Picture 3.png While trying to register on Translink's site, the iPhone conveniently sensed the field was named with "phone" and replaced my keyboard with a number keypad. A number keypad with no dash. A dash that the Translink required on their end to know it was a "real" number.

On Twitter


comments

Andy

Too smart for its own good.


Jonathan

Hey, Andre - do you use the iPhone's "email to" feature on the built in camera? Because I do, and I accidentally created a bad address in there that's one character off from the correct address I'm looking for, and now there's no way I can easily find to remove this address.

It's not in my phone contacts, and it appears every time I try to email (I use Flickr's "post via email" service all the time, and this address pops up first until I type a significant portion of the right email address).

The same thing happens with addresses in the maps section - it stores those addresses in an address book, but not the "contacts" address book, so I can't remove mistyped or no longer interesting addresses from the list of suggestions that come up when I type a new address.

Okay, done griping now.


Andy

Jonathan, have you tried the "Reset" functions under "Settings"?
http://www.technipages.com/article445.html

I'm not sure if that will do the trick, but there's the option to reset your keyboard dictionary.


Jonathan

Hmmm... that MAY be the solution. on the other hand, it may not be. But the description at the link you provided is a little sketchy on what the unintended consequences might be. For example, if I choose "reset all settings" it claims that it will NOT delete my contacts or data (movies/music), but it doesn't mention whether it will delete the four WiFi networks I've configured passwords for this thing on, and I'm not eager to re-do (especially the work one, which involved pulling teeth).


comments for this entry have been closed.

before this i wrote y after this i wrote oh yeah, beer brewing

navigation