Updating to iOS 8
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 @technobabble said: @ajstringham I prefer SwiftKey...it works for iStuff and Android and lets you Swype. Slash Gear says iOS 8 gets swiped! I love Swift Key 
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 Yes there are apps for adding in swipe now. I haven't tested them yet but hope to 
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 @Minion-Queen said: Yes there are apps for adding in swipe now. I haven't tested them yet but hope to You type pretty fast. You'll like it. It's a different approach, but once you get used to it, which doesn't take long, the one-key-at-a-time feels so archaic... 
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 @technobabble Swype was the example listed in the iOS 8 announcement as WWDC back in June. Everyone who watched knew it was coming. @ajstringham it IS predictive or it would have no idea how to figure out what you are trying to type by swyping. I am neutral to the keyboard functionality itself. I tried it, for days. I did not grow used to it. My boss loves it. Different people use devices differently. It is people like @ajstringham that blindly spew about how things are "better" that piss me off. 
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 I prefer the old fashioned key by key style. They are both predictive so not all that much different. One is just way more familiar as I have 33 years of typing experience. 
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 I updated last night, I haven't gotten to far into it. But it appeared that it only need about 900MB. 
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 @g.jacobse said: I updated last night, I haven't gotten to far into it. But it appeared that it only need about 900MB. Yeah, that was the download size. i reckon they want free space for swap files and the like. may also store a local "backup" before pushing the update. 
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 @Hubtech said: @g.jacobse said: I updated last night, I haven't gotten to far into it. But it appeared that it only need about 900MB. Yeah, that was the download size. i reckon they want free space for swap files and the like. may also store a local "backup" before pushing the update. my required 4.6 GB free. 
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 iOS 8 kicks ass! My wife just called me and my iPad rang!! I have an iPhone 5 and iPad 4 both upgraded to iOS 8 and I did not realize that the new features for this were available on them. I thought it was the iPad Air and iPhone 5s that got these new Handoff features. 
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 @JaredBusch said: iOS 8 kicks ass! My wife just called me and my iPad rang!! I have an iPhone 5 and iPad 4 both upgraded to iOS 8 and I did not realize that the new features for this were available on them. I thought it was the iPad Air and iPhone 5s that got these new Handoff features. OK that's kinda cool, your iPad rang.. if you had a bluetooth headset could you have taken the call? 
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 @Dashrender said: @JaredBusch said: iOS 8 kicks ass! My wife just called me and my iPad rang!! I have an iPhone 5 and iPad 4 both upgraded to iOS 8 and I did not realize that the new features for this were available on them. I thought it was the iPad Air and iPhone 5s that got these new Handoff features. OK that's kinda cool, your iPad rang.. if you had a bluetooth headset could you have taken the call? Well, I had a wired headset plugged into it because I was watching a video a bit ago, so I just popped the earbuds in and hit answer. it was kick ass. 
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 My MacBook Pro is too old and does not have the Bluetooth Low Power capability. 
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 @JaredBusch said: @Dashrender said: @JaredBusch said: iOS 8 kicks ass! My wife just called me and my iPad rang!! I have an iPhone 5 and iPad 4 both upgraded to iOS 8 and I did not realize that the new features for this were available on them. I thought it was the iPad Air and iPhone 5s that got these new Handoff features. OK that's kinda cool, your iPad rang.. if you had a bluetooth headset could you have taken the call? Well, I had a wired headset plugged into it because I was watching a video a bit ago, so I just popped the earbuds in and hit answer. it was kick ass. What cellular network are you on? Does your iPad have a cellular card? 
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 @Dashrender said: What cellular network are you on? Does your iPad have a cellular card? The iPad is WiFi only. I am with AT&T at the moment. This is not WiFi calling, it is the handoff feature. So cool because I did not think my devices were on the supported list. 
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 How does it hand off a phone call that is not on IP? 
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 @Dashrender said: How does it hand off a phone call that is not on IP? Call turns into WiFi. No call originates on IP. Or effectively none. 
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 @scottalanmiller said: @Dashrender said: How does it hand off a phone call that is not on IP? Call turns into WiFi. No call originates on IP. Or effectively none. You'll have to add more explanation at some point. 





