And I'd love to know how to do this one with Voiceover:

You can hide entire home screen panels with just a few taps. Long-press on an 
empty area of your home screen to trigger edit mode. Next, tap on the page 
indicator, then tap the check mark below each panel you want
to remove. This won't delete those apps, but will instead move them solely to 
the App Library.

How does a Voiceover user long-press on an empty area of the home screen?

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Saturday, September 19, 2020 9:17 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: 9 Best New iOS 14 Hidden Features We Found for your iPhone, cNet

9 best new iOS 14 hidden features we found for your iPhone

We've dug through iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 and discovered a handful of hidden gems. 
We'll show you where to find them.

iOS 14 is full of hidden gems; you just have to know where to look. 

Apple's brand-new iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 for the iPhone ($699 at Amazon) and iPad 
($285 at Back Market) add some fancy new features like widgets on the 
homescreen, an app drawer of sorts and privacy improvements. (Here's how to 
install iOS 14 and iPad 14 right now, after prepping your phone or tablet, of 
course.) 

All of those features are welcome enhancements, but my favorite tricks in iOS 
14 and iPadOS 14 are the ones you have to work to find. For instance, you can 
now fully ditch Apple Mail and Safari with a new default apps setting. 

Below, I'll walk you through how to use nine of the best hidden features I've 
uncovered in iOS 14. This list will surely continue to grow, so check back for 
more gems.  

1.
Set your default email or web browser
It's true, Apple is finally giving up some control over your default apps.
Right now the feature is limited to email apps and web browsers. So, for 
example, you can assign Chrome to be your go-to browser or Outlook as your 
email app of choice.  
App developers will need to update their apps for iOS 14 in order for the new 
default assignment option to appear, so you may need to be patient if your 
favorite app isn't ready.  
To get started, open your iPhone or iPad's Settings app and then scroll down to 
the bottom where it lists all of your installed apps. Find the mail or browser 
app you're looking for and tap on it. If it's been updated for iOS 14, you'll 
see either Default Browser App or Default Email App; tap it and then select 
your preferred app.  
There's currently a bug in iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 that resets your default app 
selection when you restart your device. Apple is aware and promises a future 
update will fix it.  
Right now, I know Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Outlook and Hey email have 
updated to include this new "default" toggle.  

2.
Quickly get rid of app home screens
iOS 14's new App Library acts like an app drawer, allowing you to ditch 
countless home screens full of apps you rarely, if ever, use. Instead of going 
through each app one by one and sending them to the App Library, you can hide 
entire home screen panels with just a few taps.  
Long-press on an empty area of your home screen to trigger edit mode. Next, tap 
on the page indicator, then tap the check mark below each panel you want to 
remove. This won't delete those apps, but will instead move them solely to the 
App Library, where they're more or less hidden in an app drawer that you can 
access at any time.

3.
Banish newly downloaded apps from your home screen You just took all that time 
to curate your home screens, adding widgets and keeping just your most 
important apps, only to have all of your hard work ruined by a new app you just 
downloaded. Instead of letting your iPhone put apps on your home screen when 
you install them, send them directly to the App Library until they prove 
they're worthy.  
Open Settings > Home Screen and select App Library Only in the top section.
You can easily find recently downloaded apps in the App Library's Recently 
Added category, which should be the top-right folder when you view it.  

4.
Can't find that emoji you need? Search for it. 
Search the emoji keyboard
Finally -- yes, this one deserves a very loud "FINALLY! "-- you can search the 
emoji picker for exactly what you want. Launch the emoji keyboard just like you 
always do and now you'll find a search bar at the top of the keyboard.  

5.
Your hidden photo album can actually be hidden now. Cool, right? 
Hidden photos are now actually hidden
The ability to hide specific photos or videos has been in iOS and iPadOS for 
awhile now, but there was a big problem -- these photos you didn't want to see 
anymore were stored in a Hidden Album in the Photos app that was far too easy 
to find. With iOS 14, Apple has added the option to hide the hidden album, 
letting you truly cloak those photos and videos you want to keep, but don't 
want anyone else to see.  
Turn it on by going to Settings > Photos and making sure the Hidden Album 
switch is turned off. (Yes, off: Enabling the setting means the Hidden Album 
will show in the Albums tab.) Anything you hide in your camera roll will still 
be saved on your device and in your iCloud Photos library, but you won't have a 
way to get to it unless you go back to this setting and turn the Hidden Album 
feature on.  

6.
Picture-in-picture is one of our favorite iOS 14 features. 
Watch YouTube videos in Picture in Picture mode The iPhone now has one of my 
favorite iPad features: Picture in Picture
(PiP) mode for watching videos or using during FaceTime calls. Here's how it 
works. Instead of having to stay in an app, for example if you're watching your 
favorite game streamer in Twitch, you can swipe up from the bottom of the 
screen to leave the app and the video will automatically shrink down to a 
floating window. You can move this thumbnail video around, or even hide it off 
the edge of the screen if you just want to listen to the audio. 
The YouTube app doesn't support PiP right now, but you can get around that by 
starting to watch a YouTube video in Safari in full-screen mode, then swiping 
up to go back to your home screen. The key is you have to put the video in 
full-screen mode before leaving the app.  
If you'd rather not trigger PiP when you leave an app, turn off automatic 
activation by going to Settings > General > Picture in Picture and turn it off. 
After which, the only time PiP will be used is when you tap on the icon in a 
playing video.  

7.
Fake eye contact in FaceTime
We first saw FaceTime's eye contact feature show up in the iOS 13 beta last 
year, but ultimately it was never released. Well, it's back in iOS 14.
Essentially your iPhone or iPad will make it look as if your eyes are looking 
directly into the camera, even if you're staring at the screen.  
It's a subtle feature, but one that should make the person on the other end of 
the call feel as if you're fully paying attention instead.  
Turn it on by going to Settings > General > FaceTime > Eye Contact.  

8.
Tap on the back of your phone to do all kinds of fancy tricks. 
Double- or triple-tap on the back of the phone to trigger actions A new 
accessibility feature called Back Tap makes it possible to trigger system 
features, like multitasking or Control Center, or launch a Shortcut just by 
tapping on the back of your iPhone two or three times.  
Find the feature in Settings > Accessibility > Touch > Back Tap. Pick the 
number of taps you want to use, and then you'll see a list of actions you can 
initiate.  
For example, you can triple-tap on the back of your phone to take a screenshot 
or launch Siri.  
When I first read about this feature, I thought it would be all too easy to 
prompt it just by putting my iPhone in my pocket or placing it on my desk.
But that hasn't been the case at all -- the phone seems good at identifying the 
tap pattern before it activates.  

9.
You can use the Apple Pencil to write in any text field. 
Scribble in any text field on your iPad with Apple Pencil The iPad has a new 
feature called Scribble. It basically converts any text field into a box that 
you can write in using an Apple Pencil, and your iPad will convert your 
handwriting to typed text automatically.  
If you're in the middle of jotting notes and you get a new iMessage, you can 
pull down the alert and use the quick-reply field to write out your response 
and go back to writing notes, all without ever putting down the Pencil or 
activating the keyboard.  
For heavy Apple Pencil users, Scribble should speed up a lot of tasks that 
normally would have been slowed down by having to switch between stylus and 
keyboard.  

There's so much more to these updated operating systems. iOS 14 and iPadOS
14 are available as free updates and don't take long to install. Just make sure 
to do some housekeeping on your device before installing to make sure the 
process goes smoothly. And don't be surprised if there are some issues with 
your favorite apps for the first few days -- Apple surprised everyone, 
including developers, by releasing the update the day after the Sept. 15 "Time 
Flies" event. 

Original Article at:
https://www.cnet.com/how-to/9-best-new-ios-14-hidden-features-we-found-for-y
our-iphone/?ftag=CAD1acfa04&bhid=22694667381686839172315209628767&mid=130565
54&cid=643954770


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