Monday, September 26, 2016

How to use iMessage's new features, effects, and stickers, iPhone 7 Plus, iOS 10.X, Dr Mobiles Limited 0800429429


26-9-2016:  Now Apple iPhone users or Apple product users will have more fun and productivities with the new arrival of Apple iOS 10.X.

Please see this link for more details.


This post is sponsored by:
Dr Mobiles Limited

1 Huron Street, 
Takapuna, North Shore 0622
Toll: 0800 429 429.  Telephone: (09) +649 551-5344
Support: +6421 02555888 Sales:
+6421 2640000
Web
 - Map - Email - Twitter - Blogger - Flickr - 
Auhtor

Disclaimer:
Dr Mobiles Limited is an independent repair centre for smartphones, computers and tablet since 2011.  We are not a dealer for any Apple products and repair only out-of-warranty devices.  The contents of this post is for casual reading on current IT events.

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Apple iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus: All you need to know... Repair, Unlock


8-SEPT-16:  This all you need to know about Apple iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus from the official site! 
Dr Mobiles Limited    
1, Huron Street    
Takapuna, Auckland 0622     
Toll:  0800 429 429     info@drmobiles.co.nz

Friday, September 9, 2016

Apple iPhone 7, 7 Plus officially launched! 8th September, 2016. Auckland iPhone Repair, Dr Mobiles Limited


Apple has finally unveiled its long-awaited iPhone 7, and almost all of the rumours and leaks ahead of the launch have turned out to be true.

The new device is indeed waterproof, and the larger model comes with an impressive dual-lens camera capable of of all kinds of photographic wizardry.

Controversially, Apple has removed the headphone socket from the bottom of the device, meaning you may have to rethink your headphone choices.

Apple has also ditched the 16GB and 64GB models, and introduced a new 256GB model - which has the same amount of storage as Apple's top-of-the-range iPad Pro.

Here's everything you need to know about Apple's new iPhone 7:
Release date

Apple unveiled the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus at an event in San Francisco on September 7.

Customers in the UK will be able to pre-order the new phones from Friday, September 9, and the new devices will be available in shops from Friday, September 16.


 

See the official site for the new Apple iPhone 7's details

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 - 
AuhtorDisclaimer:

Dr Mobiles Limited is an independent repair centre for smartphones, computers and tablet since 2011.  We are not a dealer for any Apple products and repair only out-of-warranty devices.  The contents of this post is for lesiure reading on current IT events.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Pokemon Go: How to efficiently use stardust in Pokemon Go, Auckland, New Zealand ? #drmobileslimited, #02102555888, 0212640000, 095515344, #iphonerepair, #aucklandrepair, #www.drmobiles.co.nz


After you’ve spent time catching them and maybe getting into a speculative battle or two, the next step in becoming a Pokemon Master is clear in the main Pokemon games: training and improving the abilities and strength of your Pokemon. The same is true in Pokemon Go, but it’s handled a little differently.


Here we guide you through just how Pokemon are powered up, evolved and otherwise improved in Pokemon Go, plus detail exactly how you should be spending the limited resources needed to do so, Stardust and Candy. It’s all a little more hidden than the main games which makes it all inherently a little more complicated, but we’re going to streamline our explanation of it all. Here we go:

Pokemon Go: How levelling up and evolution works

In traditional Pokemon games on the Game Boy and DS, fans are used to gaining specifically numbered amounts of experience (XP) and levelling up an equally obvious numbered level. In Pokemon Go things aren’t quite so simple: The primary measurement of a Pokemon’s strength is its Combat Power (CP).

CP is determined by a number of factors behind-the-scenes including a Pokemon’s hidden level, how much it has been powered up and other hidden factors as detailed on other pages in our guide.

There’s two key ways to make a Pokemon more powerful. One is to evolve it into a more advanced form of its type, which isn’t available for every single Pokemon as all evolutionary lines have an end. The other is to power up the Pokemon, which based on stats behind-the-scenes will boost a Pokemon. Evolution and power-ups will raise a Pokemon’s CP, health, and other hidden stats used in battle.

Evolving Pokemon costs candy, and powering up a Pokemon costs a combination of candy and stardust.

Pokemon Go: Earning and spending Stardust

Stardust is a key component for when players begin to power up Pokemon to take on higher end gyms and the like, and powerful Pokemon will also be key as new features are added to the game – but it’s also a finite resource, and needs to be spent wisely.

Stardust is obtained a few key ways, and the primary and easiest method to obtain it is by catching Pokemon. All-new catches that you’ve never owned before will net you more stardust, but every single Pokemon you catch will offer you a little bit of stardust too.

If you have the access to the Pokeballs to do so it’s thus well worth continuing to catch the likes of Pidgey and Ratatta as they appear, as each you catch will earn a stardust reward and duplicates can either be used to gain some extra candy or evolved to maximise your experience gains.

Another method to obtain stardust comes in another method to obtain new Pokemon – hatching eggs. Every egg you hatch will net you some stardust to go with the Pokemon it delivers, and the further you’ve had to walk to catch the egg the more stardust you’ll get alongside the hatching.

The largest source of stardust actually comes from gyms, though it’s also the most difficult method to consistently manage. If you leave a Pokemon behind at a friendly gym to defend it (more on this over in our gyms guide), stardust will be doled out to you daily for as long as you manage to remain installed at that gym.

This stardust has to be manually picked up by heading to the in-game shop and pressing the shield in the top right of the screen. This bonus isn’t capped, so if you’re assisting in more than one gym the bonus will multiply as necessary.

Stardust is spent in order to power a Pokemon up. Every ‘level’ of power up for a Pokemon will only cost 1 candy, but the amount of stardust needed starts at 200 and rises depending on the strength of the Pokemon. Later power-ups get very costly and stardust is quite limited, so think carefully before you use it!

Pokemon Go: Earning and spending Candy, plus Pokemon Transfers

As detailed earlier, candy is used to evolve and power up Pokemon and is additionally a species-specific resource – a Pidgey candy is different to a Squirtle candy or a Zubat candy, and so it’s fairly difficult to save up the necessary amounts.

Thanks to its species-specific trappings, obtaining candy is all about individual Pokemon. You’ll obtain some candy for its species when you catch a Pokemon, and likewise for hatching – though hatched Pokemon will always offer up more candy than those caught in the wild.

Candy can also be obtained by transferring unwanted Pokemon back to the professor by clicking on them, scrolling down and hitting transfer. This only offers up one candy per Pokemon, but it’s better than a useless Pokemon clogging up your menus. Just be careful not to transfer anything useful or wanted!

Candy is spent on powering up and evolving Pokemon. Compared to stardust powering up is cheap, costing only one candy per power boost. Evolving is more expensive with the cost varying depending on the breed of Pokemon, but expect to pay as much as 15, 25, 50 or even more candy to evolve a Pokemon into its next powerful form.

Given that at its core Pokemon is an RPG and the RPG genre is all about choice, there really isn’t necessarily a right or wrong answer to these questions. Some players might choose to simply power up their favourite Pokemon or evolve in order to get to an evolved Pokemon they’re particularly fond of – and that’s fine.

With that said, there are optimisations you can make as a player. There’s not a huge amount of scope in powering up a 15 CP Pidgey, for instance – a more powerful Pidgey is likely to crop up in the wild at any moment, leaving that previously powered up Pokemon obsolete and the resources wasted.

Similarly you should be aware of your own trainer level and how it impacts what’s going on around you. Early in the game you’re drowning in stardust and candy from your early catches, but it might not necessarily be worth spending all your candy to evolve.

Take Pidgey, for instance: once you level up a bit Pidgeotto begin showing up in the wild quite frequently for you, and a little further down the line Pidgeot will begin showing up. Is it thus worthwhile spending that candy to evolve? Evaluate your resources carefully.

With power-ups you need to be more careful – as mentioned earlier, you’re drowning in stardust early on due to the sheer number of new catches and the cheap power up costs. That dries up quickly and you’ll want to beware of that fact – try to save your stardust early on until your stand-out Pokemon begin to emerge. These Pokemon – your favourites and the naturally-powerful – are where you’ll want to pool your resources and spend your stardust.

 
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 - 
Auhtor

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