I have no tabs.
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
What do you see when you select the iPod from the left-hand panel?
Do you know what version of iTunes you have? (Maybe earlier versions don't have the tabs?)
I see an ad for an iTunes update. I just realized (after looking at it 12 or so times) that there is a "Remind me later button", I will click that and see what happens.
Okay, I see tabs now!
I clicked the music tab and found my playlist and it seems to be syncing now!
Thanks for the help!
Skipping about 90 posts to ask about removing the 'System Security' malware off my friend's pc. I've googled a bunch of options, but most of them strike me as potential baitnswitches.
I've searched for the various [assorted numbers].exe files but can't find matches.
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Bonnie, try downloading malwarebytes. We use it at work and it's free unless you want to have it run automatically.
We've saved many a fast food franchise store with it.
yikes!
Seconding quester's yikes!
Hands-On: Kindle for iPhone spreads the e-reading love across platforms
Amazon rolled out Kindle for iPhone, a free download from the iTune app store that opens up Amazon's library of 240,000 e-books to iPhone users. We installed the app on an iPhone, and found it to be a useful enhancement to the Kindle 2 experience, as well as an excellent e-reader in its own right. With its "Whispersync," it cues up your book on the page you last read on the Kindle, and gives you access to all your bookmarks and highlights, too. It's a joy to use — a swipe to the side with your finger, and one page gracefully slides to the next in that unmistakable iPhone way.
Most of the Kindle features are all there, including text sizing, table of contents, and an unexpected enhancement not on the Kindle itself: a spot of color here and there. The app stops short of showing you the book's cover in color, though, perhaps in a reluctance to upstage the black-and-white Kindle itself.
This iPhone app not only enhances the Kindle, it might encourage more people to buy the E Ink reader with its much longer battery life, bigger screen and wireless book purchasing. Oh yeah, you can't buy books directly from Kindle for iPhone — you'll need to use the iPhone's Mobile Safari or a Mac or PC and then transfer the e-book over to Kindle for iPhone. Can't make it too easy, because even though Apple's apparently given up on selling books and book-reading hardware because of Steve Jobs's misguided pronouncement that "people don't read anymore" (despite statistics that show Americans reading more than ever), Apple's not stupid.