Apple officially released iOS 17 into the wild on September 18. The latest update packs a number of new tools that make engaging with your iPhone a more personal experience. One of those features, ...
iOS 17 has arrived, and one of its coolest new features is the Contact Poster. It’s a large-screen visual you can customize–similar to your Lock Screen–that displays on other iPhone users’ screens ...
Apple’s newfound love for bold aesthetic refinements in iOS 16 has continued with iOS 17, which is currently in the public beta phase and will be released widely in the coming months. One of those ...
You can use Contact Posters with the pre-installed Phone app, third-party phone apps that support the feature, and NameDrop, among other things. To enable Contact ...
Description: Photoshop cc 2014 tutorial showing how to make a custom, vintage, Old West, “WANTED” poster. Photo provided by ...
Photoshop cc tutorial showing how to create an authentic-looking, 1960s, psychedelic rock, music poster. (Design #1) ...
Whether in academia or industry many of us -pre-pandemic- waded through crowded poster halls at conferences to get quick glimpses at snapshots of research projects presented in this condensed form.
While writing “Comparing the Classic and Unified Views in iOS 26’s Phone App” (10 November 2025), I commented that the Unified view’s Calls screen was more attractive if you had contact posters for ...
Don’t push those Barbiecore ‘fits to the back of your closet just yet. We’re still very much living in a Barbie world. After Warner Bros. dropped a new trailer for the Barbie movie coming out this ...
Creating your own poster meme is a simple affair. Head to the official Barbie Selfie Generator and hit “Start.” As long as the device you’re using has a camera, you can choose to either take a selfie ...
Last week, NPR’s "All Things Considered" covered an unusual topic: Scientific conference posters. For the first time in decades, scientists are rethinking the traditional design of the posters they ...
Hey science, your posters stink. Mike Morrison, a Ph.D. candidate in organizational psychology at Michigan State University, is way too polite to say it that way. But that's the implicit message ...