![]() Most of all, it requires three taps to be activated. It turns out though, this “simple system” wasn’t so simple to achieve but now, thanks to the help of my friend I think I’ve got something here that just works and does exactly what I need. So when I get home, I’ll find the link I shared on iOS ready in my browser. What I’m looking for, and what I’m sure others like me have dreaming of for a while, it’s a simple system that allows me to send with a few taps any webpage from the iPhone (on WiFi and 3G) to the Mac, and have a new browser tab open on the desktop. AirLink, however, requires you to visit a special webpage on your browser to retrieve the link you have shared. In my Twitter poll, many followers recommended AirLink, a web service that, once installed on the Mac and iOS, allows you to send an receive webpages remotely. But the other way around, iOS to Mac, is not just as easy to achieve. Apps like Handoff ( review) and Push The Page even work remotely with the iPhone on a 3G connection. Currently, there are several iPhone apps that allow you to get links from your Mac browser onto the iPhone or iPad: most of them either work with a bookmarklet or browser extensions that, with just one click, let you “push” webpages to iOS. When I try to open this edited file Pixelmator photo doesn’t see it as a raw file, only a jpg, when I undo the changes in the photos app, then Pixelmator see the raw file again.Yesterday, I asked on Twitter if there was an easy way to send a webpage from the iPhone to the Mac.
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