How to Restore a Locked and Disabled iPhone or iPad [GUIDE]

The entry code or password for your most cherished device such as an iPhone or iPad may get locked and disabled, due to faulty inputs on a buggy Bluetooth keyboard or a complete short-term memory loss. Apple is known to allow up to six attempts for password entry before the iOS device automatically locks out and gets completely disabled.

Although Apple has shared a number of Knowledge Base articles to help resolve such issues, the solutions come with their own set of constraints and deadlocks. So, it would be wise to ascertain the consequences before performing any further action to unlock your device.

Here are a few key actions/solutions with their ramifications:

Syncing the Device with iTunes

Scenario 1: If you have access to or already synced the device with iTunes


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  • Connect the device with iTunes (you may get an error)
  • Right-click on the device name (in iTunes 11 browse and select the device name from the sidebar's View Menu) and choose Backup
  • Once the backup is done, click Restore

NOTE: If you are prompted to enter a password while connected to iTunes, then you should try another computer which you recently synced with or try the Never Synced with iTunes option.

iTunes Backup

Use iTunes local backup to recover your device's security passcode

Use iTunes local backup to recover your device's security passcode

There are two kinds of backups - encrypted and non-encrypted. The encrypted version stores all your account passwords on the device and will require you to entire a single master-password for all functions on the device, which is a big plus. On the downside, if you forget this password, you will lose access to all backed up data and hence you will have to start over (installing purchased apps and music) from the scratch.

On the other hand, the non-encrypted backup requires you to remember and re-enter all your account passwords on the device. But the master-password will be off and you can skip backup if you already have the latest backup on the device.

Scenario 2: If you never synced the device with iTunes

This method involves booting the device in Recovery mode and performing full data wipe. In other words, it will be a fresh installation of purchased apps and music.

In this scenario, if you try to connect the device with iTunes, you will receive the following error message:

Now, you have to place the device in Recovery mode manually, as follows:

  • Unplug the sync cable from your device
  • Switch off your device (hold the power button down and slide it to power off)
  • Press and hold the Home button and plug in the sync cable
  • Continue to hold the Home button until you see "Connect to iTunes". When you see this message, release the home button.
  • Now, iTunes will Restore the device to factory settings. In other words, you'll have some work to do to get things back to normal.

NOTE: If you do not have a backup and want to restore your purchased apps and music, check out Apple's support article on how to download your purchased software.

Use Find My iPhone app to erase your iPhone 5 data completely and then restore the device's unlock password

Use Find My iPhone app to erase your iPhone 5 data completely and then restore the device's unlock password

Now, you can erase data on your device either locally by mounting the device as mass storage on a computer or via iCloud.com or with Find My iPhone app installed on another iOS device. Assuming that Find My iPhone function is already turned on with the disabled device (when you first setup your device), you can use the Erase Phone/iPad option.

iCloud Backup

Use iCloud's Restore from Backup option to recover your device's security passcode

Use iCloud's Restore from Backup option to recover your device's security passcode

iCloud backup and restore is another option you could use to reset passcode, if you have a device backup on your iCloud storage (which offers up to 5GB free space). Users needing larger storage space can buy another 10GB of space for $20 on iCloud.

Buy more storage space on iCloud

Buy more storage space on iCloud

The iCloud backup runs automatically in the background under following instances:

  • when your device is plugged in to the computer
  • locked or disabled
  • connected to Wi-Fi
Use iCloud's Restore from Backup option to recover your device's security passcode

Use iCloud's Restore from Backup option to recover your device's security passcode

iCloud backup can be turned on by navigating to iCloud > Storage and Backup > Turn iCloud Backup on. You can also delete unwanted backup files such as Keynote decks, pages docs and old unused data to free space in iCloud. In addition, you can always upgrade your free iCloud account for more storage space or cancel an existing plan or opt for a new one depending on your needs.

[Source: iPhone Hacks]

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Source: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/423526/20130113/restore-locked-iphone-ipad-icloud-backup-itunes.htm

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No 'Death Star' for US Military, White House Says

This story was updated at 11:42 p.m. ET.?

The planet-killing Death Star may have been the ultimate weapon for the Empire in the "Star Wars" films, but it has no place in the United States military today, a White House official said Friday (Jan. 11).

The statement, an official response a petition to begin building a real-life Death Star by 2016 on the White House's We the People website, said President Barack Obama's Administration cannot support building the science fiction weapon for several down-to-Earth reasons.

"The Administration shares your desire for job creation and a strong national defense, but a Death Star isn't on the horizon," wrote Paul Shawcross, chief of the Science and Space Branch at the White House's Office of Management and Budget.

The Death Star petition, posted in the November, was signed by 34,435 people and the White House has pledged to respond to any petitions that garner 25,000 signatures in 30 days.

Not the least of the hurdles for a real-life Death Star is the space construction costs, which Shawcross said has been estimated at $850 quadrillion (that's $850,000,000,000,000,000). The White House is trying to reduce the deficit, not expand it, he wrote.

Then there's the Death Star's planet-destroying warship nature.

"The Administration does not support blowing up planets," Shawcross wrote.

And of course, there's the fact that Luke Skywalker destroyed the first Death Star with a single X-wing fighter.

"Why would we spend countless taxpayer dollars on a Death Star with a fundamental flaw that could be exploited by a one-man starship?" Shawcross explained.

While there will be no moon-size Death Star in the U.S. military's arsenal by 2016, Saturn's real-life moon Mimas does look eerily similar to the fictional warship. [Saturn's'Death Star' Moon Mimas (Photos)]

Last year, astronomers with the agency's planet-hunting Kepler space telescope also announced that they found a real-life version of Tatooine, Luke's home planet with two suns. NASA also plans to send astronauts where no one has gone before ? an asteroid ? by 2025, and then take aim a manned trip to Mars in the 2030s.

And Shawcross also urged the public to go outside at night and look up.

"However, look carefully (here's how) and you'll notice something already floating in the sky ? that's no moon, it's a space station!" Shawcross wrote. "Yes, we already have a giant, football field-sized International Space Station in orbit around the Earth that's helping us learn how humans can live and thrive in space for long durations."

The?International Space Station ?is a $100 billion orbiting lab ??a deal compared to the Death Star ??and is currently home to a six-man crew representing the United States, Russia and Canada. Construction of the space station began in 1998 and today it is the largest manmade structure in space. It has the same living space as a five-bedroom house.

The space station can appear so bright to observers on Earth that at times it rivals Venus, the brightest planet in the night sky. Two American astronauts (of NASA), three Russian cosmonauts and a Canadian astronaut currently live on the station.

And Shawcross said there are other Star Wars technologies besides the Death Star that do have a place in today's society.

"We don't have a Death Star, but we do have floating robot assistants on the space station, a President who knows his way around a light saber and advanced (marshmallow) cannon, and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which is supporting research on building Luke's [robotic] arm, floating droids, and quadruped walkers," Shawcross wrote.

"We are living in the future!" Shawcross wrote. "Enjoy it. Or better yet, help build it by pursuing a career in a science, technology, engineering or math-related field."

The Administration and NASA have both been working to spur interest in science, math, engineering and technology among students.

"If you do pursue a career in a science, technology, engineering or math-related field, the Force will be with us!" Shawcross concluded. "Remember, the Death Star's power to destroy a planet, or even a whole star system, is insignificant next to the power of the Force."

With the Death Star officially the table, there is another science fiction spaceship petition that could draw a White House response.

Last month, an engineer writing as BTE Dan launched a petition to build a real-life Starship Enterprise from the "Star Trek" TV series. So far, 5,973 have signed the petition, so it still has a ways to go to prompt a White House response. The petition's deadline is Jan. 21.

For Shawcross's full response to the Death Star response, visit: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/response/isnt-petition-response-youre-looking

Editor's note: This story was updated to correct the number of signatures on the petition to build a Starship Enterprise. The correct number of petition signatures to date is?5,973.

You can follow SPACE.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter?@tariqjmalik.?Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter?@Spacedotcom?and on?Facebook.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-death-star-us-military-white-house-says-160359143.html

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China's e-commerce giant aims to remain agile

Lead Photo

Alibaba Group claims to sell more goods to online shoppers than Amazon.com Inc. and eBay Inc. combined, but the Chinese e-commerce giant aims to remain nimble. With that in mind, the company announced this week plans to divide itself into 25 business units, the company?s third reorganization in less than two years.

"We are going to make the most difficult?organizational and cultural?transformation in Alibaba's 13-year history," chairman and CEO Jack Ma wrote in an e-mail to the company?s 24,000 employees, according to the company?s Alizila blog. Ma urged employees to "work together to make every business unit small but beautiful, and enable them to collaboratively drive the development of and create value for the ecosystem."

The change will keep Alibaba agile at a time when China?s Internet industry is changing rapidly, says Alibaba chief financial officer Joe Tsai.

"Rather than looking at six or seven big business groups, each of the 25 units could be a significant player in their industry and be very influential," he said. For example, he says, for the first time Alibaba has broken out online travel as a separate division.

Alibaba split itself into seven business units in July. A year earlier, it divided its Taobao?marketplace business into three units.

These reorganizations are Ma?s response to the rapid evolution of e-commerce in China, says Ernie Diaz, director of Beijing-based online marketing firm Web Presence in China. ?As the breakneck development of Chinese e-commerce ramifies into ever more profitable sub-industries: cloud hosting, display advertising, affiliate marketing, et al, Jack sees that the only way for Alibaba to remain a giant on the e-landscape is to create dedicated subdivisions to influence and dominate that development,? Diaz says. ?Keeping these subdivisions integrated rather than siloed will be the issue that defines the success of this new tactic.?

These changes come as Alibaba reports ongoing growth and heads for a likely initial public offering of stock this year or next. The company says its two big online marketplaces in China?Taobao for smaller sellers and Tmall for larger brands?exceeded 1 trillion yuan?worth of sales ($161 billion) in the first eleven months of 2012, a month ahead of company projections. Company executives expect those sales to triple in the next five years, putting Alibaba in position to challenge Wal-Mart Stores Inc. as the world?s largest retailer.

Taobao and Tmall dominate online retailing in China, accounting for 81.5% of online purchases by Chinese shoppers in 2011, according to data from investment firm Macquarie Capital Securities Limited. That helps account for the $40 billion market valuation of Alibaba, based on the $7.6 billion it paid Yahoo Inc. in September for about half of its 40% stake in the Chinese firm.

Alibaba also scored a coup last month when the U.S. government removed?Alibaba from a list of marketplaces where counterfeit and pirated goods are freely sold.

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Source: http://www.findata.co.nz/News/18669990/China39s_ecommerce_giant_aims_to_remain_agile.htm

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Ask Engadget: best smartphone car mount?

Ask Engadget best smartphone car mount

We know you've got questions, and if you're brave enough to ask the world for answers, then here's the outlet to do so. This week's Ask Engadget inquiry is from Sam, who needs to find a new way of attaching a Galaxy S III to a windshield. If you're looking to ask one of your own, drop us a line at ask [at] engadget [dawt] com.

"I've ditched my GPS unit for a Galaxy S III in my car, but I can't find a good windshield mount. Are there any models that don't use suction cups? For some reason they won't stick to my window, and yes, before you ask, yes I do keep it clean. Thanks!"

While we wouldn't recommend doing anything unhealthy, we've found a good lick on the suction cup before attaching it sometimes helps. Your mileage, however, may vary. Still, you could always try one of TomTom's generic smartphone dashboard mounts or perhaps even using a Bean Bag mount? As for a window mount that doesn't use suction cups? That's a question we'll leave for our friendly commenters to join in on.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/05/ae-smartphone-car-gps-mount/

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Parks and Recreation Youth Tennis Lessons Starting Soon ...

Home | Multiple Categories | Parks and Recreation Youth Tennis Lessons Starting Soon

Missoula Parks and Recreation invites kids to try ?10-&-Under Tennis,? lessons designed especially for younger children. 10-&-Under Tennis is an exciting new play format designed to bring kids into the game by utilizing specialized equipment, shorter court dimensions and modified scoring, all tailored to their age and size.? Within the first hour of stepping onto the court, kids are actually playing the game, rallying with one another, moving around and having fun!

10-&-Under Tennis lessons for kids ages 5 to 10 meet Tuesdays and Thursdays afternoons beginning Tuesday, January 8.? New four-week sessions begin on February 5 and March 5.? Lessons meet from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at Parks and Recreation?s Sports and Wellness Center at 1515 Fairview.? The registration fee is $50, or $40 with a city resident discount card.? Parks and Recreation?s tennis pro, Collin Fehr, is a nationally certified tennis instructor with over 20 years of tennis experience.? 10 & Under Tennis is the fast, fun way to get kids into tennis?and keep them playing.

To register, phone 721-PARK or stop by Currents Aquatics Center in McCormick Park. For more information, visit the Parks and Recreation website.

Source: http://www.makeitmissoula.com/2013/01/parks-and-recreation-youth-tennis-lessons-starting-soon/

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Confess? Armstrong may not have much to gain

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Lance Armstrong may be considering a change in course, dropping his years of denials and admitting that he used performance-enhancing drugs ? though whether such a move would help him is uncertain.

The New York Times, citing anonymous sources, reported late Friday that Armstrong has told associates he is thinking about the move.

However, Armstrong attorney Tim Herman says that the cyclist hasn't reached out to USADA chief executive Travis Tygart and David Howman, director general of the World Anti-Doping Agency.

A USADA spokeswoman declined comment on Saturday, while Howman was quoted by the Sunday Star-Times in New Zealand, where he is vacationing, saying Armstrong has not approached his group.

USADA stripped Armstrong of his seven Tour de France titles last year and issued a report portraying the cyclist as the leader of a sophisticated doping operation on his winning teams.

Public confessions and apologies have been the route of redemption for several athletes who have gotten in trouble.

For example, Tiger Woods said he was sorry for cheating on his wife in televised speech, and baseball slugger Mark McGwire eventually admitted to steroid use. Yet Armstrong faces serious legal entanglements those megastars didn't, and a confession to doping could end up complicating matters for Armstrong ? not making them easier.

The U.S. Department of Justice is considering whether to join a federal whistle-blower lawsuit filed by former Armstrong teammate Floyd Landis alleging fraud against the U.S. Postal Service during the years the agency sponsored Armstrong's teams.

A Dallas-based promotions company has also said it wants to recover several million dollars paid to Armstrong in bonuses for winning the Tour de France. And the British newspaper The Sunday Times is suing to recover about $500,000 paid to Armstrong to settle a libel lawsuit.

Armstrong has testified under oath that he never used performance-enhancing drugs, which could theoretically lead to charges if he confessed. Former U.S. track star Marion Jones spent several months in federal prison for lying to investigators about her drug use.

And after so many years of vehement denials and sworn statements that he never doped, at this point, what would Armstrong gain from a confession? There would be no guarantee that his personal sponsors would return or that the public would accept it.

Is the public even interested in an Amrstrong confession?

Gene Grabowski, executive vice president of Levick, a Washington, D.C.-based crisis and issues management firm, said "it may be too little, too late because he's been denying it for so long."

A confession would only work to salvage Armstrong's reputation if he accepted full responsibility and blamed no one else, Grabowski said. And it would have to include some public act of atonement.

"If he does all three, he has a shot," Grabowski said. "You have to show people you are willing to pay a price."

The New York Times reported the 41-year-old Armstrong may be considering a confession in an attempt to reduce his lifetime ban from cycling and Olympic sport so he can return to competing in triathlons and elite running events.

Armstrong lost most of his personal sponsorship worth tens of millions of dollars after USADA issued its report and he left the board of the Livestrong cancer-fighting charity he founded in 1997. He is still worth about a reported $100 million.

Livestrong might be one reason to issue an apology. The charity supports cancer patients and still faces an image problem because of its association with its famous founder.

And if Armstrong did confess, the corporate sponsors who abandoned him might support him again, Grabowski said.

"They'll do what the public does," Grabowski said.

Betsy Andreu, the wife of former Armstrong teammate Frankie Andreu, was one of the first to publicly accuse Armstrong of using performance-enhancing drugs.

She dismissed a potential confession from Armstrong as self-serving and too late.

"Sorry, your chance is over. You're banned for life. It's not with an asterisk, that because you are Lance Armstrong you get to come back," Andreu said. "He does not belong in sport."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/confess-armstrong-may-not-much-gain-220539709--spt.html

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Inmate ordered retried in '80 'waiting ever since'

GATESVILLE, Texas (AP) ? Jerry Hartfield was still a young man when an uncle visited him in prison to tell him that his murder conviction had been overturned and he would get a new trial.

Not long afterward, he was moved off of death row.

"A sergeant told me to pack my stuff and I wouldn't return. I've been waiting ever since for that new trial," Hartfield, now 56, said during a recent interview at the prison near Gatesville where he's serving life for the 1976 robbery and killing of a Bay City bus station worker. He says he's innocent.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals overturned Hartfield's murder conviction in 1980 because it found a potential juror improperly was dismissed for expressing reservations about the death penalty. The state tried twice but failed to get the court to re-examine that ruling, and on March 15, 1983 ? 11 days after the court's second rejection ? then-Gov. Mark White commuted Hartfield's sentence to life in prison.

At that point, with Hartfield off death row and back in the general prison population, the case became dormant.

"Nothing got filed. They had me thinking my case was on appeal for 27 years," said Hartfield, who is described in court documents as an illiterate fifth-grade dropout with an IQ of 51, but who says he has since learned to read and has become a devout Christian.

A federal judge in Houston recently ruled that Hartfield's conviction and sentence ceased to exist when the appeals court overturned them ? meaning there was no sentence for White to commute. But Hartfield isn't likely to go free or be retried soon because the state has challenged a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' decision favorable to Hartfield, arguing he missed a one-year window in which to appeal aspects of his case.

A 5th Circuit panel of the New Orleans court agreed with the district court in an October ruling, but last month it made a rare, formal request to the Texas appeals court asking it to confirm its decades-old decision to overturn Hartfield's conviction.

Hartfield's current attorney, Kenneth R. Hawk II, recently described the case as a "one-in-a-million" situation in which an inmate has been stuck in the prison system for more than three decades because no one seems to know what to do with him.

"When you see it, it's kind of breathtaking," he said. "It was tough story for him so far and it's not over yet. ... The bottom line is the commutation came after a mandate was issued. It wasn't valid and it's time for him to get a new trial."

Several factors appear to have contributed to Hartfield's unusual predicament.

Hartfield said that when his uncle read him the article about his conviction being overturned, he didn't fully grasp the meaning of it. Furthermore, Hartfield's trial lawyers, who worked on his initial appeal, stopped representing him once his death sentence was commuted, said Robert Scardino, who was the lead trial attorney.

"When governor commuted the sentence, that's when our obligations to Hartfield ended," Scardino said.

Hartfield was 21 in June 1977 when he was convicted of murdering 55-year-old Eunice Lowe, a bus station ticketing agent who was beaten with a pickaxe and robbed. Her car and nearly $3,000 were stolen. Lowe's daughter found her body in a storeroom at the station.

At the time, Hartfield, who grew up in Altus, Okla., had been working on the construction of a nuclear power plant near Bay City, which is about 100 miles southwest of Houston. He was arrested within days in Wichita, Kan., and while being returned to Texas, he made a confession to officers that he calls "a bogus statement they had written against me." That alleged confession was among the key evidence used to convict Hartfield, along with an unused bus ticket found at the crime scene that had his fingerprints on it and testimony from witnesses who said he had talked about needing $3,000.

Scardino said he tried using an insanity defense for Hartfield and that psychiatrists called by the defense described Hartfield as "as crazy a human being as there was."

Virginia Higdon, who lived next door to Lowe and knew her most of her life, told the AP that she spoke to Lowe the day she was killed and her friend complained of about a man who refused to leave the station.

"'I can't get rid of this guy. He's just sitting there eating candy, a bag of candy,'" Higdon said her friend told her. "And it was Jerry Hartfield."

She said it's "absurd" that Hartfield might ever be released or retried.

Jurors deliberated for 3? hours before convicting Hartfield of murder and another 20 minutes to decide he should die, Scardino said. He said the jury foreman later told him the jurors were "all farmers and ranchers down here, and when one of our animals goes crazy, we shoot it."

Matagorda County District Attorney Steven Reis said with the appeal still pending, it's premature to discuss a possible retrial of Hartfield. Lowe's killing was particularly bloody and investigators found semen on her body, but Reis declined to say whether there was crime scene evidence from the case that could undergo DNA testing, which wasn't available when Lowe was killed.

Scardino said that if Hartfield's confession, which he believes authorities illegally obtained, is allowed at a retrial, Hartfield risks being sent back to death row.

"You have to think: Why would you undo something like that now when you might be looking at something like the death penalty?" he said.

But in 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed executing mentally impaired people, a threshold generally accepted as below the IQ of 70.

Hartfield insists that he's not angry that he's spent nearly all of his entire adult life locked up, and he says he holds no grudges.

"Being a God-fearing person, he doesn't allow me to be bitter," he said. "He allows me to be forgiving. The things that cause damage to other people, including myself, that's something I have to forgive.

"In order to be forgiven, you have to forgive."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/inmate-ordered-retried-80-waiting-ever-since-192257674.html

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Dems want House vote on Senate-passed 'cliff' deal

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., right, walks down a staircase on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2013, to a Democratic caucus meeting with Vice President Joe Biden. Squarely in the spotlight, House Republicans began deciding their next move Tuesday after the Senate overwhelmingly approved compromise legislation negating a fiscal cliff of across-the-board tax increases and sweeping spending cuts to the Pentagon and other government agencies. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of Calif., right, walks down a staircase on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2013, to a Democratic caucus meeting with Vice President Joe Biden. Squarely in the spotlight, House Republicans began deciding their next move Tuesday after the Senate overwhelmingly approved compromise legislation negating a fiscal cliff of across-the-board tax increases and sweeping spending cuts to the Pentagon and other government agencies. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

(AP) ? House Democratic leaders are pressing Speaker John Boehner to let the House vote on the Senate-approved bipartisan compromise that would avert much of the impact of the so-called fiscal cliff.

Following a nearly three-hour private meeting Tuesday between Vice President Joe Biden and House Democratic lawmakers, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi said Democrats expected Boehner to allow the House to vote on the accord.

Boehner has said the House will vote on the Senate measure or vote to amend it. He and House GOP lawmakers were also meeting Tuesday, and some Republicans expressed concerns that the measure needed more spending cuts.

The Senate passed the measure early Tuesday on an 89-8 vote.

The compromise would allow tax increases on the nation's highest earners but prevent tax boosts from everyone else.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-01-Fiscal%20Cliff-Democrats/id-5cef4352a7874967953ef5da5bff5dcd

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