Your phone is about to get way more useful
The iPhone always seems to have a new trick up its sleeve. Tucked away in the device’s myriad menus, there’s probably a setting or two you’ve never played with that could make the device even more useful. That’s to say nothing of the numerous gesture-based controls Apple tucks away in its mobile operating system, many of which may not be readily apparent. Chances are you could be typing faster, taking better pictures and noticing more texts with these hidden wonders.
Here, we uncover six lesser-known iPhone tricks that you can use every day:
Take Pictures Using Your Headphones
Pressing the volume-up button on Apple’s
official headphones will snap a picture with the iPhone’s camera app.
This is a useful trick if you’re setting up your phone on a tripod or
want to ensure your shot is steady, as you won’t have to press a button
on the screen to take a photo. You can also take a picture by hitting
the volume buttons on the side of the iPhone itself.
Shake to Undo
Typed an error into a text or email? Simply
shake the iPhone to bring up the option to Undo your last action. The
gesture works in iMessage, Mail and other default apps, but developers
can also implement the feature, so try it in all kinds of different
apps.
Take High-Quality Photos
There’s an easy way to automatically make
your iPhone camera take better pictures. With the Camera app open,
select HDR On at the top of the screen to take a high dynamic range
picture. An HDR photo takes three pictures of a scene and combines the
best parts of each to make an image that best captures what the human
eye sees.
It’s especially useful for landscapes,
pictures in sunlight and photos in low light. If you’re not sure when an
HDR photo is appropriate, select HDR Auto at the top of the Camera app,
and the iPhone will automatically determine when to use the feature.
Enable Read Receipts
If you want to receive a text from a friend,
not reply for a while, but let her know you read it, read receipts are
the feature for you. The iMessage function lets other iPhone users know
exactly what time you read their texts, similar to how BlackBerry’s BBM
worked. To enable the feature, go to Settings, scroll down to Messages
and toggle on “Send Read Receipts.” Rumor has it that the upcoming iOS 9
will also let people tailor which friends receive read receipts and
which don’t.
Create Keyboard Shortcuts
You can create custom text shortcuts for long
words or phrases you often use, like an email address. In the Settings
menu, select General, then select Keyboard, then Add New Shortcut. The
first field will ask for the long phrase you want to use and the second
field will ask for the shortcut you want to stand in for the longer
phrase. After the shortcut has been saved, if you type it into iMessage
and press the space bar, it will automatically transform into the longer
phrase.
Make your phone flash for text message alerts
Sometimes a phone vibration or chime isn’t
enough to alert you to a new text message. You can use the iPhone’s LED
flash as another alert signal. Simply open the Settings menu, select
General, Select Accessibility, then toggle LED Flash for Alerts on.