SOLuTIONS
Tips Useful tidbits from PCMag editorial staff, Labs analysts, and readers IPHONE
Sync Your iPhone’s Calendar with Google Calendar This new sync capability was announced by Google just before we were set to publish this tip roundup. Yes, you can now sync your Google Calendar with your iPhone without resorting to any third-party services, but it won’t happen automatically. First, you need to make sure your iPhone firmware is Version 2.2 or later. Then you visit www.google .com/mobile/apple/sync.html, and take a few proactive steps. Don’t ignore the step of backing up your contacts, as the Google Sync setup will delete them from the device. There are a couple of disadvantages to backing up your contacts to Google Contacts— doing so means you’re no longer syncing with Outlook or MobileMe contacts, if you’d set one of those up. And you’re sharing all your contacts with Google, which may or may not be a problem, depending on your comfort level. Finally, don’t be confused by the fact that you actually set up your Gmail account as a Microsoft Exchange account rather than the Google Mail choice—Google Sync uses an Exchange server to accomplish the syncing. 88 PC MAGAZINE DIGITAL EDITION JUNE 2009
In the next 13 steps of the process, you’ll enter Google’s server name and choose whether you want Contacts, Calendars, or both synced; and finally pass a couple of scary red warning screens reminding you that you’ll lose the existing contacts and calendar entries on the phone. Thereafter, your contacts and calendar entries will sync with the beta Google services rather than MobileMe or Exchange. If you’ve enabled Push in your iPhone’s Fetch New Data control panel, you won’t have to do anything for the info to update. Otherwise, you can sync every 15 or 30 minutes, or manually when in your Gmail inbox. WORD 2007
The Word Status Bar In Word 2003 the status bar displays a number of useful status items that have vanished in Word 2007. Maybe you don’t need an indicator to let you know that macro recording is on, or that extended selection is enabled, but it can be awfully handy to see at a glance that Word is tracking changes or that your keystrokes will overtype existing text. The Word Options dialog won’t help. You can scan it ’til your eyes cross without find-