1. Rise and shine
You no longer need to slide to open or press the home
button to glance at your iPhone's screen. With Raise to Wake, you need
only pick up your iPhone to see your lock screen and any notifications
that may await. If you would rather the lock screen not flash on each
time you lift your iPhone, go to Settings > Display & Brightness and turn off the toggle switch for Raise to Wake.
2. Lock screen limits
Your iPhone can show a lot of information on the lock
screen, which is convenient for quickly glancing at reminders, messages
and more. Should you want to restrict what information can be accessed
from your iPhone without your passcode, go to Settings > Touch ID & Passcode and disable whichever items you don't want showing up on your lock screen.
3. Rest or press?
With Slide to Unlock a thing of the past, you now press
the home button to unlock your iPhone. If you'd rather just rest your
finger on the home button, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Home Button and toggle on the switch for Rest Finger to Open.
4. Choose your click
If you back up a level from the previous tip, you can
adjust the strength of the buzzing haptic feedback you receive when you
press the home button. Go to Settings > General > Home Button and you can choose your click, from a slight (1) to heavy (3).
5. Hidden Control Center panel
You know how you can swipe up from the bottom edge of
your iPhone to call up the Control Center? It lets you adjust Wi-Fi and
Bluetooth settings, turn on the flashlight and a bunch of other settings
and features. But did you know that you can swipe to the left when
viewing the Control Center? That lets you access its second panel of
playback controls for music or podcasts.
6. Send messages with effect
The Messages app received a substantial overhaul with iOS
10. You can now add stickers and GIFs as well as message effects. There
are four bubble effects -- Slam, Loud, Gentle and Invisible Ink -- and
five screen effects -- Balloons, Confetti, Lasers, Fireworks and
Shooting Star -- and they are somewhat hidden. To access them, type your
message into the text field as you normally would but instead of
tapping the blue up arrow button to send your message, tap-and-hold the
up arrow button to send your entered text with one of the nine effects.
7. Preserve camera setting
By default, the Camera app opens to the standard Photo
mode (as opposed to Video, Square or any of the other camera modes). If
you would rather it remember what mode you last used and open to that
instead, you can do just that with the iOS 10.2 update. Go to Settings > Photos & Camera > Preserve Settings and toggle on Camera Mode. There are also toggles for preserving photo filters and Live Photos.
8. Lock camera (7 Plus only)
For iPhone 7 Plus owners, you have the luxury of shooting
photos and videos with one of two rear-facing cameras. Switching
between the two cameras, however, can create some flicker when recording
video. To prevent such flickering, you can lock down whichever camera
you want to shoot a video. Head to Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Video and toggle on Lock Camera Lens.
9. On the Night Shift
Turn the cool, blue colors that may make it harder for you to fall asleep at night into warmer hues in the evening. Go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Night Shift and schedule this setting for a specific block of time or manually enable it until the next day.
10. Bedtime alarm
Flicking up on my iPhone, tapping the Timer button from
Control Center, tapping the Alarm button and then tapping to turn on my
alarm is a familiar sequence, but that's no longer the last thing I do
at night before going to bed. Apple has added a new Bedtime button to
the Clock app. It lets you set a time to wake up and the number of hours
of sleep you'd like to get each night.
Source : Cnet
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