How to use your iPhone 4S and SIRI for online banking and other transactions..

facebook logo 300x300 How to use your iPhone 4S and SIRI for online banking and other transactions..I realize this tip really applies to using any service (like online banking, facebook, twitter, etc) which offers a way to submit data via SMS text messages, but I found a neat way to use it on the fly with my online banking service. 

Like a lot of businesses, my banking’s online services offer a VERY limited set of transactions that can be completed by simply sending a text message to a prescribed number that is pre-approved via their Web interface.  In other words, your phone MUST be entered in and subscribed to their service by way of their Web site, so only your phone can access your account.

How does this work?

  1. I logged into my bank’s online Web site using several secure passwords and tokens.
  2. I subscribed to the SMS banking service, providing my phone number, carrier, and other secure details
  3. The Web site provided me with their SMS number (usually 5 digits) and a short list of commands like BAL(ance), and TRANS(fer).
  4. On my iPhone 4S, I set up a contact for “Bank” which — as the phone number — contained the 5-digit SMS number provided by my bank.

Now, from anywhere I have phone service, I can raise the phone to my ear (activating SIRI) and say “Message Bank BAL“.  SIRI asks me to confirm, and within just a second or two, my bank answers back with my balance via text message (which I immediately delete from my phone).

Is it secure? Sure.  About as secure as the online Web site as long as I don’t keep the messages on my phone.  The commands available also don’t let me do anything destructive like “send money to hackerX” or “make payment to JoeBlow”.  Otherwise, I need to make the clear disclaimer that I’m NOT a security professional, and you should use these tips at your own risk.

Twitter, Facebook, and others

Like the example above, you can subscribe to similar services inside most social networks, add a new contact (like Facebook) to your 4S, and use SIRI to say “Message Facebook blah blah blah” and it’ll post “blah blah blah” to your status message on Facebook, which is all sorts of wicked cool..

While I hate the idea of wasting my limited text messages every month to do this, at least with iMessages, you could theoretically avoid such a charge.

UPDATE: I have to do a little more testing, but with the recent outages in SIRI processing, you might need to disable the option to share your Contacts in the iCloud, making them local to your phone.  Something about the time delay between asking SIRI to send a message and the phone having to look up your contact in the cloud seems to be causing an issue.  You can temporarily disable this option in Settings >> iCloud on your iPhone.

 

Apple SIRI Command Cheatsheets – iOS 5.0 – October 2011

I picked up the new iPhone 4S the other day. Found it useful to create a “cheat sheet” of all the SIRI commands I could find. Thought I’d share it with everyone and ask for feedback/additions if you have or know of any.

iPad USB Port: What’s the big friggin deal?

apple leather1 300x300 iPad USB Port: Whats the big friggin deal?Ok, so… I’ve got this friend — the same Internet paranoid friend as the “Why do I blog?” article.  He is a fantastic friend.  The kind of guy you rely on, but he — like me — is prone to holding on to jokes that he thinks are funny for far too long, but one of them (at least I think it’s a joke) is starting to get to me.

I bought my iPad on release day.  I’ve never had a moment’s regret for it, as I use the iPad almost more than I do my desktop system.  I blog from it, I code on it, I do pretty much all things computer on it.

I’ve never.  Not one single time, ever had use for, nor missed having a USB port built into the iPad.  I even bought the dongle and have used it exactly once.  Mostly just to make sure it works (and it did) to transfer off some images from the memory card.

This friend — I call him “Bert” though it’s not his name — and I often talk about the iPad when he invariably comes around to his fall-back response “I won’t buy one because it doesn’t have a USB port“.

After all this time, and having the same old argument, I can’t tell if he’s serious, or whether he’s doing it just because he knows it yanks my proverbial chain, but in all the people whining and bitching about the lack of a USB port (not really Bert), I just don’t get it.

Not one single person has given me a real, legitimate, non-BS reason for needing a USB port on an iPad which can’t be handled with the dongle.  I agree.  It *seems* like Apple could have capitulated and put one on it just to make people happy, but I’m more interested in knowing WHY BOTHER?

USB 2.0 is on it’s way out.  USB 3.x uses a different port design which would require a dongle/adapter for most things since 3.x support right now is very scarce for most devices.  The power draw on a USB 2.x device would more than likely kill — or seriously strain — the battery on the iPad.  At a minimum, trying to power a USB 2.x device would shorten the useful battery life by half, which doesn’t really help anyone, so once again, I ask…

Why does anyone REALLY need one, or is it just another reason to hate Apple by those who don’t “get it”???  Someone PLEASE give me a real reason why the lack of a native USB port on an iPad is a legitimate problem…!  Either that, or quitcherbitchen…

SegWayne radio — "I’d give good money if he’d shut up"

u47 m vf 14 in mount1 SegWayne radio    "Id give good money if hed shut up"I love the title, but once again, Friday night and I’m bored to death.  Can’t sleep, so I thought I’d see how far I’d progressed down the padawan’s path to podcasting (say that 5 times really fast)…  Anyway, click the play button for my review of the Apple iPhone 3g.

SegWayne Radio – 082908

[podcast]http://segwayne.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/08/082908.mp3[/podcast]

Wayne Hunt
segwayne.com

Christmas in June

apple leather1 300x300 Christmas in JuneWe find our royal selves immensely amused Tuesday..

As anyone with a brain can attest, I am a relatively new Apple computer fan.  When I started my new job, the systems admin stopped by the first day in my temp office and said “whatcha need?”  I jokingly responded that “Hey, if you’re granting wishes, I’d love a mac laptop”.  Now…  No system admin has ever taken me seriously — even when I used to be one.

Enter Tuesday afternoon.  Robin (same guy) walks in with a couple of non-descript boxes and says “Merry Christmas”.  Lo and behold, the contents of said boxes contain one Mac Pro laptop and a copy of Office 2008.

Needless to say I was simply giddy and while I had other work to do, you can bet that I stayed the whole night configuring the new baby for work-like activities..  The next day, the scavengers — who for all imaging purposes appear like those little fish that suck algae off of bigger fish — quickly found the lonely, unloved Windows box sitting in the hallway.

Love this company. Love my job.  Love, love, love the Mac.  Can’t wait for the iPhone.

Apple’s new iPhone 3G, coming soon

 Apples new iPhone 3G, coming soonApple’s chief Steve Jobs unveils faster, cheaper iPhone – Jun. 9, 2008

Thanks go out to a new-found bud over at “The Shameless watching of TV” blog who got me interested in the iPhone. Since my Motorola PEBL is already dying a quick and horrid death after only two years, I had made up my mind yesterday that I was going to pull the proverbial trigger (complete with swap to AT&T) when quite serendipitously a new “3G” version was announced yesterday.

“Twice the speed, half the cost” is the rallying cry from Apple with the new versions tallying in at $199 (8GB) and $299 (16GB) respectively. The new phones, still apparently tied to AT&T’s wireless service will be released July 11th, and I’ve made up my mind that I’ll just have to bite the bullet and grab one ASAP.