Ipods,java the latest car accessories..........
The iPhone synchronizes music, photos, and videos in the same way that the iPod does -- via the iTunes software program and the iPod "dock connector" port.
Currently, you cannot officially synchronize the iPhone via Bluetooth or wi-fi.
Starting with iPhone OS 3.0, and continuing with iOS 4, it became possible for "any application, not just games, to communicate between devices using Bluetooth" and as a result, support for synchronizing additional data over Bluetooth is provided by some third-party applications as well.
As designed with the first and second versions of the iPhone operating system, the iPhone software did not allow one to transfer music, photos, or videos between iPhones. The iPhone could not be used to transfer data files via Bluetooth or wi-fi, nor did it support "disk mode" when connected to a Mac or PC.
However, as is often the case, where Apple decided to deny access, third-parties came to the rescue.
It's not quite as convenient as it would be to directly "beam" music, photos, videos, or data files between iPhones, but as first spotted by the TUAW blog, there is a third-party iPhone application called Song Sender that makes it easy to send a song by e-mail to another iPhone -- or any other device with e-mail access -- or add the song to the available ringtones on your iPhone.
To solve the lack of iPhone "disk mode" functionality, PhoneView (originally named iPhoneDrive) makes it possible to copy files from a Mac to the iPhone for transfer to another computer as well as access some types of files on the iPhone itself. For Windows users, TouchCopy provides many of the same functions.
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