![pictures folder icon png 45x45 pictures folder icon png 45x45](https://icon-library.com/images/user-folder-icon/user-folder-icon-8.jpg)
How’d they do it and how can I have my own custom icon too? Above and to the right you can see custom home page bookmark icons for and. It’s kind of hard to see, but the icon itself is a tiny representation of the home page of the site, with the “Ask Dave” button supplying the red dot on the right side.
![pictures folder icon png 45x45 pictures folder icon png 45x45](https://gramfile.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Dr.-Folder-Screenshot-550x300.png)
Instead, I’ll actually skip the “2” so you can see the default home screen bookmark: Even here, by adding the ” 2″ to the default “Tech Support” it kinda messes up the display on the iPhone screen, showing “Tech…port 2” to fit. In this instance, shorter is definitely better. Tap it and you’ll now have a chance to fine-tune the name of the bookmark: “Add Bookmark” adds it to your bookmark menu, but the interesting feature here is Add to Home Screen. To bookmark this – or any other page – you simply tap on the “+” symbol along the bottom of the screen, which brings up: Here’s AskDaveTaylor as shown in the iPhone Safari browser:Ĭute, eh? Everything in miniature, even my shrunken voodoo head.
PICTURES FOLDER ICON PNG 45X45 HOW TO
Let me show you how it works, then I’ll explain how to make a custom icon for those bookmarks too.
PICTURES FOLDER ICON PNG 45X45 UPDATE
The latest update to the phone, 1.1.3, added a very important new feature to the phone system, one that finally gives you the ability to truly customize and tweak the phone’s base screen for your personal tastes and requirements: Home Screen Bookmarks. I can recall at least five updates since the phone was released, updates that generally improved stability and functionality, but also added new features and even entirely new applications (in this case I’m thinking of access to the iTunes Store, which just *poof* appeared one day). The Apple iPhone represents a significant step in the evolution of these phone systems, however, because, like the iPod itself, Apple continually tweaks and tunes the operating system with updates. A year ago I had just bought a Blackberry Pearl and was finding it a wonderful evolutionary step from the Motorola RAZR which, upon reflection, was all about the form factor and definitely not about the phone capabilities (especially with the crippled Verizon RAZR operating system). I’ve had a variety of different cellphones in the last few years as the technology underlying the cellular network has evolved from being about phone calls to offering up a wide variety of services, many of which have a small but growing price tag associated.