No depend how long you’ve used an iPhone, there are always new (or new-to-you) capabilities to discover. And stumbling upon a time-saving trick after such a number of years is, pretty frankly, a satisfaction.
- Here are 15 recommendations and hints that Wire cutter staffers rely on all of the time. If you don’t already recognize about them, we hope they make your lifestyles plenty much less complicated.
- Identify flowers or animals. If you are taking a picture of a plant, flower, tree, or animal, you could find out exactly what its miles by tapping the Info button on the lowest of the display screen; if your iPhone is privy to what its miles, an image with stars will appear at the bottom of the photograph. The metadata information will let you know what the plant or animal is and also will provide you with a choice to appearance up extra statistics about it.
- Transform your phone into a portable white noise machine. In Settings, go to Accessibility > Audio & Visual > Background Sounds and choose from sounds such as Ocean, Rain, and Stream. We’ve tested this ourselves and with babies, and the sounds are soothing for all.
- Ask Siri to read things to you. Open the Safari app and then command Siri to “study this” or say “I need to concentrate to this web page.” You can also faucet the Page Settings button on the left of the cope with bar and tap Listen to Page. You have the choice to modify the speak me pace as well as pause.
- Schedule a text to send later. If you don’t want people to know you’re awake at all hours of the night, schedule your messages to send at more, uh, normal hours. Open a chat, type your text, and then tap the + on the left side of the message field. Select Send Later, then choose a day and time for your scheduled message to be delivered.
- Keep people out of your private tabs. If you’ve been away from Safari for 15 minutes, your iPhone can require authentication before displaying your private tabs. That’s handy if you often let other people use your phone and would like to keep some browsing habits private. To enable the feature, go to Settings, tap Safari, scroll down, and switch on the toggle for Require Face ID to Unlock Private Browsing.
- Create gestures that you can trigger with your voice. The iOS accessibility features can replay any series of touch actions when you give a voice command. Imagine mapping out an entire, tedious action that you do frequently in an app, such as manually entering information to move through screens, or having a command that scrawls your signature or draws a picture. Go to Settings, tap Accessibility, and then tap Voice Control. Toggle it on, and then tap Commands > Create New Command. Enter your desired command phrase, tap Action, and then tap Run Custom Gesture. Use your finger to create the gesture on your home screen, and your phone will replay it when you say the trigger phrase. Note: We found that Voice Control would respond to anyone using the commands, so maybe turn this one off when you aren’t using it.
- Quickly remove the background from photos. Tap and hold any picture stored in the Files app, and then tap Quick Actions > Remove Background. iOS creates a duplicate of your original photo with no background—perfect for further editing in another app. You can use the same trick with several photos, too.
- Use two fingers to select all. Just swipe down to select all to mark every item as read or mass-delete items within apps like Messages, Mail, Notes, and Reminders. This action also works in some third-party apps, such as Telegram, but there is no support yet in others, like Gmail.
- Copy or translate text with the camera. Open the camera app and point your phone lens at a block of text. An icon with three lines in an outlined square appears at the bottom-right corner. Tap the icon, and it captures the text with the option to copy, select all, look up, translate, or share.
- Look up laundry-care icons. After you take a photo of a laundry-care label, tap the Info button at the bottom of the page and tap Look Up Laundry Care. The results will show you what each specific label means.
- Lock apps you don’t want people to open. You can protect specific apps with Face ID, which is useful if you have a kid who regularly uses your phone and you don’t want those playing games or sending accidental e-mails. Long press on the app and select Require Face ID to enable it.
- Keep people from snooping through your phone. A setting called Guided Access keeps your phone locked to one app, which is particularly useful when you’re letting kids play with your iPhone. In Settings, tap Accessibility > Guided Access to activate the feature, which prevents whoever is using your phone from exiting an app and opening another one. Just remember to turn it off once you get your phone back.
- Become a faster photographer with Camera shortcuts. Swiping left to your iPhone’s lock display screen opens the Camera app by way of default (though you can also exchange that shortcut to something else in iOS 18). It’s plenty less complicated to shoot snap shots by way of pressing the physical volume button at the facet of the phone in place of tapping the Shutter button. Swiping the Shutter button to the left shoots a group of pictures in a row, a characteristic known as burst mode, while keeping down the Shutter button shoots video without your having to swipe into video mode. Shaving a second off the time it takes to snap a picture or report video can be precious when you’re shooting something fleeting, like rapid-transferring children or pets.
- Limit screen time for specific apps. Wasting too much time mindlessly scrolling TikTok or Instagram? You can turn on a setting that restricts your access to those apps. Within Settings, tap Screen Time, and then tap Add Limits > Add Limit. You can select an entire app category, such as Social, or you can set limits on specific apps by tapping the category and then selecting apps within those categories. Tap next in the top-right corner and then choose how much time you’ll allow yourself to spend in those apps. You can give yourself more time on weekends if you want by tapping Customize Days.
- Move a group of apps to another page on your home screen. When you’re curating your iPhone home screen, moving apps one by one to a different page can be tedious. You can move a group of apps over at the same time: Just long-press an app, tap Edit Home Screen, and then grab the app you want to move. While still holding your finger on the screen, tap on each app icon you’d like to move with it, and the iPhone will grab them all.