iPhone

Set up and sync with iTunes.

MacBook Air, showing iTunes, with iPhone 3G

iPhone syncs with your PC or Mac using iTunes, just like an iPod. Get ready by organising your content now. When you get your new iPhone, you’ll be able to text, email, surf, watch, and listen in minutes.

iPhone showing different views for the contact manager

Contacts

iPhone syncs with the address book you already use on your computer — Address Book or Entourage on a Mac, or Outlook or Outlook Express on a PC. If you keep your contacts on the web using Yahoo! Address Book or Google Contacts, iPhone syncs with them, too. To get ready for iPhone, organise your contacts in one of these applications and make sure they’re up to date with the latest phone numbers and email addresses. If you don’t have contacts on your computer, you can enter them directly into iPhone.

iPhone showing different calendar views

Calendars

iPhone uses iTunes to sync with the calendar application you already use on your computer — iCal or Entourage on the Mac or Outlook on a PC — just as it does with your contacts. Have a Yahoo! or Google calendar? They both sync wirelessly to your iPhone. If you don’t already use one of these applications to manage your appointments, now is a great time to start, so you’ll be ready to sync when your iPhone arrives. If you choose not to use a calendar program, that’s OK. You’ll be able to enter appointments directly into the iPhone calendar.

iPhones showing the Mail application.

Email

iPhone works with the most popular email systems — including Yahoo! Mail, Gmail, AOL, and MobileMe. iTunes makes email setup on iPhone easy by automatically syncing the settings from email accounts stored in Mail on a Mac or Outlook on a PC. Don’t worry if you’re not using one of these email services: iPhone also works with almost any industry-standard POP3 or IMAP email system.

Photos

iPhone uses iTunes to sync your photos from iPhoto on a Mac or Adobe Photoshop Elements, Adobe Photoshop Album, or any picture folder on a PC. You can carry thousands of photos on iPhone, but you can start by creating an album or two with 50 to 100 of your favourite photos, so that when you first sync your iPhone, you can show off your best shots.

iPhone, iTunes, and the iPhone iPod icon

Music and Video

If you already use iTunes, try creating a playlist of a few hundred of your favourite songs. If you don’t have the latest version of iTunes, download it now and start a music and video library. That way, when you sync your iPhone with iTunes, you’ll be able to take your favourite music — as well as a few of your TV shows and movies — with you wherever you go.