20 Hidden iPhone features

AggieMike88

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The original "I don't know it all" of aviation.
Found this article and thought it's worth sharing. A few of the tips I (and maybe you) already knew about. But there were several I didn't.
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Each of the tips that follow below, however, are completely hidden. There is no indication that these functions exist in iOS, and we guarantee that most users don’t know about them. In fact, we also guarantee that even the savviest iPhone owners among you will find at least one or two things you didn’t already know. In fact, ran this list past a friend who works at Apple and there were a few things that even he didn’t know.

Enjoy.

Redial: In the Phone app, press the green call button on the keypad screen to make the last dialed number appear.

Clear cache: Make your iPhone run faster by clearing out the cache in several of Apple’s apps using a secret trick. In the App Store, Podcasts, Music, Game Center and Phone apps, tap on any single tab icon at the bottom of the screen 10 times in a row.

Make TouchID work faster: Save the same fingerprint multiple times as different entries and TouchID will work much faster. This is especially useful on older phones like the iPhone 6 and iPhone 5s.

Spotlight conversions: Remember when we told you how easy conversions are in our post on Google search tricks? It’s even easier for iPhone users — just open Spotlight and type something like “20 euros in GBP,” and it will instantly perform the conversion.

Spotlight math: Want to do a quick math problem? No need to open the Calculator app, just pull down to open Spotlight and type it right there.

Delete numbers in the Calculator: Speaking of the Calculator, you can delete single digits when you tap the wrong number by swiping left or right on the screen where the numbers appear.

Clear RAM to make your phone run faster: Hold down the power button until you see “Slide to power off,” then let go and hold down the home button until the screen goes blank and your home screen reappears.

Burst mode: Hold down the camera’s shutter button to shoot in burst mode.

Remote shutter: Use the volume up or down button on your headphones to snap a photo in the Camera app.

Turn the flashlight off: How many times have you turned your flashlight on and wished that you didn’t have to swipe open the Control Panel again to shut it off? We’ll save you a step: simply swipe up on the camera icon on your lock screen and the flashlight will turn off.

3D Touch while drawing: All of the drawing tools and the eraser are pressure sensitive in the Notes app.

Close multiple apps at once: Double-tap the home button to open the app switcher and you can use two, even three fingers to slide multiple apps closed with one swipe.

Recently closed tabs: Want to reread this article on your phone but you forgot what site you were reading it on in the first place? Simply tap and hold on the + symbol in Safari on the tab carousel view to open a screen that lists all of your recently closed tabs.

Desktop version of a site: We all know you can request the desktop version of a mobile site in Safari but it’s easier to do than you think. Just hold down the reload button in the URL bar.

Peek at tabs: Not sure you want to open that tab in the Safari tab carousel? A 3D Touch will let you Peek at it first.

Peek at bookmarks: Did you know you can use 3D Touch to Peek at bookmarks before you open them?

Edit reminders: 3D Touch an item in your Reminders app to edit the time or add a location.

View only unread emails: So you don’t practice “inbox zero” like I do but you only want to see unread emails in your inbox. Tap the Mailboxes link in the top right corner of the Mail app and then tap Edit. Tap the circle next to “Unread” and you’ll have a new folder that contains only your unread emails.

Save a draft with one swipe: In the Mail app, tap on the subject line and swipe down to the bottom of the screen to save a draft.

Quick Reply: When you get a notification at the top of the screen that you have a new iMessage or SMS, pull the notification downward to reply without leaving the screen you’re on.

Hidden level(s): Slide to the left in the Compass app open the level. Then place your phone flat with the screen facing away from the ground to reveal a bubble level.

Artist Peek: 3D Touch an artist in the Music app to Peek at their music.

Re-enable Low Power Mode: When Low Power Mode automatically shuts off as you charge, you’ll get a notification on your lock screen that it has been disabled. Swipe left on that notification to turn it back on.

Find an iPhone’s owner: Did you find a lost iPhone in a bar? Simply ask Siri, “whose phone is this?” and it will show you so you can get in touch with him or her and return it.

Reachability: This is one of the new iPhones’ best features and there are still SO many people who don’t know about it. Double-touch (don’t tap, touch) on the home button and the entire screen will shift down so you can reach the top without shifting your grip.
 
Thanks, didn't know about RAM and chache
 
And if you throw it across a room, it flies quiet well :)
 
Spotlight conversions: Remember when we told you how easy conversions are in our post on Google search tricks? It’s even easier for iPhone users — just open Spotlight and type something like “20 euros in GBP,” and it will instantly perform the conversion.

It's worth noting that this also works in airplane mode. I sometimes use Spotlight as an app launcher, especially when using someone else's iDevice where they invariably have their apps in some arbitrary non-alphabetical order.

Spotlight math: Want to do a quick math problem? No need to open the Calculator app, just pull down to open Spotlight and type it right there.

Good to know, since the iPad lacks the Calculator app.
 
Something on the most recent hardwares such as the 6s and iPad Pro. Senses how hard you press the surface.

I've been playing with it on the 6s I just got, it's really handy for the touch short cuts.

Press hard on the phone app and it pops a quick link to dial you 3 most recent, same with message, calendar shows your next event or make a new event, plus preview of links and emails, cool stuff.
 
Good to know, since the iPad lacks the Calculator app.
That seemed like a dumb decision to me. I remember looking for it when I first got the iPad. Even the Mac has a Calculator app.
 
Also does no harm only a week to do a complete hard reset - hold the power and home button down for 8 seconds
 
Found this article and thought it's worth sharing. A few of the tips I (and maybe you) already knew about. But there were several I didn't.

_____________________________________________



Each of the tips that follow below, however, are completely hidden. There is no indication that these functions exist in iOS, and we guarantee that most users don’t know about them. In fact, we also guarantee that even the savviest iPhone owners among you will find at least one or two things you didn’t already know. In fact, ran this list past a friend who works at Apple and there were a few things that even he didn’t know.



Enjoy.



Redial: In the Phone app, press the green call button on the keypad screen to make the last dialed number appear.



Clear cache: Make your iPhone run faster by clearing out the cache in several of Apple’s apps using a secret trick. In the App Store, Podcasts, Music, Game Center and Phone apps, tap on any single tab icon at the bottom of the screen 10 times in a row.



Make TouchID work faster: Save the same fingerprint multiple times as different entries and TouchID will work much faster. This is especially useful on older phones like the iPhone 6 and iPhone 5s.



Spotlight conversions: Remember when we told you how easy conversions are in our post on Google search tricks? It’s even easier for iPhone users — just open Spotlight and type something like “20 euros in GBP,” and it will instantly perform the conversion.



Spotlight math: Want to do a quick math problem? No need to open the Calculator app, just pull down to open Spotlight and type it right there.



Delete numbers in the Calculator: Speaking of the Calculator, you can delete single digits when you tap the wrong number by swiping left or right on the screen where the numbers appear.



Clear RAM to make your phone run faster: Hold down the power button until you see “Slide to power off,” then let go and hold down the home button until the screen goes blank and your home screen reappears.



Burst mode: Hold down the camera’s shutter button to shoot in burst mode.



Remote shutter: Use the volume up or down button on your headphones to snap a photo in the Camera app.



Turn the flashlight off: How many times have you turned your flashlight on and wished that you didn’t have to swipe open the Control Panel again to shut it off? We’ll save you a step: simply swipe up on the camera icon on your lock screen and the flashlight will turn off.



3D Touch while drawing: All of the drawing tools and the eraser are pressure sensitive in the Notes app.



Close multiple apps at once: Double-tap the home button to open the app switcher and you can use two, even three fingers to slide multiple apps closed with one swipe.



Recently closed tabs: Want to reread this article on your phone but you forgot what site you were reading it on in the first place? Simply tap and hold on the + symbol in Safari on the tab carousel view to open a screen that lists all of your recently closed tabs.



Desktop version of a site: We all know you can request the desktop version of a mobile site in Safari but it’s easier to do than you think. Just hold down the reload button in the URL bar.



Peek at tabs: Not sure you want to open that tab in the Safari tab carousel? A 3D Touch will let you Peek at it first.



Peek at bookmarks: Did you know you can use 3D Touch to Peek at bookmarks before you open them?



Edit reminders: 3D Touch an item in your Reminders app to edit the time or add a location.



View only unread emails: So you don’t practice “inbox zero” like I do but you only want to see unread emails in your inbox. Tap the Mailboxes link in the top right corner of the Mail app and then tap Edit. Tap the circle next to “Unread” and you’ll have a new folder that contains only your unread emails.



Save a draft with one swipe: In the Mail app, tap on the subject line and swipe down to the bottom of the screen to save a draft.



Quick Reply: When you get a notification at the top of the screen that you have a new iMessage or SMS, pull the notification downward to reply without leaving the screen you’re on.



Hidden level(s): Slide to the left in the Compass app open the level. Then place your phone flat with the screen facing away from the ground to reveal a bubble level.



Artist Peek: 3D Touch an artist in the Music app to Peek at their music.



Re-enable Low Power Mode: When Low Power Mode automatically shuts off as you charge, you’ll get a notification on your lock screen that it has been disabled. Swipe left on that notification to turn it back on.



Find an iPhone’s owner: Did you find a lost iPhone in a bar? Simply ask Siri, “whose phone is this?” and it will show you so you can get in touch with him or her and return it.



Reachability: This is one of the new iPhones’ best features and there are still SO many people who don’t know about it. Double-touch (don’t tap, touch) on the home button and the entire screen will shift down so you can reach the top without shifting your grip.


I disagree with his assertion that these are "undocumented". Some comments below.

Redial: Documented, use it all the time. Also calls back last missed call I believe.

Cache: New. Interesting.

TouchID: Not only documented but it prompts you to do it when you're setting it up and only lets you exit if you're in a hurry and say no.

Spotlight: Known because it's driven by the same engine Siri uses. Siri can do math also if you can speak it properly to her.

RAM: Isn't that just a documented standard reboot?

Burst and Remote shutter: Camera tricks were well covered during the keynote when they were released and are documented everywhere.

Flashlight: Interesting. It's a side effect of activating the camera module. It needs the light for the flash.

Touch: Shown during keynote along with the goofy ipencil. Well documented.

Close Apps: Been doing that since iOS 7 I think?

Desktop version: Useful. Reader view is usually better.

Touch stuff: See other Touch comment. All documented and well demoed. Not all that useful for most since 3D touch isn't in anything but the newest phones. Millions without it.

Unread Emails: Not well documented but most iPhone tech sites have had it documented for a while now. Very handy.

Draft in mail: Hadn't heard that one. Don't like drafts anyway because you also have to be careful which mail server it stores the draft one and check to see if it guessed your from address correctly or you'll be hunting for it on the wrong server later. Assuming you have more than one mail server attached. I have four.

Quick reply: Heck, that's the only reason I even leave notifications on. Works for almost any app that notifies too. It'll open the app if it's not something you can "reply" to. Like Foreflight telling you it stopped downloading in the background for the 100th time during a cycle update. Ha.

Bubble level: it blows. Go find a real level. There's a reason they hid it. It wasn't hidden when it first came out. Accelerometers don't work that way. ;)

Low Power: Don't know how useful that is. If I need it to charge a LOT in a short time I'd better set it down and lock it turning the screen off. Low power mode is mostly annoying.

Owner: neat Siri trick. Doesn't work if you tell Siri she can't respond when the phone is locked, which you probably should because she can read all your emails and texts to anyone even when locked.

Reach ability: Absolutely hate it. Do it by accident all the time and don't have any problems "shifting my grip" on iPhone 6+. I'm sure someone loves it.
 
GeorgeC: I use spotlight as an app launcher all the time. I never leave "Page 1" on my phone. Important stuff is there in folders, the hundred other apps are all over the rest of the pages. I don't bother flipping for them, I just type a few characters of their name.
 
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