Showing posts with label "Dr Mobiles Limited". Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Dr Mobiles Limited". Show all posts

Thursday, June 16, 2011

25 Killer Steps to Save Water Damaged iPhone (www.drmobiles.co.nz, repair, unlock, Takapuna, Auckland)


25 Killer Steps to Save Water Damaged iPhone (www.drmobiles.co.nz, repair, unlock, Takapuna, Auckland)

When expensive smartphone like iPhone 4 falls into toilet, it is the most horrible experience and you cannot manage to flush it, or let it in bucket full of water. There are other cases like your toddler baby throw your newly bought iPhone 4 into a pool or you accidentally spill over coffee on your mobile phone or you got it damp in rainy season or forgot to take out you iPhone from your jacket before washing it in washing machine.  Please call Dr Mobiles Limited at (09) 551-5344 for tips on how to save your water damaged iPhone
Please nte that the following steps are for illustrations and acadmeical research only; you are solely responsible for whatever you do to dry out your water damge iPhone.
iphone-water
There are several ways to save a wet iPhone 4 that will make it operable again and preventing you to purchase another expensive iPhone unit. Follow the simple methods listed below to fix and bring your water damaged iPhone back to life and its warranty. The methods listed below holds good if your iPod Touch falls into the Toilet and you don’t have insurance.

Simple Ways to Fix and Dry out a Water Damaged iPhone 4

  1. Don’t Panic – You can save your iPhone 4 if you follow right instructions at right time. Keep yourself cool and don’t panic at all. The key to saving a wet iPhone is “Patience”.
  2. Remove iPhone out of water– Water takes no time in getting into your mobile phone. If a glass of water is spilled on iPhone and the phone is connected to the charger, then disconnect the charger immediately. Most damage occurs when the phone is wet and there is a power source.
  3. Remove the battery immediately – Water is a good conductor of electricity. Make sure that you remove the cellphone battery as soon as possible; else the electrical circuit inside your cellphone will get damaged due to short circuit. The circuits will survive in water if your cellphone has no battery or any type of electric power attached.
  4. Remove SIM Card – Contact List is the most important thing that you would like to save instead your iPhone. Some people do not bother to pay for getting their phone contact list back. There may be other important data present on SIM card. To save your SIM card just wipe it off with dry towel or tissue paper. Do not keep your SIM card under direct sunlight.
  5. Remove all covers and external connectors – Make sure to remove all external covers to open up as many gaps, slots, in the phone. This will help you in removing water from every possible area of your wet iPhone 4.
  6. Remove the excess water – Shake it well without dropping it to remove the excess water. Using towel is not recommended as it might take time to absorb the water from your iPhone. Instead, use tissue paper and press it gently against your iPhone handset to absorb the water.
  7. Use Newspaper To absorb Water – Everyone do not have tissue paper at home. Do not panic, in that case you can use newspaper which has got good water absorbing capacity.  Do not panic, if neither of the two is available to you can use small towel as well to remove excess water from your wet cellphone.
  8. Male Vests To absorb Water – If you are looking for immediate action, you may also use male vests to absorb the excess water.
  9. Use ear-buds – There are certain narrow areas inside your cellphone where your fingers cannot reach. To remove water from those areas you can use ear buds.
  10. Using Tooth Pick – Take a tooth-pick and roll-on tissue paper on it and then remove the excess water from narrow areas of your wet cellphone. Make sure that you do not clog the wet paper in the narrow gaps.
  11. Using Vacuum Cleaner – To remove residual moisture you can use vacuum cleaner with precautionary measures. Hold the vacuum cleaner in one hand and place your cellphone on a towel (placed on the top of a table). Maintain a good distance between vacuum cleaner and wet cellphone. If they are too close then your phone or vacuum cleaner may damage as a vacuum can create static electricity. Do not use the vacuum cleaner to dry out your wet cellphone for more than 15 minutes.
  12. Soak in Un-Cooked Rice – You may not believe that you can save your wet cell phone by placing it in a container of uncooked rice (dry rice) overnight. The rice has an excellent moisture absorbing capacity and would absorb any remaining moisture.
  13. Place the phone on top of a TV – This method may not work if you have LCD TV placed on wall. Instead if you are having TV which emits a low heat from the vents placed on the top, you can put your wet cellphone there. This method may take some time to dry-up your cell-phone but the method can be used in cases where you need to spend some time with your guests instead drying up your cellphone.
  14. Place the phone near microwave – You may place your wet cellphone near the rear vent of the microwave which emits out low heat that might help you in drying up your cellphone.
  15. Place wet phone in front of an air conditioner – You can safely place your wet cellphone in front of air conditioner. Air from an air conditioner is dry, and will evaporate water faster.
  16. Use Silica Packs – You might have seen silica packs inside electronic goods that you have purchased. Those silica packs are rarely used. But make sure you do not throw them. Instead, collect them so that they may be used in removing excess water from gadgets. You can put silica packs and wet cellphone together in a bag and leave them for at least two days.
  17. Place your cellphone in Sunlight – If you do not have much time to dry up your cellphone then just remove the excess water using tissue paper or towel and then place the wet mobile phone in the area where sunlight is present, say near windows. Do not place your mobile under direct sunlight. Do not place your phone under sunlight for extended periods.
  18. Use Desiccants – Desiccants helps in absorbing moisture to a greater extent. You can go to the stores to buy desiccant. You can ask for “Damp Rid”, “Dry Right”  or “Dry-All”.
  19. Using Spirit or Methanol – What would you do if your cellphone falls into salty water? If you dry up using the methods listed above then the water may form crystals on the electronic circuit of your cell phone which may cause further damage. After removing the excess water, to remove water minerals, rinse the phone gently with spirit or alcohol using cotton cloth. Alcohol might dissolve the internal adhesives used in electronic circuits. Make sure you do not apply alcohol to those areas. Do not connect the battery until the alcohol smell goes away.
  20. Using Compressed air – If you already have a can of compressed air then you may use it to remove the water from small gaps. Do not think of getting it from computer store. You don’t have that much time. Hold the can straight and push the air (set to a low psi) into speaker, mic, keypad, and hard to reach gaps. This will pull out moisture from small gaps.

Things to Avoid, if your iPhone 4 falls into Water

  1. Do not place iPhone in Refrigerator – Many people recommend placing the wet cellphone in refrigerator claiming that the refrigerator cools things by drawing moisture out of things. I would not recommend this method because most of the refrigerators are automatic and the method may damage your wet iPhone.
  2. Do not put the iPhone in the freezer – Placing the wet phone in the freezer may damage the LCD of your cellphone and therefore the method is not recommended at all.
  3. Hair dryer may damage your iPhone – You may use hair dryer to dry up your wet iPhone 4 but again it is not recommended by us. Hair dryer blows air out that may push the excess water deep inside your iPhone which may further damage the components and electronic circuits of your wet cellphone.
  4. Do not place in front of Desert Cooler – Desert coolers are widely used in countries like India and other parts of south Asian countries. Placing the wet cellphone in the vicinity of desert cooler may add moisture to you cellphone. Make sure you do not place your cellphone in front of cooler.
  5. Do not place into microwave Oven – Most people have suggested keeping the wet mobile inside microwave oven with warm settings. It is not at all recommended by us. Instead of saving you iPhone 4 you may end up in ruining your microwave as well.

How to Test your wet iPhone -- WRONG!

Do not turn on your wet iPhone as it will be start to short-circuit your motherboard!  Keep in a cool and air place for an hour or so. Then place it inside a sealed bag of uncocked rice, this will help to aborb the remaing moisture inside your iPhone.
If you want to kill wet iPhone 4 outright, you just try to charge it with the wall charge--this is going to start to heat up your phone and cook it.

Prevent water damage indicator from voiding your warranty

iPhone warranty does not cover water damage. There are iphone moisture indicator that prove moisture in iPhone unit. Phone and iPod products are equipped with Liquid Contact Indicators in the bottom of the headphone jack. At the base of the headphone jack, you should see what a white or silver-colored dot is normally. If this gets wet it permanently changes color (from white to pink or red) and your iPhone is marked for water damage and eventually voiding your warranty claims.|

How to repair your water damged iPhone?

We recommend that you let the pros do the job.  You need specialized hardware, dignostic tool and specific repair methodlogy to repair and restor your iPhone.  The longer you wait to repair it, the worse the damage and corrosion will be for your water damaged iPhone.  The motheboard aborbs liquied, it will likely to be bloated slowly and warpped/change in physical ship. Once this took place, most of the embedded threds (tiny micro circuitory) will be broken or damage (i.e. like nerves on our spine is broken).  This will attribute to permanent damage of your iPhone.

What should I do next?

You can call Dr Mobiles Limited to make appint to check up your water damage iPhone at the repair hotline (09) 551-5344.  Our physical address is located at the bottom of this post.  BTW, we DO NOT charge inspection to look at your water damage phone.  Once the water damage iPhone is in our hand, we will perform the following:
(1) Detail inspection of the iPhone 4
(2) Dismental the iPhone 4 and remove all dried residual resulted from water damge
(3) Remove and stop all rusting prosses
(4) Perform multi-stage diagnostic procedure
(5) Use isolation test method to check all major function of your iPhone
Our engineers will call you up and inform you what are the options are to get your iPhone 4 working again along with cost implication.  Nothing will be done or repair unless we obtain your consent and agreed on the repair cost.
This post is sponsored by:Dr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000Web - Map - Email - Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flickr
Please note that Dr Mobiles Limited is the only professional phone repair laboratory who DOES NOT charge inspection fee for looking at your damage phone. It is simply if we can fix your damage phone or not. No point of adding burden to our clients!
Besides that, we are able to repair your Apple iPhone 4, 3G, 3GS while you wait at our laboratory! Just call (09) 551-5344 for booking.
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Saturday, June 4, 2011

Apple iPhone 4 Gagdget News Update: iFusion iPhone Dock (www.drmobiles.co.nz)


If you are looking for something a little more robust for daily desktop use the iFusion iPhone Dock might well be worth a look.
iFusion

Designed like a old retro desktop phone your would have found in the 90′s the iFusion allows you to rem inis and tether yourself once again to the desktop with a corder handset. Allowing you to enjoy a tangled handset cable and limited movement once again.


Joking aside the iFusion connects to your iPhone via Bluetooth and either alows you to use the handset or doubles as a speaker phone using the iFusion’s full-duplex that provides improved sound quality than the speaker phone included on the iPhone 4.


While connected to the iFusion iPhone Dock your iPhone will charge and sync via a USB cable. The iFusion iPhone Dock will sart shipping in April and isnow available to pre-order for $169 from iFusion and is available in either black or white.

This post is sponsored by:
Dr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622
Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web - Map - Email - Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flickr
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Sunday, May 29, 2011

Google Android Smartphone News: HTC Wildfire S review (www.drmobiles.co.nz) "Android Unlock", Auckland


Mini phones are hot and HTC don’t want you take Sony Ericsson’s word on that. What started as a small niche is now a segment that keeps growing – and one that no manufacturer can afford to ignore. Sony Ericsson have just announced their updated mini lineup while Samsung and LG routinely have more than one thing going on in the midrange.
HTC know they can’t afford to stop right in the middle of what they’ve been doing with the Wildfire, the Aria and the Gratia. Going all the way back to the Tattoo, which first put Android on the radar for budget shoppers.
HTC Wildfire S HTC Wildfire S HTC Wildfire S HTC Wildfire S 
HTC Wildfire S official photos
There’s plenty of choice already for those who like their droid in a small package. The HTC Wildfire S seems to be aware of that and does well to make itself seen. The lively paintjobs and friendly compact size are the right features to show to potential buyers. The Wildfire S has found a way to further reduce size while keeping the same 3.2” screen.
One thing we should keep in mind though. HTC seem to be in power-saving mode currently with all their recent releases but facelifts offering minor improvements over predecessors. That holds true for the Wildfire S too, though this is not to say that it shouldn’t be on your list if you’re looking for the next hot mini. HTC seem to have worked exactly on the things that most needed improvement. Display is key here, HVGA finally bringing it to acceptable levels. CIF video-capture was upped to VGA and the phone runs the latest Android Gingerbread.
These things should give it enough value as an upgrade. The Wildfire S is well-designed and well-built – a colorful little droid to offer good bang for buck. Let’s look at what else the S stands for.

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM and dual-band 3G support
  • 7.2 Mbps HSDPA, 384 Kbps HSUPA support
  • 3.2" 256K-color TFT capacitive touchscreen of HVGA (320 x 480 pixels) resolution
  • 600MHz Snapdragon MSM7227 CPU, Adreno 200 GPU; 418MB of user-available RAM
  • Android 2.3.3 (Gingerbread) with HTC Sense 2.1 UI
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b, g, n with hotspot functionality
  • GPS with A-GPS connectivity; digital compass
  • 5 MP autofocus camera, LED flash, geotagging and face-detection
  • VGA video @ 24fps
  • microUSB port (charging) and stereo Bluetooth v3.0
  • microSD slot (up to 32GB, 2GB in box)
  • Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
  • Accelerometer and proximity sensor
  • Gorilla Glass display
  • Stereo FM radio with RDS
  • Light and compact
  • Turn-to-mute, lift-to-tone-down, flip for speakerphone
  • Smart dialing
  • XviD video support
  • HTCSense.com integration
  • HTC Portable Hotspot
  • Ultra-fast boot times (if you don’t remove battery)

Main disadvantages

  • Poor camera performance
  • No HD 720p video recording
  • No shutter key for the camera
  • No Adobe Flash player, Flash Lite only
  • No Document viewer
  • No secondary videocall camera
  • No ambient light sensor
The Wildfire S is the usual all-round smartphone – with the latest Android inside at that – but now in an even friendlier shape. All work and no play wouldn’t do for the Wildfire S and HTC have added some twists to the old recipe to make it 2011-ready.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
HTC Wildfire S live shots
Balance was sought above all – no groundbreaking features are to be expected. Not in this price range, not in a pint-sized package. Minis are friendly and playful. Let’s see if the HTC Wildfire S matches the description.

Economical retail package

The tiny box of the HTC Wildfire S has the essentials duly covered. You get the mandatory charger and an USB cable (to use with the charger as well as in data connections). There’s a set of nice looking headphones and a complimentary 2GB microSD card inside too. The rest is the usual papers.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
HTC Wildfire S retail package
The white set of accessories is suspiciously similar to the iPhone’s, the earphones especially almost a complete replica.

HTC Wildfire S 360-degree spin

The HTC Wildfire S measures 101.3 x 59.4 x 12.4 mm and is smaller in real life than it appears on a picture. It’s made entirely of plastic, tipping the scales at the acceptable 105 grams. Maybe it’s the similar styling but we got it wrong initially. No aluminum unibody in the HTC Wildfire S.
The phone feels great in your hand and – being so small, one-hand operation is hassle-free. 3.2” is still more than enough screen real estate to work with – you don’t feel crammed for space.

Design and construction

The HTC Wildfire S borrows some styling ideas from its bigger brother the Desire S and has inherited others from the original Wildfire. Bottom line, the Wildfire S is neat and friendly, and delightfully compact. The finish hasn’t suffered from the plastic build. The soft rubbery back contrasts nicely with the brushed finish of the front frame.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
A little Desire S
The phone will be available in a variety of colors and the selection makes sense for a phone targeted at the young. Size is still the key selling point though.
HTC Wildfire S Review 
The Wildfire S next to the Galaxy S II, iPhone 4
The front of the Wildfire S is dominated by a 3.2” capacitive touchscreen of HVGA (320x480) resolution. It’s a reasonably bright LCD unit but with no automatic adjustment for the lack of an ambient light sensor. The smallish screen is quite reflective – making it uncomfortable to use outdoors. The poor viewing angles don’t help it either: colors quickly get washed out. Still it’s enough of an improvement over the poor QVGA screen of the original Wildfire.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
The HVGA display of the Wildfire S
As you have every right to expect, the capacitive screen response is top-notch.
Display test50% brightness100% brightness
Black, cd/m2White, cd/m2Contrast ratioBlack, cd/m2White, cd/m2Contrast ratio
Sony Ericsson XPERIA Neo0.1929915770.315131670
LG Optimus Black P9700.2733212280.657491161
LG Optimus 2X0.232289820.353471001
HTC Wildfire S0.432566030.76314414
HTC Incredible S0.181629080.31275880
Motorola Atrix 4G0.483146520.60598991


At the bottom of the device you get the usual four capacitive keys: Home, Menu, Back and Search. The major absence compared to the original Wildfire is the optical trackpad. It won’t be badly miss we guess – except perhaps in text editing.
The capacitive keys are small but well-spaced, with precise vibration feedback for comfortable use.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
Capacitive Home, Menu, Back and Search keys
On the left side of the Wildfire S you’ll find the volume rocker and the MicroUSB port for charging/data connections. The volume control is unexpectedly big and prominent, with good press.
HTC Wildfire S Review 
Volume rocker and MicroUSB slot
There’re no controls on the right, the asymmetrical contour of the battery cover a nice little accent.
HTC Wildfire S Review 
The right side features nothing
At the top of the device there is a standard 3.5mm headphone jack and the power/lock button. It’s easy to locate by touch and bounces right back up after each press.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
Power/lock button and 3.5mm headphone jack
The mouthpiece and a tiny lanyard eyelet are the only things to note at the bottom.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
Microphone, lanyard eyelet
The back of the device is simple but attractive. We like the soft matt finish and the light-colored patch holding the loudspeaker grill, camera lens and LED flash that stands out against the darker finish of the surrounding surface. The camera is a 5 MP auto-focus unit and the LED flash looks quite powerful.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
5 MP auto-focus camera with LED flash and loudspeaker
Removing the back panel reveals the 1230 MAh Li-Ion battery. It’s quoted at 360-570 hours of stand-by and 430/350 minutes of talk time (between 2G and 3G). In reality our unit gave us about 5 days, used sparingly.
HTC Wildfire S Review 
1230MAh Li-Ion battery
The HTC Wildfire S is a solid little mini whose key feature is its diminutive size. The premium feel is gone but getting a higher-res HVGA screen we’d call it a fair trade. And just to be clear, the phone has no aluminum unibody but the build and finish are up to the usual high HTC standards.
HTC Wildfire S Review HTC Wildfire S Review 
HTC Wildfire S in hand
It’s a small phone that handles well and comes in a variety of colors to please any taste. Friendly and compact, the Wildfire S will let even less experienced users enjoy Android.


This post is sponsored by:
Dr Mobiles Limited
1 Huron Street, Takapuna, North Shore 0622
Tel: (09) 551-5344 and Mob: (021) 264-0000
Web - Map - Email - Posterous - Twitter - Blogger - Flickr
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