Cool Tips and Tricks for your awesome Gadgets




All of us use use funky and cool gadgets flaunting to others ,but these gadgets have much more than just looks.take a look at some secrets of those gadgets and how you can unleash them....

1.)TV viewing distances

Most people sit too far away from flat panel televisions. In order to provide an immersive viewing experience, the TV needs to occupy a certain minimal field of view. Plus, sitting too far away means that your eyes will not be able to view the extra detail that a high definition set offers.

Recommendations can vary, but as a thumb rule, take the screen size in inches, multiply it by 1.5 and you get the ideal viewing distance (in inches). For instance, for a 40-inch HD set, you need to sit about 60 inches (5 feet) away for the optimum viewing experience with HD content

2.)Call barring

The call barring feature, present in almost all phones now, allows you to restrict incoming or outgoing calls. This is useful when you are roaming out of your network or when you are handing your phone over to someone else and want to prevent misuse.

Usual settings include restricting all incoming /outgoing calls, outgoing international calls or calls when roaming. Go to Settings > Call Settings and open the sub menu for call barring. Here you can set a restriction of your choice. If available, set a password so that no one else can change the settings..

3.)Leave a CD inside your DVD player

It's an unfortunate (and completely overlooked) design flaw, but almost all CD/DVD players have their lenses facing upwards.

And the biggest enemy of the lens is dust, which always settles down. Accumulation of dust on a lens leads to several issues - slower loading times, read errors (skips, pops) or a complete failure to read. The easiest way to prevent this is to simply leave a disc inside the player at all times.

The disc completely covers the lens and acts as a shield that prevents dust from settling. If you haven't used your CD player for a long time, make sure to eject the disc first and clean it before playing.

4.)How to tweak equalizers


When tweaking audio equalizers, almost everyone increases the levels to boost certain frequencies . However, it's way better if you first move all the frequencies to the zero position (flat) and then lower the ones you want reduced.

For instance, if you want more bass, leave the lower frequency bars (often denoted by Hertz or Hz) at the zero or flat level and move the higher frequency (often denoted by KiloHertz or KHz) bars down. To compensate, simply increase the volume a bit.

These settings will give you 'sweeter sound', protect your speakers from damage, reduce overall distortion and prevent the automatic limiter (found in most audio systems now) from kicking in.
  

5.)USB drive as RAM


On a Windows PC (Vista and later), you can use a highspeed USB flash drive to increase performance. The feature, called ReadyBoost, can be enabled by right clicking a connected USB drive in 'My Computer' and selecting 'Properties'. It works best if you dedicate a 4GB drive for this purpose (don't use the same drive to store files)


6.)Custom keyboard shortcuts in iOS


To make typing simpler on your iOS device, you can assign keyboard shortcuts to oft used phrases or sentences. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard and tap on Add New Shortcut - just type out the phrase you want to use, the shortcut for it and click save. Now when you are typing in any app, enter the shortcut and it will automatically enter the phrase it is assocciated with.


7.)Using Gmail aliases


Your one Gmail ID is actually many. Gmail aliases are a great way to filter incoming mails. The first way is to add a "+" icon after your username followed by text of your choice. For example , you can register on shopping sites with the ID "yourusername +shopname@gmail.com" and then set a filter for emails to this ID. The other way is to use dots. If your ID is username@gmail, mails sent to user.name@gmail or even us.er.na.me@gmail will still get delivered to your inbox.


8.)Volume levels on iPod


Many songs have different volume levels, especially when they're different audio formats and obtained from different sources. You'll notice that when listening to songs using earphones, levels can keep changing, forcing you to adjust the volume.

On most iPods, Apple has included a setting called 'Sound Check' - when switched on, it automatically adjusts (normalises) volume levels of different tracks to similar levels. To activate this feature, head to Settings > Music > Sound Check. Note that Sound Check only works with the default music player.


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