Iphone Call History Recovery Software To Get Deleted Call Logs Back

For those who have an iPhone, personal data is also very important including your call history, notes, text messages, contacts, photos, etc. on your iPhone. By accident or just somhow, you have lost all your call history on iPhone. Situations like “Clean Recent” call logs by mistake, call history erased by iPhone factory restore, broken iPhone, etc. In these cases, your first priority is to recover your call history anyhow. Here are two ways for iPhone call history recovery.

If there is a backup for the call history on iTunes or iCloud, to restore from, that contains the call logs you lost. If you want to restore from the backup, connect your phone to the iTunes. Right-click (or control-click) your iPhone on iTunes under iDevices as well as choose Restore from Backup. Then your deleted or lost call history are back to your phone.

But I don’t have a backup on iTunes! What to do? Don’t worry! Here can be your last shot! iPhone call history recovery software will help you most. It restore your call history back into your iPhone without loosing any further or any previous data. Easily and efficiently you can recover deleted call history from iPhone or get all your lost iPhone call logs back.

Though iPhone has a significant different storage mechanism which differents from other smartphone have the external memory card like Samsung Galaxy S III, HTC One X, Windows Phone 7, nonetheless you can easily recover all your deleted or lost data (for example call logs, notes, texting, contacts, pictures, etc.) by using a third party specific iPhone data recovery software known as Tenorshare iTunes Data Recovery. I used it to recover deleted call history from iPhone 4s and it worked well. Even though it is a comercial product, it actually works. By the way, it is very easy to use! Just a couple of mouse clicks you can get all your call history back. You are able to download it from http://www.any-data-recovery.com/product/itunes-data-recovery.htm

Heres how to recover iPhone call history using iPhone call history recovery software(available for Windows and Mac OS), follow the steps below:
Be Careful: Do not connect or sync your iPhone along with iTunes to avoid data loss.
1. Download and install Tenorshare iTunes Data Recovery on your running machine.
2. Open the program and choose on the right backup file for your phone under the iDevice list. Click on “Start Scan”.
3. After the scanning, all your iPhone files like photos, notes, cal history, contacts, SMS messages, etc. will be shown in categories. You can preview any of them before recovery. Then, choose the files you want to recover and click “Recover”.
4. One last thing you need to do is to set a path to Save your recovered content on your computer.

After the recovery, you can import your call history to your iPhone 4/4S/5 again.

If you have time, check out my personal blog to learn more tips and tricks for how to use your iPhone better.

Resource from
http://www.recoveriphonephotos.com/recover-iphone-call-history.html

Amadeus Consulting Discusses HPs webOS and its Impact on Custom App Developers

Will there be a Potential Market for App Developers?

When Microsoft launched Windows Phone 7 late last year, it came with only a very small app store. For developers with the foresight and ambition to be in the app store on launch day, there was a very large payout. Not only was there very little competition at the beginning, but they retained their “most popular” status for quite some time which kept them ahead of new apps.

Apples iPhone app store and its Mac app store also saw the same thing during the initial launch, and those that got there early often made big money with simple apps and retained their top positions for long periods of time even after superior apps appeared on the market.

Of course with Googles Android 2.0 and 3.0, we saw the same thing there too, and Amazons Android market (which just launched this week) seems positioned for a possible repeat as well. From a developer point of view, this places a lot of trust in platforms ability to attract a consumer market. HPs promise of quickly integrating this into a desktop market provides some incentive of a long term strategy.

However it is obvious from an app design point of view that an app running on the desktop must be different from a mobile version simply because of the interface options. HP has promised to aid with this by making easy integration of multiple input sources (multi-touch, mouse, keyboard), but developers will still need to adapt accordingly. Even so, it sounds promising.

Have an app idea for webOS app? Or even an iPhone, Android or Windows Phone 7 app? Our custom app development team has developed dozens successful apps for businesses, entrepreneurs and startup companies around the world, and wed love to help you develop your idea too.