Apple E2642A Cellular Phone with Bluetooth and WLAN Radio User Manual iPhone User Guide iOS7 v1 0 Part3

Apple Inc. Cellular Phone with Bluetooth and WLAN Radio iPhone User Guide iOS7 v1 0 Part3

iPhone_User_Guide_iOS7_v1.0_Part3

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At a glance
Voice Memos lets you use iPhone as a portable recording device using the built-in microphone,
iPhone or Bluetooth headset mic, or supported external microphone.
Start, pause, or stop recording.
Start, pause, or stop recording.
Recording level
Recording level
See your list of
recordings.
See your list of
recordings.
Make a recording: Tap or press the center button on your headset. Tap to pause or to
stop recording, or press the center button on your headset.
Recordings using the built-in microphone are mono, but you can record stereo using an external
stereo microphone that works with the iPhone headset jack, or with the Lightning connector
(iPhone 5) or 30-pin dock connector (earlier iPhone models). Look for accessories marked with
the Apple “Made for iPhone or Works with iPhone” logo.
Adjust the recording level: Move the microphone closer to or further away from what you’re
recording. For better recording quality, the loudest level on the level meter should be between
–3 dB and 0 dB.
Play or mute the start/stop tone: Use the iPhone volume buttons to turn the volume all the
way down.
Use another app while recording: Press the Home button and open an app. To return to
Voice Memos, tap the red bar at the top of the screen.
Voice Memos
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Play a recording: Tap , tap a recording, then tap . Tap to pause.
Trim or relabel the
recording.
Trim or relabel the
recording.
Listen to the
recording.
Listen to the
recording.
Attach the recording
to an email or text
message.
Attach the recording
to an email or text
message.
Drag to skip
to any point.
Drag to skip
to any point.
Switch between the speaker and the receiver.
Trim a recording: Tap next to the recording, then tap Trim Memo. Drag the edges of the
audio region, then tap to preview. Adjust if necessary, then tap Trim Voice Memo to save. The
portions you trim can’t be recovered.
Sharing voice memos with your computer
You can sync voice memos with the primary iTunes library on your computer, then listen to
memos on your computer or sync them with another iPhone or iPod touch.
When you delete a synced memo from iTunes, it stays on the device where it was recorded, but
is deleted from any other iPhone or iPod touch you synced. If you delete a synced memo on
iPhone, it's copied back to iPhone the next time you sync with iTunes, but you can’t sync that
copy back to iTunes a second time.
Sync voice memos with iTunes: Connect iPhone to your computer, then in iTunes select iPhone.
Select Music at the top of the screen (between Apps and Movies), select Sync Music, select
“Include voice memos,” and click Apply.
Voice memos synced from iPhone to your computer appear in the Music list and in the Voice
Memos playlist in iTunes. Memos synced from your computer appear in the Voice Memos app on
iPhone, but not in the Music app.
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With a Nike + iPod Sensor (sold separately), the Nike + iPod app provides audible feedback on
your speed, distance, time elapsed, and calories burned during a run or walk.
At a glance
The Nike + iPod app doesn’t appear on the Home screen until you turn it on.
Turn on Nike + iPod: Go to Settings > Nike + iPod.
Review your
workout history.
Review your
workout history.
Calibrate based on
your last workout.
Calibrate based on
your last workout.
Choose a standard workout.
Choose a standard workout.
Choose or create a
custom workout.
Choose or create a
custom workout.
Choose a
workout type.
Choose a
workout type.
Link and calibrate your sensor
FPO
Nike + iPod collects workout data from a wireless sensor (sold separately) that you attach to your
shoe. Before you use it the rst time, you need to link your sensor to iPhone.
Link your sensor to iPhone: Attach the sensor to your shoe, then go to Settings > Nike + iPod >
Sensor.
Nike + iPod
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Calibrate Nike + iPod: Record a workout over a known distance of at least a quarter mile (400
meters). Then, after you tap End Workout, tap Calibrate on the workout summary screen and
enter the actual distance you covered.
Reset to the default calibration: Go to Settings > Nike + iPod.
Work out
FPO
The Nike + iPod app doesn’t appear on the Home screen until you turn it on.
Turn on Nike + iPod. Go to Settings > Nike + iPod.
Nike + iPod collects workout data from a wireless sensor (sold separately) that you attach to your
shoe. Before you use it the rst time, you need to link your sensor to iPhone.
Link your sensor to iPhone. Attach the sensor to your shoe, then go to Settings > Nike + iPod >
Sensor.
Start a workout. Tap Workouts, and choose a workout.
Pause the workout. Wake iPhone and tap on the lock screen. Tap when youre ready
to continue.
End the workout. Wake iPhone, tap , then tap End Workout.
Send workout data to nikeplus.com. With iPhone connected to the Internet, open Nike + iPod,
tap History, then tap “Send to Nike+.”
See your workouts on nikeplus.com. In Safari, go to nikeplus.com, log in to your account, and
follow the onscreen instructions.
Settings
Go to Settings > Nike + iPod, where you can adjust settings such as:
your power song
the voice used for spoken feedback
units of distance
your weight
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Get iBooks
FPO
Download your free copy of iBooks at the App Store.With an Internet connection and an Apple
ID you’ll have everything you need to nd books, get samples of their contents, and read and
write reviews. In iBooks, tap Store to visit the iBookstore, where it all begins.
Download previous purchases.You can download any book you’ve purchased (even it was free)
at any time, on your iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and [redacted]. In Settings > iTunes & App Stores
you can turn on automatic downloads to have purchases sent to all your devices.
Update a book.A badge noties you if there’s an update to a book you bought. To get it, tap
Store, then tap Purchased, then Updates.
Read a book
FPO
Show the controls.Tap near the center of a page. Not all books have all controls, but some of
the things you can do include searching, viewing the table of contents, and sharing what you're
reading
Remember the interesting parts.Add notes or highlights to your favorite passages. Double-tap
a word, move the grab points to adjust the selection, then tap Note or Highlight in the menu
that appears. In some books, you can quickly add a highlight by dragging over the text you want
to mark.
Never mind.Remove a note or highlight by tapping it to display a menu, then tap TK ICON. See
all of your notes by tapping
iBooks
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You can’t have too many bookmarks.You can add multiple bookmarks to a book–but you don’t
need one to get back to where you left o because iBooks remembers that for you.
Where was I?After you tap a link, you can quickly get back to where you were. Just tap the “Back
to page x.” button at the bottom.
Change your view.Some books let you change the font and font size and the color of the page.
The (icon) button gives you the power. You can also set if iBooks justies or hyphenates text. Go
to Settings > iBooks.
Organize books
FPO
The bookshelf is home base for your library.Tap Edit to move a book to a collection or delete
it. When you delete, you can remove it from the device you’re using, or all of your devices. Don’t
worry, if it’s from the iBookstore, you can just download it again.
Organize books with collections.Tap the name of the current collection (at the top of the shelf),
then create, delete, or rename a collection.
See a list of your books.If youd rather see a list instead of covers, tap . You can also sort y our
books by author, in list view, too.
Download your books from iCloud.Books you’ve purchased but aren’t on your device can be
downloaded from iCloud. Tap . iCloud makes sure all the copies have the same bookmarks,
notes, and highlights too. To turn this on or o to go Settings > iBooks.
Read PDFs
FPO
Read a PDF.iBooks works with PDFs, too. You might want to create a collection just for those.
Sync books and PDFs from your computer.You can sync them using iTunes. If someone sends
you a PDF via mail, on iPhone, just touch and hold the attachment, then choose Open in iBooks
from the menu that appears. Voila
Print.Yes, you can print PDFs. To an AirPrint-compatible printer. Just tap , then Print.
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iBooks settings
iBooks stores your purchases, collections, bookmarks, notes, and current page information in
iCloud, so you can read books seamlessly across all your iOS devices. iBooks saves information
about all of your books when you open or quit the app. Information about individual books
is also saved when you open or close the book. These are controlled by “Sync Bookmarks” and
“Sync Collections” in Settings > iBooks.
If you’re left-handed, you can change the direction the page turns when you tap the left
margin. Do this in Settings > iBooks > Both Margins Advance.
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At a glance
Download the free Podcasts app from the App Store, then browse, subscribe to, and play your
favorite audio and video podcasts.
View the podcasts
in your library.
View the podcasts
in your library.
Browse all available podcasts.
Browse all available podcasts.
Tap a podcast to
view available
episodes.
Tap a podcast to
view available
episodes.
Browse and preview
the most popular
podcasts.
Browse and preview
the most popular
podcasts.
Organize your
podcasts.
Organize your
podcasts.
Scroll to see your
entire library.
Scroll to see your
entire library.
See the playback
controls.
See the playback
controls.
Refresh your
podcast list.
Refresh your
podcast list.
Add to your library
Browse the iTunes Store for an extensive selection of podcasts on a wide variety of topics.
Browse the full catalog. Tap Store, then tap any podcast that interests you.
Browse the most popular podcasts. Tap Top Charts (if you don’t see it, tap Library rst). Swipe
left or right to change the category, or swipe up or down to browse the current category. Tap a
podcast to preview the latest episode, or tap to see a list of episodes.
Stream an episode. Tap any episode.
Download an episode so you can listen to it when you’re not connected to Wi-Fi. Tap next
to the episode.
Podcasts
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Subscribe to a podcast to always get the latest episode. If you’re browsing the catalog, tap a
podcast to see the list of episodes, then tap Subscribe. If you’ve already downloaded an episode,
tap the podcast in your library, then tap it again at the top of the list of episodes, and turn
on Subscription.
Automatically get the latest episode of a subscribed podcast. Tap the podcast in your library,
tap it again at the top of the episode list, then turn on Auto-Download.
Control playback
Play previous
episode.
Play previous
episode.
Adjust the playback speed.
Adjust the playback speed.
Share this podcast.
Share this podcast.
Skip to the next
episode.
Skip to the next
episode.
Skip forward 15
seconds.
Skip forward 15
seconds.
Set the sleep timer.
Set the sleep timer.
Drag the playhead to
jump to another part
of the podcast.
Drag the playhead to
jump to another part
of the podcast.
Control audio playback. To see all of the playback controls, swipe the artwork upward.
Control video playback. Tap the screen while youre watching a video podcast.
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Accessibility features
iPhone incorporates these accessibility features:
VoiceOver
Call audio routing
Siri voice assistant
Zoom magnication
Large Text
Invert Colors
Speak Selection
Speak Auto-text
Mono Audio and balance
Hearing aids and Hearing Aid Mode
Assignable ringtones and vibrations
LED Flash for Alerts
Guided Access
AssistiveTouch
Support for braille displays
Display and customization of video closed captions
To turn on accessibility features go to Settings > General > Accessibility on iPhone. You can also
turn the features on using iTunes: connect iPhone to your computer, select it in iTunes, and click
Congure Universal Access at the bottom of the Summary screen.
Use the Accessibility Shortcutto switch features on or o in an instant. Go to Settings > General
> Accessibility > Accessibility Shortcut and choose the features use, then triple-press the
Home button.
For more information about iPhone accessibility features, go to www.apple.com/accessibility.
VoiceOver
VoiceOver describes aloud what appears onscreen, so you can use iPhone without seeing it.
VoiceOver tells you about each item on the screen as you select it. When you select an item, the
VoiceOver cursor (a black rectangle) encloses it and VoiceOver speaks the name or describes
the item.
Accessibility
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 118
Touch the screen or drag your ngers to hear dierent items on the screen. When you select text,
VoiceOver reads the text. If you turn on Speak Hints, VoiceOver may tell you the name of the
item and provide instructions—for example, double-tap to open.” To interact with items on the
screen, such as buttons and links, use the gestures described in Learning VoiceOver gestures on
page 120.
When you go to a new screen, VoiceOver plays a sound, then selects and speaks the rst item
on the screen (typically in the upper-left corner). VoiceOver also lets you know when the display
changes to landscape or portrait orientation, and when the screen becomes locked or unlocked.
Note: VoiceOver speaks in the language specied in International settings, which may be
inuenced by the Region Format setting in Settings > General > International. VoiceOver is
available in many languages, but not all.
VoiceOver basics
Important: VoiceOver changes the gestures you use to control iPhone. When VoiceOver is on,
you must use VoiceOver gestures to operate iPhone—even to turn VoiceOver o again and
resume standard operation.
Turn VoiceOver on or o: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver. You can also set
Triple-click Home to turn VoiceOver on or o. See Take the shortcut on page 126.
Explore the screen: Drag your nger over the screen. VoiceOver speaks each item you touch. Lift
your nger to leave an item selected.
Select an item: Tap it, or lift your nger while dragging over it.
Select the next or previous item: Swipe right or left with one nger. Item order is left-to-right,
top-to-bottom.
Select the item above or below: Use the rotor to turn on Vertical Navigation, then swipe up or
down with one nger.
Select the rst or last item on the screen: Swipe up or down with four ngers.
Select an item by name: Triple-tap with two ngers anywhere on the screen to open the Item
Chooser. Then type a name in the search eld, or swipe right or left to move through the list
alphabetically, or tap the table index to the right of the list and swipe up or down to move
quickly through the list of items.
Change the name of the selected item so it’s easier to nd: Tap and hold with two ngers
anywhere on the screen.
Speak the text of the selected item: Set the rotor control to characters or words, then swipe
down or up with one nger.
Turn spoken hints on or o: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver.
Include phonetic spelling: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Use Phonetics.
Speak the entire screen from the top: Swipe up with two ngers.
Speak from the current item to the bottom of the screen: Swipe down with two ngers.
Stop speaking: Tap once with two ngers. Tap again with two ngers to resume speaking.
Speaking resumes when you select another item.
Mute VoiceOver: Triple-tap with three ngers. Triple-tap again with three ngers to turn
speaking back on. To turn o only VoiceOver sounds, set the Ring/Silent switch to Silent. If an
external keyboard is connected, you can also press the Control key on the keyboard to mute
or unmute VoiceOver.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 119
Adjust the speaking voice: You can adjust the characteristics of the VoiceOver speaking voice to
make it easier for you to understand:
Change the speaking volume: Use the volume buttons on iPhone. You can also add volume to
the rotor and swipe up and down to adjust; see Using the VoiceOver rotor control on page 121.
Change the speaking rate: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver and drag
the Speaking Rate slider. You can also add Speech Rate to the rotor, then swipe up or down
to adjust.
Use pitch change: VoiceOver uses a higher pitch when speaking the rst item of a group (such
as a list or table) and a lower pitch when speaking the last item of a group. Go to Settings >
General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Use Pitch Change.
Change the language for iPhone: Go to Settings > General > International > Language.
VoiceOver pronunciation of some languages is aected by Settings > General > International
> Region Format.
Change pronunciation: Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Language is
available in the rotor only if you select more than one pronunciation.
Select the pronunciations available in the language rotor: Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > VoiceOver > Language Rotor. To change the position of a language in the list,
drag up or down.
Change the basic reading voice: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Use
Compact Voice.
Silence sound eects: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Use Sound Eects.
Using iPhone with VoiceOver
Unlock iPhone: Select the Unlock slide, then double-tap the screen.
Tap” to activate the selected item: Double-tap anywhere on the screen.
“Double-tap” the selected item: Triple-tap anywhere on the screen.
Adjust a slider: Select the slider, then swipe up or down with one nger.
Use a standard gesture when VoiceOver is turned on: Double-tap and hold your nger on the
screen. A series of tones indicates that normal gestures are in force. They remain in eect until
you lift your nger, when VoiceOver gestures resume.
Scroll a list or area of the screen: Swipe up or down with three ngers. When paging through a
list, VoiceOver speaks the range of items displayed (for example, showing rows 5 through 10”).
Scroll continuously through a list: Double-tap and hold. When you hear a series of tones, move
your nger up or down to scroll the list. Continuous scrolling stops when you lift your nger.
Use a list index: Some lists have an alphabetical index along the right side. The index can’t be
selected by swiping between items; you must touch the index directly to select it. With the
index selected, swipe up or down to move along the index. You can also double-tap, then slide
your nger up or down.
Reorder a list: You can change the order of items in some lists, such as the Rotor and Language
Rotor items in Accessibility settings. Select on the right side of an item, double-tap and
hold until you hear a sound, then drag up or down. VoiceOver speaks the item you’ve moved
above or below, depending on the direction you’re dragging.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 120
Rearrange your Home screen: On the Home screen, select the icon you want to move. Double-
tap and hold the icon, then drag it. VoiceOver speaks the row and column position as you drag
the icon. Release the icon when it’s in the location you want. You can drag additional icons. Drag
an item to the left or right edge of the screen to move it to a dierent page of the Home screen.
When you nish, press the Home button .
Speak the iPhone status information: Tap the top of the screen to hear information about the
time, battery life, Wi-Fi signal strength, and more.
Speak notications: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver and turn on Speak
Notications. Notications, including the text of incoming text messages, are spoken as
they occur, even if iPhone is locked. Unacknowledged notications are repeated when you
unlock iPhone.
Turn the screen curtain on or o: Tap four times with three ngers. When the screen curtain is
on, the screen contents are active even though the display is turned o.
Learning VoiceOver gestures
When VoiceOver is turned on, the standard touchscreen gestures have dierent eects. These
and some additional gestures let you move around the screen and control individual items when
theyre selected. VoiceOver gestures include two- and three-nger gestures to tap or swipe.
For best results when using two- and three-nger gestures, relax and let your ngers touch the
screen with some space between them.
You can use dierent techniques to enter VoiceOver gestures. For example, you can enter a
two-nger tap using two ngers from one hand, or one nger from each hand. You can also use
your thumbs. Many nd the “split-tap gesture especially eective: instead of selecting an item
and double-tapping, you can touch and hold an item with one nger, then tap the screen with
another nger. Try dierent techniques to discover which works best for you.
If your gestures don’t work, try quicker movements, especially for double-tapping and swiping
gestures. To swipe, try quickly brushing the screen with your nger or ngers. When VoiceOver
is turned on, the VoiceOver Practice button appears, which gives you a chance to practice
VoiceOver gestures before proceeding.
Practice VoiceOver gestures: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then tap
VoiceOver Practice. When you nish practicing, tap Done. If you don’t see the VoiceOver Practice
button, make sure VoiceOver is turned on.
Heres a summary of key VoiceOver gestures:
Navigate and read
Tap: Speak the item.
Swipe right or left: Select the next or previous item.
Swipe up or down: Depends on the Rotor Control setting. See Using the VoiceOver rotor
control on page 121.
Two-nger tap: Stop speaking the current item.
Two-nger ick up: Read all from the top of the screen.
Two-nger ick down: Read all from the current position.
Two-nger scrub”: Move two ngers back and forth three times quickly (making a “z”) to
dismiss an alert or go back to the previous screen.
Three-nger swipe up or down: Scroll one page at a time.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 121
Three-nger swipe right or left: Go to the next or previous page (such as the Home screen,
Stocks, or Safari).
Three-nger tap: Speak additional information, such as position within a list or whether text
is selected.
Four-nger tap at top of screen: Select the rst item on the page.
Four-nger tap at bottom of screen: Select the last item on the page.
Activate
Double-tap: Activate the selected item.
Triple-tap: Double-tap an item.
Split-tap: As an alternative to selecting an item and double-tapping to activate it, touch an
item with one nger, and then tap the screen with another.
Double-tap and hold (1 second) + standard gesture: Use a standard gesture. The double-tap
and hold gesture tells iPhone to interpret the next gesture as standard. For example, you can
double-tap and hold, and then without lifting your nger, drag your nger to slide a switch.
Two-nger double-tap: Answer or end a call. Play or pause in Music, Videos, Voice Memos, or
Photos. Take a photo in Camera. Start or pause recording in Camera or Voice Memos. Start or
stop the stopwatch.
Two-nger double-tap and hold: Change an items label to make it easier to nd.
Two-nger triple-tap: Open the Item Chooser.
Three-nger triple-tap: Mute or unmute VoiceOver.
Three-nger quadruple-tap: Turn the screen curtain on or o.
Using the VoiceOver rotor control
Use the rotor to choose what happens when you swipe up or down with VoiceOver turned on.
Operate the rotor: Rotate two ngers on the iPhone screen around a point between them.
Change the options included in the rotor: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver
> Rotor and select the options you want to be available using the rotor.
The eect of the rotor setting depends on what youre doing. For example, if you’re reading an
email, you can use the rotor to switch between hearing text spoken word-by-word or character-
by-character when you swipe up or down. If you’re browsing a webpage, you can set the rotor to
speak all the text (either word-by-word or character-by-character), or to jump from one item to
another of a certain type, such as headers or links.
When you use an Apple Wireless Keyboard to control VoiceOver, a speech rotor lets you adjust
settings such as volume, speech rate, use of pitch or phonetics, typing echo, and reading of
punctuation. See Using VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 124.
Entering and editing text with VoiceOver
When you enter an editable text eld, you can use the onscreen keyboard or an external
keyboard connected to iPhone to enter text.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 122
Enter text: Select an editable text eld, double-tap to display the insertion point and the
onscreen keyboard, then type characters.
Standard typing: Select a key on the keyboard by swiping left or right, then double-tap to
enter the character. Or move your nger around the keyboard to select a key and, while
continuing to touch the key with one nger, tap the screen with another nger. VoiceOver
speaks the key when it’s selected, and again when the character is entered.
Touch typing: Touch a key on the keyboard to select it, then lift your nger to enter the
character. If you touch the wrong key, slide your nger to the key you want. VoiceOver
speaks the character for each key as you touch it, but doesn’t enter a character until you lift
your nger.
Choose standard or touch typing: With VoiceOver turned on and a key selected on the
keyboard, use the rotor to select Typing Mode, then swipe up or down.
Move the insertion point: Swipe up or down to move the insertion point forward or backward
in the text. Use the rotor to choose whether you want to move the insertion point by character,
by word, or by line.
VoiceOver makes a sound when the insertion point moves, and speaks the character, word, or
line that the insertion point moves across. When moving forward by words, the insertion point
is placed at the end of each word, before the space or punctuation that follows. When moving
backward, the insertion point is placed at the end of the preceding word, before the space or
punctuation that follows it.
Move the insertion point past the punctuation at the end of a word or sentence: Use the rotor
to switch back to character mode.
When moving the insertion point by line, VoiceOver speaks each line as you move across it.
When moving forward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the next line (except
when you reach the last line of a paragraph, when the insertion point is moved to the end of the
line just spoken). When moving backward, the insertion point is placed at the beginning of the
line that’s spoken.
Change typing feedback: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Typing Feedback.
Use phonetics in typing feedback: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Use Phonetics. Text is read character by character. VoiceOver rst speaks the character, then its
phonetic equivalent—for example, “f and then “foxtrot.”
Delete a character: Select , then double-tap or split-tap. You must do this even when touch
typing. To delete multiple characters, touch and hold the Delete key, then tap the screen with
another nger once for each character you want to delete. VoiceOver speaks the character as its
deleted. If Use Pitch Change is turned on, VoiceOver speaks deleted characters in a lower pitch.
Select text: Set the rotor to Edit, swipe up or down to choose Select or Select All, then double
tap. If you chose Select, the word closest to the insertion point is selected when you double-tap.
If you chose Select All, all text is selected. Pinch to increase or decrease the selection.
Cut, copy, or paste: Make sure the rotor is set to Edit. With text selected, swipe up or down to
choose Cut, Copy, or Paste, then double-tap.
Undo: Shake iPhone, swipe left or right to choose the action to undo, then double-tap.
Enter an accented character: In standard typing mode, select the plain character, then double-
tap and hold until you hear a sound indicating alternate characters have appeared. Drag left or
right to select and hear the choices. Release your nger to enter the current selection.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 123
Change the keyboard language: Set the rotor to Language, then swipe up or down. Choose
default language” to use the language specied in International settings. The Language rotor
appears only if you select more than one language in Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Language Rotor.
Making phone calls with VoiceOver
Answer or end a call: Double-tap the screen with two ngers.
When a phone call is established with VoiceOver on, the screen displays the numeric keypad by
default, instead of showing call options.
Display call options: Select the Hide Keypad button in the lower-right corner and double-tap.
Display the numeric keypad again: Select the Keypad button near the center of the screen and
double-tap.
Using VoiceOver with Safari
When you search the web in Safari with VoiceOver on, the Search Results rotor items lets you
hear the list of suggested search phrases.
Search the web: Select the search eld, enter your search, then swipe right or left to move down
or up the list of suggested search phrases. Then double-tap the screen to search the web using
the selected phrase.
Set the rotor options for web browsing: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Rotor. Tap to select or deselect options, or drag up to reposition an item.
Skip images while navigating: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Navigate
Images. You can choose to skip all images or only those without descriptions.
Reduce page clutter for easier reading and navigation: Select the Reader item in the Safari
address eld (not available for all pages).
Using VoiceOver with Maps
You can use VoiceOver to explore a region, browse points of interest, follow roads, zoom in or
out, select a pin, or get information about a location.
Explore the map: Drag your nger around the screen, or swipe left or right to move to
another item.
Zoom in or out: Select the map, set the rotor to Zoom, then swipe up or down with one nger.
Pan the map: Swipe with three ngers.
Browse visible points of interest: Set the rotor to Points of Interest, then swipe up or down with
one nger.
Follow a road: Hold your nger down on the road, wait until you hear “pause to follow,” then
move your nger along the road while listening to the guide tone. The pitch increases when you
stray from the road.
Select a pin: Touch a pin, or swipe left or right to select the pin.
Get information about a location: With a pin selected, double-tap to display the information
ag. Swipe left or right to select the More Info button, then double-tap to display the
information page.
Hear location cues as you move about: Turn on tracking with heading to hear street names and
points of interest as you approach them.
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Editing videos and voice memos with VoiceOver
You can use VoiceOver gestures to trim Camera videos and Voice Memo recordings.
Trim a voice memo: On the Voice Memos screen, select the button to the right of the memo
you want to trim, then double-tap. Then select Trim Memo and double-tap. Select the beginning
or end of the trim tool. Swipe up to drag right, or swipe down to drag left. VoiceOver announces
the amount of time the current position will trim from the recording. To complete the trim, select
Trim Voice Memo and double-tap.
Trim a video: While viewing a video in Photos, double-tap the screen to display the video
controls, then select the beginning or end of the trim tool. Then swipe up to drag to the right, or
swipe down to drag to the left. VoiceOver announces the amount of time the current position
will trim from the recording. To complete the trim, select Trim and double-tap.
Using VoiceOver with an Apple Wireless Keyboard
You can control VoiceOver using an Apple Wireless Keyboard paired with iPhone. See Use an
Apple Wireless Keyboard on page 25.
VoiceOver Help speaks keys or keyboard commands as you type them. You can use VoiceOver
Help to learn the keyboard layout and the actions associated with key combinations.
Use VoiceOver keyboard commands to navigate the screen, select items, read screen contents,
adjust the rotor, and perform other VoiceOver actions. Most keyboard commands use the
Control-Option key combination, abbreviated in the table below as VO.”
VoiceOver keyboard commands
VO = Control-Option
Read all, starting from the current position: VO–A
Read from the top: VO–B
Move to the status bar: VO–M
Press the Home button: VO–H
Select the next or previous item: VO–Right Arrow or VO–Left Arrow
Tap an item: VO–Space bar
Open the Item Chooser: VO–I
Double-tap with two ngers: VO–”-”
Select the next or previous item specied by the rotor: VO–Up Arrow or VO–Down Arrow
Adjust the speech rotor: VO–Command–Left Arrow or VO–Command–Right Arrow
Adjust the setting specied by the speech rotor: VO–Command–Up Arrow or VO–Command–
Down Arrow
Mute or unmute VoiceOver: VO–S
Switch apps: Command–Tab or Command–Shift–Tab
Turn the screen curtain on or o: VO–Shift–S
Turn on VoiceOver help: VO–K
Return to the previous screen, or turn o VoiceOver help: Escape
Quick Nav
Turn on Quick Nav to control VoiceOver using the arrow keys.
Turn Quick Nav on or o: Left Arrow–Right Arrow
Select the next or previous item: Right Arrow or Left Arrow
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 125
Select the next or previous item specied by the rotor: Up Arrow or Down Arrow
Select the rst or last item: Control–Up Arrow or Control–Down Arrow
"Tap an item: Up Arrow–Down Arrow
Scroll up, down, left, or right: Option–Up Arrow, Option–Down Arrow, Option–Left Arrow, or
Option–Right Arrow
Adjust the rotor: Up Arrow–Left Arrow or Up Arrow–Right Arrow
You can also use the number keys on an Apple Wireless Keyboard to dial a phone number in
Phone or enter numbers in Calculator.
Single-letter Quick Nav for the web
When you view a webpage with Quick Nav enabled, you can use the following keys on the
keyboard to navigate the page quickly. Typing the key moves to the next item of the indicated
type. To move to the previous item, hold the Shift key as you type the letter.
Heading: H
Link: L
Text eld: R
Button: B
Form control: C
Image: I
Table: T
Static text: S
ARIA landmark: W
List: X
Item of the same type: M
Level 1 heading: 1
Level 2 heading: 2
Level 3 heading: 3
Level 4 heading: 4
Level 5 heading: 5
Level 6 heading: 6
Using a braille device with VoiceOver
You can use a Bluetooth braille display to read VoiceOver output, and you can use a braille
display with input keys and other controls to control iPhone when VoiceOver is turned on. For a
list of supported braille displays, go to www.apple.com/accessibility/iphone/braille-display.html.
Connect a braille display: Turn on the display, then go to Settings > Bluetooth and turn on
Bluetooth. Then, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille and choose
the display.
Turn contracted or eight-dot braille on or o: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver > Braille.
Adjust Braille settings at Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille, where you can:
For information about common braille commands for VoiceOver navigation, and for information
specic to certain displays, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT4400.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 126
The braille display uses the language that’s set for Voice Control. This is normally the language
set for iPhone in Settings > International > Language. You can use the VoiceOver language
setting to set a dierent language for VoiceOver and braille displays.
Set the language for VoiceOver: Go to Settings > General > International > Voice Control, then
choose the language.
If you change the language for iPhone, you may need to reset the language for VoiceOver and
your braille display.
You can set the leftmost or rightmost cell of your braille display to provide system status and
other information:
Announcement History contains an unread message
The current Announcement History message hasn’t been read
VoiceOver speech is muted
The iPhone battery is low (less than 20% charge)
iPhone is in landscape orientation
The screen display is turned o
The current line contains additional text to the left
The current line contains additional text to the right
Set the leftmost or rightmost cell to display status information: Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille > Status Cell, and tap Left or Right.
See an expanded description of the status cell: On your braille display, press the status cell’s
router button.
Routing the audio of incoming calls
You can have the audio of incoming calls automatically routed to a headset or speaker phone
instead of the iPhone receiver.
Reroute audio for incoming calls: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Incoming Calls and
choose where you want to hear your calls.
Siri
With Siri, you can do things with your iPhone, such as opening apps, just by asking, and
VoiceOver can read Siri responses to you. For information, see Chapter 4, Siri, on page 43.
Take the shortcut
You can use the Accessibility Shortcut to turn these features on or o:
VoiceOver
Invert Colors
Zoom
Switch Control
AssistiveTouch
Hearing Aid Control (if you have paired with a hearing aid)
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 127
Guided Access (The shortcut starts Guided Access if it’s already turned on. See Keep ‘em on
task on page 129.)
Choose the features you want to control at Settings > General > Accessibility > Accessibility
Shortcut. You can select more than one.
Turn accessibility features on or o by pressing the Home button quickly three times.
Slow down the click speed: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Home-click Speed.
Zoom
Many apps let you zoom in or out on specic items. For example, you can double-tap or
pinch to expand webpage columns in Safari. But, there’s also a Zoom accessibility feature that
lets you magnify the entire screen of any app youre using. And, you can use Zoom together
with VoiceOver.
Turn Zoom on or o: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom. Or, use Triple-click Home.
See Take the shortcut on page 126.
Zoom in or out: Double-tap the screen with three ngers.
Vary the magnication: With three ngers, tap and drag up or down. The tap-and-drag gesture
is similar to a double-tap, except you don’t lift your ngers on the second tap—instead, drag
your ngers on the screen. Once you start dragging, you can drag with a single nger. iPhone
returns to the adjusted magnication when you zoom out and in again using the three-nger
double-tap.
Pan around the screen: While zoomed in, drag the screen with three ngers. Once you start
dragging, you can drag with a single nger so that you can see more of the screen. Or, hold a
single nger near the edge of the display to pan to that side. Move your nger closer to the edge
to pan more quickly. When you open a new screen, Zoom goes to the top-middle of the screen.
While using Zoom with an Apple Wireless Keyboard (see Use an Apple Wireless Keyboard on
page 25), the screen image follows the insertion point, keeping it in the center of the display.
Get a better look
Display larger text in alerts, and in apps such as Calendar, Contacts, Mail, Messages, and Notes.
Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Larger Text, where you can turn on Larger Dynamic
Type and adjust the font size.
Zoom in. Turn on Zoom at Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then double-tap with three
ngers to zoom in and out. To adjust magnication, double-tap with three ngers and drag up
or down. To pan, drag with three ngers, or hold a single nger near the edge of the screen. If
you're using an Apple Wireless Keyboard, zoom follows the insertion point, which stays centered
on the screen.
Invert the screen colors to see if that makes it easier to read. Go to Settings > General >
Accessibility > Invert Colors.
Use the Home button shortcut to turn Zoom or Invert Colors on or o—see Take the
shortcut on page 126.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 128
Invert Colors
Sometimes, inverting the colors on the iPhone screen may make it easier to read. When Invert
Colors is turned on, the screen looks like a photographic negative.
Invert the screens colors: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Invert Colors.
Speak Selection
Even with VoiceOver turned o, you can have iPhone read aloud any text you select.
iPhone analyzes the text to determine the language, then reads it to you using the
appropriate pronunciation.
Turn on Speak Selection: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speak Selection. There you
can also:
Adjust the speaking rate
Choose to have individual words highlighted as they’re read
Have text read to you: Select the text, then tap Speak.
Speak Auto-text
Speak Auto-text speaks the text corrections and suggestions iPhone makes when you type.
Turn Speak Auto-text on or o: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Speak Auto-text.
Speak Auto-text also works with VoiceOver and Zoom.
Mono Audio
Mono Audio combines the left and right stereo channels into a mono signal played through
both channels. You can adjust the balance of the mono signal for greater volume on the right
or left.
Turn Mono Audio on or o and adjust the balance: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Mono Audio.
Hearing aids
Made for iPhone hearing aids
If you have a Made for iPhone hearing aid (available for iPhone 4S and later), you can adjust its
settings on iPhone to suit your listening needs.
Adjust your hearing aid settings: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Aids, or set
Triple-Click Home to open Hearing Aid Control. See Take the shortcut on page 126.
Hearing aid compatibility
The FCC has adopted hearing aid compatibility (HAC) rules for digital wireless phones. These
rules require certain phones to be tested and rated under the American National Standard
Institute (ANSI) C63.19-2007 hearing aid compatibility standards.
The ANSI standard for hearing aid compatibility contains two types of ratings:
An “M” rating for reduced radio frequency interference to enable acoustic coupling with
hearing aids that are not operating in telecoil mode
A T rating for inductive coupling with hearing aids operating in telecoil mode
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 129
These ratings are given on a scale from one to four, where four is the most compatible. A phone
is considered hearing aid compatible under FCC rules if it is rated M3 or M4 for acoustic coupling
and T3 or T4 for inductive coupling.
For iPhone hearing aid compatibility ratings, go to www.apple.com/support/hac.
Hearing aid compatibility ratings don’t guarantee that a particular hearing aid works with a
particular phone. Some hearing aids may work well with phones that don’t meet particular
ratings. To ensure interoperability between a hearing aid and a phone, try using them together
before purchase.
This phone has been tested and rated for use with hearing aids for some of the wireless
technologies it uses. However, there may be some newer wireless technologies used in this
phone that have not been tested yet for use with hearing aids. It is important to try the dierent
features of this phone thoroughly and in dierent locations, using your hearing aid or cochlear
implant, to determine if you hear any interfering noise. Consult your service provider or Apple
for information on hearing aid compatibility. If you have questions about return or exchange
policies, consult your service provider or phone retailer.
Hearing Aid Mode
iPhone has a Hearing Aid Mode that, when activated, may reduce interference with some
hearing aid models. Hearing Aid Mode reduces the transmission power of the cellular radio in
the GSM 1900 MHz band and may result in decreased 2G cellular coverage.
Activate Hearing Aid Mode: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Hearing Aids.
Assignable ringtones and vibrations
You can assign distinctive ringtones to people in your contacts list for audible caller ID. You can
also assign vibration patterns for notications from specic apps, for phone calls, for FaceTime
calls or messages from special contacts, and to alert you of a variety of other events, including
new voicemail, new mail, sent mail, Tweet, Facebook Post, and reminders. Choose from existing
patterns, or create new ones. See UNRESOLVABLE CROSS-REFERENCE on page ###.
You can purchase ringtones from the iTunes Store on iPhone. See Chapter 22, iTunes Store, on
page 97.
LED Flash for Alerts
If you can’t hear the sounds that announce incoming calls and other alerts, you can have iPhone
ash its LED (next to the camera lens on the back of the iPhone). This works only when iPhone is
locked or asleep. Available for iPhone 4 or later.
Turn on LED Flash for Alerts: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > LED Flash for Alerts.
Keep em on task
Guided Access helps an iPhone user to stay focused on a task. Guided Access dedicates iPhone
to a single app, and lets you restrict app features. Use Guided Access to:
Temporarily restrict iPhone to a particular app
Disable areas of the screen that aren’t relevant to a task, or areas where an accidental gesture
might cause a distraction
Disable the iPhone Sleep/Wake or volume buttons
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 130
Enable Guided Access at Settings > General > Accessibility > Guided Access, where you can:
Turn Guided Access on or o
Set a passcode that controls the use of Guided Access and prevents someone from leaving an
active session
Set whether other accessibility shortcuts are available during a session
To start a Guided Access session open the app you want to run, then triple-click the Home
button. Adjust settings for the session, then click Start.
End a Guided Access session: Triple-click the Home button and enter the Guided
Access passcode.
AssistiveTouch
AssistiveTouch helps you use iPhone if you have diculty touching the screen or pressing
the buttons. You can use a compatible adaptive accessory (such as a joystick) together with
AssistiveTouch to control iPhone. You can also use AssistiveTouch without an accessory to
perform gestures that are dicult for you.
Turn on AssistiveTouch: Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch. To set
Triple-click Home to turn AssistiveTouch on or o, go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
Triple-click Home.
Adjust the tracking speed (with accessory attached): Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
AssistiveTouch > Touch speed.
Show or hide the AssistiveTouch menu: Click the secondary button on your accessory.
Move the menu button: Drag it to any edge of the screen.
Hide the menu button (with accessory attached): Go to Settings > General > Accessibility >
AssistiveTouch > Always Show Menu.
Perform a swipe or drag that uses 2, 3, 4, or 5 ngers: Tap the menu button, tap Gestures, and
then tap the number of digits needed for the gesture. When the corresponding circles appear
on the screen, swipe or drag in the direction required by the gesture. When you nish, tap the
menu button.
Perform a pinch gesture: Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, and then tap Pinch. When the
pinch circles appear, touch anywhere on the screen to move the pinch circles, then drag the
pinch circles in or out to perform a pinch gesture. When you nish, tap the menu button.
Create your own gesture: Tap the menu button, tap Favorites, and then tap an empty gesture
placeholder. Or, go to Settings > General > Accessibility > AssistiveTouch > Create New Gesture.
Lock or rotate the screen, adjust iPhone volume, or simulate shaking iPhone: Tap the menu
button, then tap Device.
Simulate pressing the Home button: Tap the menu button, then tap Home.
Exit a menu without performing a gesture: Tap anywhere outside the menu.
TTY support
You can use the iPhone TTY Adapter cable (sold separately in many areas) to connect iPhone to
a TTY machine. Go to www.apple.com/store (may not be available in all areas) or check with your
local Apple retailer.
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Chapter 32 Accessibility 131
Connect iPhone to a TTY machine: Go to Settings > Phone and turn TTY on, and then connect
iPhone to your TTY machine using the iPhone TTY Adapter.
When TTY on iPhone is turned on, the TTY icon appears in the status bar at the top of the
screen. For information about using a particular TTY machine, see the documentation that came
with the machine.
Assignable ringtones
You can assign distinctive ringtones to people in your contacts list for audible caller ID. You can
purchase ringtones from the iTunes Store on iPhone. See Chapter 22, iTunes Store, on page 97.
Visual voicemail
The play and pause controls in visual voicemail let you control the playback of messages. Drag
the playhead on the scrubber bar to repeat a portion of the message that’s hard to understand.
See Visual voicemail on page 48.
Widescreen keyboards
Many apps, including Mail, Safari, Messages, Notes, and Contacts, let you rotate iPhone when
youre typing, so you can use a larger keyboard.
Large phone keypad
Make phone calls simply by tapping entries in your contacts and favorites lists. When you need
to dial a number, iPhone’s large numeric keypad makes it easy. See Phone calls on page 45.
Voice Control
Voice Control lets you make phone calls and control Music playback using voice commands. See
Make a call on page 45, and Siri and Voice Control on page 63.
Watch videos with closed captions
To turn view closed captions for videos that oer them, go to Settings > General > Accessibility
> Subtitles & Captioning.
Customize the appearance of your captions.Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Subtitles
& Captioning > Style, where you can choose an existing option or create your own style based
on your choice of font, color, background, opacity.
Not all videos include closed captions.
Accessibility in OS X
Take advantage of the accessibility features in OS X when you use iTunes to sync information and
content from your iTunes library to iPhone. In the Finder, choose Help > Help Center, then search
for “accessibility.”
For more information about iPhone and OS X accessibility features, go to
www.apple.com/accessibility.
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132
Settings lets you congure iPhone, set app options, add accounts, and set other preferences.
See other chapters for information about settings for the built-in apps. For example, for Safari
settings, see Chapter 7, Safari, on page 55.
VPN
Your organization may use a VPN to communicate private information securely over a non-
private network. You may need to congure VPN, for example, to access your work email. This
setting appears when you have VPN congured on iPhone, allowing you to turn VPN on or o.
See UNRESOLVABLE CROSS-REFERENCE on page ###.
General
General settings include network, sharing, security, and other settings. You can also nd
information about your iPhone, and reset various iPhone settings.
VPN
VPNs used within organizations allow you to communicate private information securely over a
non-private network. You may need to congure VPN, for example, to access your work email. Ask
the network’s administrator for the settings necessary to congure VPN for your network. After
one or more VPN settings are dened you can:
Turn VPN on or o: Go to Settings > VPN.
Switch between VPNs: Go to Settings > General > VPN, then choose a conguration.
See also Appendix A, iPhone in Business, on page 134.
Auto-Lock
Locking iPhone turns o the display in order to save the battery and prevent unintended
operation of iPhone. You can still receive calls and text messages, and you can adjust the volume
and use the mic button on your headset while listening to music or on a call.
Set the amount of time before iPhone locks: Go to Settings > General > Auto-Lock, then
choose a time.
Accessibility
Go to Settings > General > Accessibility and turn on the features you want. See
Chapter 32, Accessibility, on page 117.
Settings
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Chapter 33 Settings 133
Proles
This setting appears if you install one or more proles on iPhone. Tap Proles to see information
about the proles you’ve installed. For more information see Using conguration proles on
page 134.
Reset
You can reset the word dictionary, network settings, home screen layout, and location warnings.
You can also erase all of your content and settings.
Reset iPhone: Go to Settings > General > Reset, then choose an option:
Reset all settings: All your preferences and settings are reset.
Erase all content and settings: Your information, and settings are removed. iPhone cannot be
used until it’s set up again.
Reset network settings: When you reset network settings, your list of previously used networks
and VPN settings not installed by a conguration prole are removed. Wi-Fi is turned o
and then back on, disconnecting you from any network you’re on. The Wi-Fi and Ask to Join
Networks” settings remain turned on. To remove VPN settings installed by a conguration
prole, go to Settings > General > Prole, then select the prole and tap Remove. This also
removes other settings or accounts provided by the prole.
Reset the keyboard dictionary: You add words to the keyboard dictionary by rejecting words
iPhone suggests as you type. Resetting the keyboard dictionary erases all words you’ve added.
Reset the Home screen layout: Returns the built-in apps to their original layout on the
Home screen.
Reset location and privacy: Resets the location services and privacy settings to their
factory defaults.
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134
With support for secure access to corporate networks, directories, and Microsoft Exchange,
iPhone is ready to go to work. For detailed information about using iPhone in business, go to
www.apple.com/iphone/business.
Using conguration proles
If youre in an enterprise environment, you may be able to set up accounts and other items on
iPhone by installing a conguration prole. Conguration proles let your administrator set
up your iPhone to use the information systems at your company, school, or organization. For
example, a conguration prole might set up your iPhone to access the Microsoft Exchange
servers at work, so iPhone can access your Exchange email, calendars, and contacts, and it may
turn on Passcode Lock to help keep the information secure.
Your administrator may distribute conguration proles by email, by putting them on a secure
webpage, or by installing them directly on iPhone for you. Your administrator may have you
install a prole that ties your iPhone to a mobile device management server, which allows your
administrator to congure your settings remotely.
Install conguration proles: On iPhone, open the email message or download the
conguration proles from the website your administrator provides. When you open a
conguration prole, installation begins.
Important: You may be asked whether a conguration prole is trusted. If in doubt, ask your
administrator before installing the conguration prole.
You can’t change the settings dened by a conguration prole. If you want to change settings,
you must rst remove the conguration prole, or install a new conguration prole with the
new settings.
Remove a conguration prole: Go to Settings > General > Prole, then select the conguration
prole and tap Remove.
Removing a conguration prole deletes the settings and all other information installed by the
prole.
Setting up Microsoft Exchange accounts
Microsoft Exchange provides email, contact, tasks, and calendar information that you can
automatically sync wirelessly to iPhone. You can set up an Exchange account directly on iPhone.
Set up an Exchange account on iPhone: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars. Tap Add
Account, then tap Microsoft Exchange. Ask your service provider or administrator what settings
you should use.
iPhone in Business
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
Appendix
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Appendix A iPhone in Business 135
VPN access
VPN (virtual private network) provides secure access over the Internet to private networks, such
as the network at your company or school. Use Network settings on iPhone to congure and
turn on VPN. Ask your administrator what settings you should use.
VPN can also be set up automatically by a conguration prole. When VPN is set up by a
conguration prole, iPhone may turn VPN on automatically whenever it’s needed. For more
information, contact your administrator.
LDAP and CardDAV accounts
When you set up an LDAP account, you can view and search for contacts on your organizations
LDAP server. The server appears as a new group in Contacts. Because LDAP contacts aren’t
downloaded to iPhone, you must have an Internet connection to view them. Check with your
administrator for account settings and other requirements (such as VPN).
When you set up a CardDAV account, your account contacts are synced with iPhone over the air.
You may also be able to search for contacts on your organizations CardDAV server.
Set up an LDAP or CardDAV account: Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars, then tap Add
Account. Tap Other. Ask your service provider or administrator what settings you should use.
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136
Using international keyboards
International keyboards let you type text in many dierent languages, including Asian
languages and languages written from right to left. For a list of supported keyboards, go to
www.apple.com/iphone/specs.html.
Manage keyboards. Go to Settings > General > International > Keyboards.
Add a keyboard: Tap Add New Keyboard, then choose a keyboard from the list. Repeat to add
more keyboards.
Remove a keyboard: Tap Edit, tap next to the keyboard you want to remove, then
tap Delete.
Edit your keyboard list: Tap Edit, then drag next to a keyboard to a new place in the list.
To enter text in a dierent language, switch keyboards.
Switch keyboards while typing. Touch and hold the Globe key to show all your enabled
keyboards. To choose a keyboard, slide your nger to the name of the keyboard, then release. The
Globe key appears only if you enable more than one keyboard.
You can also just tap . When you tap , the name of the newly activated keyboard appears
briey. Continue tapping to access other enabled keyboards.
Many keyboards provide letters, numbers, and symbols that aren’t visible on the keyboard.
Enter accented letters or other characters. Touch and hold the related letter, number, or symbol,
then slide to choose a variant. For example:
On a Thai keyboard: Choose native numbers by touching and holding the related
Arabic number.
On a Chinese, Japanese, or Arabic keyboard: Suggested characters or candidates appear at the
top of the keyboard. Tap a candidate to enter it, or ick left to see more candidates.
Use the extended candidate list. Tap the up arrow at the right to view the full candidate list.
Scroll the list: Flick up or down.
Return to the short list: Tap the down arrow.
When using certain Chinese or Japanese keyboards, you can create a shortcut for word and input
pairs. The shortcut is added to your personal dictionary. When you type a shortcut while using a
supported keyboard, the paired word or input is substituted for the shortcut.
Turn shortcuts on or o. Go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Shortcuts. Shortcuts are
available for:
Simplied Chinese: Pinyin
Traditional Chinese: Pinyin and Zhuyin
Japanese: Romaji and 50 Key
International Keyboards
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix B International Keyboards 137
Special input methods
You can use keyboards to enter some languages in dierent ways. A few examples are Chinese
Cangjie and Wubihua, Japanese Kana, and Facemarks. You can also use your nger or a stylus to
write Chinese characters on the screen.
Build Chinese characters from the component Cangjie keys. As you type, suggested
characters appear. Tap a character to choose it, or continue typing up to ve components to see
more options.
Build Chinese Wubihua (stroke) characters. Use the keypad to build Chinese characters using
up to ve strokes, in the correct writing sequence: horizontal, vertical, left falling, right falling, and
hook. For example, the Chinese character (circle) should begin with the vertical stroke .
As you type, suggested Chinese characters appear (the most commonly used characters
appear rst). Tap a character to choose it.
If you’re not sure of the correct stroke, enter an asterisk (*). To see more character options, type
another stroke, or scroll through the character list.
Tap the match key (匹配) to show only characters that match exactly what you typed.
Write Chinese characters. Write Chinese characters directly on the screen with your nger when
Simplied or Traditional Chinese handwriting formats are turned on. As you write character
strokes, iPhone recognizes them and shows matching characters in a list, with the closest match
at the top. When you choose a character, its likely follow-on characters appear in the list as
additional choices
Touchpad
Touchpad
Some complex characters can be typed by writing two or more component characters in
sequence. Tap the character to replace the characters you typed. Roman characters are
also recognized.
Type Japanese kana. Use the Kana keypad to select syllables. For more syllable options, tap the
arrow key and select another syllable or word from the window.
Type Japanese romaji. Use the Romaji keyboard to type syllables. Alternative choices appear
along the top of the keyboard, tap one to type it. For more syllable options, tap the arrow key
and select another syllable or word from the window.
Type facemarks or emoticons. Use the Japanese Kana keyboard and tap the ^_^ key. Or you can:
Use the Japanese Romaji keyboard (QWERTY-Japanese layout): Tap the Number key , then tap
the ^_^ key.
Use the Chinese (Simplied or Traditional) Pinyin or (Traditional) Zhuyin keyboard: Tap the
Symbols key , then tap the ^_^ key.
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C
138
Important safety information
WARNING: Failure to follow these safety instructions could result in re, electric shock, or other
injuries, or damage to iPhone or other property. Read all the safety information below before
using iPhone.
Handling Handle iPhone with care. It is made of metal, glass, and plastic and has sensitive
electronic components inside. iPhone can be damaged if dropped, burned, punctured, or
crushed, or if it comes in contact with liquid. Don’t use a damaged iPhone, such as one with
a cracked screen, as it may cause injury. If youre concerned about scratching, consider using
a case.
Repairing Don’t open iPhone and don’t attempt to repair iPhone by yourself. Disassembling
iPhone may cause injury to you or damage to iPhone. If iPhone is damaged, malfunctions, or
comes in contact with liquid, contact Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider. You can nd
more information about getting service at www.apple.com/support/iphone/service/faq.
Battery Don’t attempt to replace the iPhone battery yourself—you may damage the battery,
which could cause overheating and injury. The lithium-ion battery in iPhone should be replaced
only by Apple or an Apple Authorized Service Provider, and must be recycled or disposed of
separately from household waste. Don’t incinerate the battery. For information about battery
recycling and replacement, go to www.apple.com/batteries.
Distraction Using iPhone in some circumstances can distract you and may cause a dangerous
situation. Observe rules that prohibit or restrict the use of mobile phones or headphones (for
example, avoid texting while driving a car or using headphones while riding a bicycle).
Navigation Maps, directions, Flyover, and location-based apps depend on data services.
These data services are subject to change and may not be available in all areas, resulting in
maps, directions, Flyover, or location-based information that may be unavailable, inaccurate, or
incomplete. Compare the information provided on iPhone to your surroundings, and defer to
posted signs to resolve any discrepancies. Some Maps features require Location Services. See
UNRESOLVABLE CROSS-REFERENCE on page ###. Use common sense when navigating.
Safety, Handling, & Support
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
Appendix
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 139
Charging Charge iPhone with the included USB cable and power adapter or other third-party
“Made for iPhone cables and power adapters that are compatible with USB 2.0 or power
adapters compliant with one or more of the following standards EN 301489-34, IEC 62684,
YD/T 1591-2009, CNS 15285, ITU L.1000, or another applicable mobile phone power adapter
interoperability standard. An iPhone Micro USB Adapter (available separately in some areas) or
other adapter may be needed to connect iPhone to some compatible power adapters. Using
damaged cables or chargers, or charging when moisture is present, can cause electric shock.
When you use the Apple USB Power Adapter to charge iPhone, make sure that the AC plug or
AC power cord is fully inserted into the adapter before you plug it into a power outlet. Power
adapters may become warm during normal use, and prolonged contact may cause injury. Always
allow adequate ventilation around power adapters when using them.
Note: Only micro USB power adapters in certain regions that comply with applicable
mobile phone power adapter interoperability standards are compatible. Please contact the
power adapter manufacturer to nd out if your micro USB power adapter complies with
these standards.
Hearing loss Listening to sound at high volumes may damage your hearing. Background noise,
as well as continued exposure to high volume levels, can make sounds seem quieter than they
actually are. Turn on the audio and check the volume before inserting anything in your ear. For
more information about hearing loss, see www.apple.com/sound. For information about how to
set a maximum volume limit on iPhone, see Music settings on page 64.
WARNING: To prevent possible hearing damage, do not listen at high volume levels for
long periods.
Apple headsets The headsets sold with iPhone 4S or later in China (identiable by dark
insulating rings on the plug) are designed to comply with Chinese standards and are compatible
with iPhone 4S or later, iPad 2 or later, and iPod touch 5th generation. Use only compatible
headsets with your device.
Radio signals iPhone uses radio signals to connect to wireless networks. For information about
the amount of power used to transmit these signals, and about steps you can take to minimize
exposure, see Settings > General > About > Legal > RF Exposure.
Radio frequency interference Observe signs and notices that prohibit or restrict the use
of mobile phones (for example, in healthcare facilities or blasting areas). Although iPhone is
designed, tested, and manufactured to comply with regulations governing radio frequency
emissions, such emissions from iPhone can negatively aect the operation of other electronic
equipment, causing them to malfunction. Turn o iPhone or use Airplane Mode to turn o the
iPhone wireless transmitters when use is prohibited, such as while traveling in aircraft, or when
asked to do so by authorities.
Medical devices iPhone contains radios that emit electromagnetic elds. These electromagnetic
elds may interfere with pacemakers or other medical devices. If you wear a pacemaker, maintain
at least 6 inches (approximately 15 cm) of separation between your pacemaker and iPhone. If
you suspect iPhone is interfering with your pacemaker or any other medical device, stop using
iPhone and consult your physician for information specic to your medical device. iPhone has
magnets near the bottom, and the included headphones also have magnets in the earbuds,
which may interfere with pacemakers, debrillators or other medical devices. Maintain at least 6
inches (approximately 15 cm) of separation between your pacemaker or debrillator and iPhone
or the earbuds.
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 140
Medical conditions If you have any other medical condition that you believe could be aected
by iPhone (for example, seizures, blackouts, eyestrain, or headaches), consult with your physician
prior to using iPhone.
Explosive atmospheres Do not charge or use iPhone in any area with a potentially explosive
atmosphere, such as at a fueling area, or in areas where the air contains chemicals or particles
(such as grain, dust, or metal powders). Obey all signs and instructions.
Repetitive motion When you perform repetitive activities such as typing or playing games
on iPhone, you may experience occasional discomfort in your hands, arms, wrists, shoulders,
neck, or other parts of your body. If you experience discomfort, stop using iPhone and consult
a physician.
High-consequence activities This device is not intended for use where the failure of the device
could lead to death, personal injury, or severe environmental damage.
Choking hazard Some iPhone accessories may present a choking hazard to small children. Keep
these accessories away from small children.
Important handling information
Cleaning Clean iPhone immediately if it comes in contact with anything that may cause stains—
such as dirt, ink, makeup, or lotions. To clean:
Disconnect all cables and turn iPhone o (press and hold the Sleep/Wake button, then slide
the onscreen slider).
Use a soft, lint-free cloth.
Avoid getting moisture in openings.
Don’t use cleaning products or compressed air.
The front or back cover of iPhone may be made of glass with a ngerprint-resistant oleophobic
(oil repellant) coating. This coating wears over time with normal usage. Cleaning products and
abrasive materials will further diminish the coating, and may scratch the glass. Abrasive media
may also scratch iPhone.
Using connectors, ports, and buttons Never force a connector into a port or apply excessive
pressure to a button, because this may cause damage that is not covered under the warranty. If
the connector and port don’t join with reasonable ease, they probably don’t match. Check for
obstructions and make sure that the connector matches the port and that you have positioned
the connector correctly in relation to the port.
Lightning Discoloration of the Lightning plug after regular use is normal. Dirt, debris, and
exposure to liquids may cause discoloration. To remove the discoloration or if the cable becomes
warm during use or won’t charge or sync your iPhone, disconnect the Lightning cable from your
computer or power adapter and clean it with a soft, dry, lint-free cloth. Do not use liquids or
cleaning products when cleaning the Lightning connector.
Operating temperature iPhone is designed to work in ambient temperatures between 32° and
95° F (0° and 35° C) and stored in temperatures between -4° and 113° F (-20° and 45° C). iPhone
can be damaged and battery life shortened if stored or operated outside of these temperature
ranges. Avoid exposing iPhone to dramatic changes in temperature or humidity. When youre
using iPhone or charging the battery, it is normal for iPhone to get warm.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 141
If the interior temperature of iPhone exceeds normal operating temperatures (for example, in a
hot car or in direct sunlight for extended periods of time), you may experience the following as it
attempts to regulate its temperature:
iPhone stops charging.
The screen dims.
A temperature warning screen appears.
Some apps may close.
Important: You may not be able to use iPhone while the temperature warning screen is
displayed. If iPhone can’t regulate its internal temperature, it goes into deep sleep mode until
it cools. Move iPhone to a cooler location out of direct sunlight and wait a few minutes before
trying to use iPhone again.
For more information, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT2101.
iPhone Support site
Comprehensive support information is available online at www.apple.com/support/iphone.
To contact Apple for personalized support (not available in all areas), see
www.apple.com/support/contact.
Restarting or resetting iPhone
If something isn’t working right, try restarting iPhone, forcing an app to close, or resetting iPhone.
Restart iPhone: Hold down the Sleep/Wake button until the red slider appears. Slide your nger
across the slider to turn o iPhone. To turn iPhone back on, hold down the Sleep/Wake button
until the Apple logo appears.
Force an app to close: Hold down the Sleep/Wake button for a few seconds until a red slider
appears, then hold down the Home button until the app closes.
You can also remove an app from the recents list to force it to close. See Start at home on
page 20.
If you can’t turn o iPhone or if the problem continues, you may need to reset iPhone. A reset
should be done only if turning iPhone o and on doesn’t resolve the problem.
Reset iPhone: Hold down the Sleep/Wake button and the Home button at the same time for at
least ten seconds, until the Apple logo appears.
About
Display information about iPhone: Go to Settings > General > About. The items you can view
include:
Available storage space
Serial number
iOS version
Network addresses
IMEI (International Mobile Equipment Identity)
ICCID (Integrated Circuit Card Identier, or Smart Card) for GSM networks
MEID (Mobile Equipment Identier) for CDMA networks
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 142
Legal notices, license, and regulatory marks
To copy the serial number and other identiers, touch and hold the identier until Copy appears.
To help Apple improve products and services, iPhone sends diagnostic and usage data. This data
does not personally identify you but may include location information.
View or turn o diagnostic information: Go to Settings > General > About > Diagnostics &
Usage.
Software Update
Software Update lets you download and install iOS updates from Apple.
Update to the latest iOS version: Go to Settings > General > Software Update.
If a newer version of iOS is available, follow the onscreen instructions to download and install it.
Wrong Passcode” or “iPhone is disabled” appears
If you forget your passcode or iPhone displays an alert that it is disabled, see “iOS: Wrong
passcode results in red disabled screen” at support.apple.com/kb/HT1212.
This accessory is not supported by iPhone appears
The accessory you attached may not work with iPhone. Make sure the USB cable and connectors
are free of debris, and refer to the documentation that came with the accessory.
Can’t view email attachments
If iPhone can’t view email attachments, try the following:
View an attached le: Tap the attachment to open it in Quick Look. You may need to wait while
it downloads before viewing.
Save an attached photo or video: Tap the attachment to open it in Quick Look. You may need to
wait while it downloads before viewing.
Quick Look supports the following document types:
.doc, .docx—Microsoft Word
.htm, .html—webpage
.key—Keynote
.numbers—Numbers
.pages—Pages
.pdf—Preview, Adobe Acrobat
.ppt, .pptx—Microsoft PowerPoint
.rtf—Rich Text Format
.txt—text
.vcf—contact information
.xls, .xlsx—Microsoft Excel
For additional troubleshooting information, go to www.apple.com/support/iphone.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 143
Backing up iPhone
You can use iCloud or iTunes to automatically back up iPhone. If you choose to back up using
iCloud, you can’t also use iTunes to automatically back up to your computer, but you can use
iTunes to manually back up to your computer.
Backing up with iCloud
iCloud backs up to iPhone daily over Wi-Fi, when it’s connected to a power source and is locked.
The date and time of the last backup is listed at the bottom of the Storage & Backup screen.
iCloud backs up your:
Purchased music, TV shows, apps, and books
Photos and videos in your Camera Roll
iPhone settings
App data
Home screen and app organization
Messages (iMessage, SMS, and MMS)
Ringtones
Note: Purchased music is not backed up in all areas and TV shows are not available in all areas.
If you didn't enable iCloud backup when you rst set up iPhone, you can turn it on in iCloud
settings.
Turn on iCloud backups: Go to Settings > iCloud, then log in with your Apple ID and password,
if required. Go to Storage & Backup, then turn on iCloud Backup.
Back up immediately: Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup, then tap Back Up Now.
Manage your backups: Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup, then tap Manage Storage.
Tap the name of your iPhone.
Turn Camera Roll backup on or o: Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup, then tap
Manage Storage. Tap the name of your iPhone, then turn Camera Roll backup on or o.
View the devices being backed up: Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup >
Manage Storage.
Stop iCloud backups: Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup > Backup, then turn o
iCloud Backup.
Music that isn’t purchased in iTunes isn't backed up in iCloud. You have to use iTunes to back up
and restore that content. See Syncing with iTunes on page 17.
Important: Backups for music or TV show purchases are not available in all areas. Previous
purchases may be unavailable if they are no longer in the iTunes Store, App Store, or iBookstore.
Purchased content, as well as Photo Stream content, doesn’t count against your 5 GB of free
iCloud storage.
Backing up with iTunes
iTunes creates a backup of photos in your Camera Roll or Saved Photos album, and backups of
text messages, notes, call history, your Favorites list, sound settings, and more. Media les, such as
songs, and some photos, aren’t backed up, but can be restored by syncing with iTunes.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 144
When you connect iPhone to the computer you normally sync with, iTunes creates a backup
each time you:
Sync with iTunes: iTunes syncs iPhone each time you connect iPhone to your computer. iTunes
won’t automatically back up an iPhone that isn’t congured to sync with that computer. See
Syncing with iTunes on page 17.
Update or restore iPhone: iTunes always backs up iPhone before updating and restoring.
iTunes can also encrypt iPhone backups to secure your data.
Encrypt iPhone backups: Select “Encrypt iPhone backup in the iTunes Summary pane.
Restore iPhone les and settings: Connect iPhone to the computer you normally sync with,
select iPhone in the iTunes window, and click Restore in the Summary pane.
For more information about backups, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT1766.
Removing an iTunes backup
You can remove an iPhone backup from the list of backups in iTunes. You may want to do this,
for example, if a backup was created on someone elses computer.
Remove a backup:
1 In iTunes, open iTunes Preferences.
Mac: Choose iTunes > Preferences.
Windows: Choose Edit > Preferences.
2 Click Devices (iPhone doesn’t need to be connected).
3 Select the backup you want to remove, then click Delete Backup.
4 Click Delete, to conrm you wish to remove the selected backup, then click OK.
Updating and restoring iPhone software
You can update iPhone software in Settings, or by using iTunes. You can also erase or restore
iPhone, and then use iCloud or iTunes to restore from a backup.
Deleted data is no longer accessible through the iPhone user interface, but it isn’t erased from
iPhone. For information about erasing all content and settings, see Reset on page 133.
Updating iPhone
You can update software in iPhone Settings or by using iTunes.
Update wirelessly on iPhone: Go to Settings > General > Software Update. iPhone checks for
available software updates.
Update software in iTunes: iTunes checks for available software updates each time you sync
iPhone using iTunes. See Syncing with iTunes on page 17.
For more information about updating iPhone software, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT4623.
Restoring iPhone
You can use iCloud or iTunes to restore iPhone from a backup.
Restore from an iCloud backup: Reset iPhone to erase all settings and information. Sign in to
iCloud and choose Restore from a Backup in the Setup Assistant. See Reset on page 133.
Restore from an iTunes backup: Connect iPhone to the computer you normally sync with, select
iPhone in the iTunes window, and click Restore in the Summary pane.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 145
When the iPhone software is restored, you can either set it up as a new iPhone, or restore your
music, videos, app data, and other content from a backup.
For more information about restoring iPhone software, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT1414.
Using iPhone on cellular networks
iPhone connects to the Internet using Wi-Fi or your carriers cellular network. If iPhone is
connected to the Internet via the cellular data network, the , , , , or icon appears in the
status bar.
LTE, 4G and 3G service on GSM cellular networks support simultaneous voice and data
communications. For all other cellular connections, you can’t use Internet services while youre
talking on the phone unless iPhone also has a Wi-Fi connection to the Internet. Depending on
your network connection, you may not be able to receive calls while iPhone transfers data over
the cellular network—when downloading a webpage, for example.
GSM networks: On an EDGE or GPRS connection, incoming calls may go directly to voicemail
during data transfers. For incoming calls that you answer, data transfers are paused.
CDMA networks: On EV-DO connections, data transfers are paused when you answer incoming
calls. On 1xRTT connections, incoming calls may go directly to voicemail during data transfers.
For incoming calls that you answer, data transfers are paused.
Data transfer resumes when you end the call.
If you don’t want to use the cellular network for Internet access, turn o Cellular Data at Settings
> Cellular Data. Then all data services use only Wi-Fi—including email, web browsing, push
notications, and other services.
To check your cellular usage, go to Settings > General > Usage.
Using iPhone with other carriers
Some carriers let you unlock iPhone for use with their network. To see if your carrier oers this
option, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT1937.
Contact your carrier for authorization and setup information. You need to connect iPhone to
iTunes to complete the process. Additional fees may apply.
For more information, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT5014.
Learning more, service, and support
This table describes where to get more iPhone-related safety, software, and service information.
To learn about Do this
Using iPhone safely See Important safety information on page 138.
iPhone service and support, tips, forums, and Apple
software downloads
Go to www.apple.com/support/iphone.
Service and support from your carrier Contact your carrier or go to your carrier’s website.
The latest information about iPhone Go to www.apple.com/iphone.
Managing your Apple ID account Go to appleid.apple.com.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 146
To learn about Do this
Using iCloud Go to www.apple.com/support/icloud.
Using iTunes Open iTunes and choose Help > iTunes Help. For an
online iTunes tutorial (may not be available in all
areas), go to www.apple.com/support/itunes.
Using other Apple iOS apps Go to www.apple.com/support/ios.
Finding your iPhone serial number, IMEI, ICCID, or
MEID
You can nd your iPhone serial number, International
Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI), ICCD, or Mobile
Equipment Identier (MEID) on the iPhone packaging.
Or, on iPhone, choose Settings > General > About. For
more information, go to support.apple.com/kb/ht4061.
Obtaining warranty service First follow the advice in this guide. Then go to
www.apple.com/support/iphone.
Viewing iPhone regulatory information On iPhone, go to Settings > General > About > Legal
> Regulatory.
Battery replacement service Go to www.apple.com/batteries/replacements.html.
Using iPhone in an enterprise environment Go to www.apple.com/iphone/business to learn more
about the enterprise features of iPhone, including
Microsoft Exchange, IMAP, CalDAV, CardDAV, VPN, and
more.
FCC info
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device,
pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can
radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions,
may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that
interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful
interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment
o and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the
following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit dierent from that to which the receiver
is connected.
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
Important: Changes or modications to this product not authorized by Apple could void the
electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and wireless compliance and negate your authority to
operate the product.
Disposal and recycling information
Apple Recycling Program (available in some areas): For free recycling of your old mobile phone,
a prepaid shipping label, and instructions, see www.apple.com/recycling.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 147
iPhone disposal and recycling: You must dispose of iPhone properly according to local laws and
regulations. Because iPhone contains electronic components and a battery, iPhone must be
disposed of separately from household waste. When iPhone reaches its end of life, contact local
authorities to learn about disposal and recycling options, or simply drop it o at your local Apple
retail store or return it to Apple. The battery will be removed and recycled in an environmentally
friendly manner. For more information, see www.apple.com/recycling.
Battery replacement: The lithium-ion battery in iPhone should be replaced only by Apple
or an Apple Authorized Service Provider, and must be recycled or disposed of separately
from household waste. For more information about battery replacement services, go to
www.apple.com/batteries/replacements.html.
Battery Charger Eciency
Türkiye
Türkiye Cumhuriyeti: EEE Yönetmeliğine Uygundur.
European Union—Disposal Information
The symbol above means that according to local laws and regulations your product and/or its
battery shall be disposed of separately from household waste. When this product reaches its
end of life, take it to a collection point designated by local authorities. The separate collection
and recycling of your product and/or its battery at the time of disposal will help conserve
natural resources and ensure that it is recycled in a manner that protects human health and
the environment.
Union Européenne—informations sur l’élimination: Le symbole ci-dessus signie que,
conformément aux lois et réglementations locales, vous devez jeter votre produit et/
ou sa batterie séparément des ordures ménagères. Lorsque ce produit arrive en n de vie,
apportez-le à un point de collecte désigné par les autorités locales. La collecte séparée et le
recyclage de votre produit et/ou de sa batterie lors de sa mise au rebut aideront à préserver les
ressources naturelles et à s’assurer qu’il est recyclé de manière à protéger la santé humaine et
l’environnement.
Europäische Union—Informationen zur Entsorgung: Das oben aufgeführte Symbol weist darauf
hin, dass dieses Produkt und/oder die damit verwendete Batterie den geltenden gesetzlichen
Vorschriften entsprechend und vom Hausmüll getrennt entsorgt werden muss. Geben Sie dieses
Produkt zur Entsorgung bei einer oziellen Sammelstelle ab. Durch getrenntes Sammeln und
Recycling werden die Rohstoreserven geschont und es ist sichergestellt, dass beim Recycling
des Produkts und/oder der Batterie alle Bestimmungen zum Schutz von Gesundheit und Umwelt
eingehalten werden.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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Appendix C Safety, Handling, & Support 148
Unione Europea—informazioni per lo smaltimento: Il simbolo qui sopra signica che, in base
alle leggi e alle normative locali, il prodotto e/o la sua batteria dovrebbero essere riciclati
separatamente dai riuti domestici. Quando il prodotto diventa inutilizzabile, portalo nel punto
di raccolta stabilito dalle autorità locali. La raccolta separata e il riciclaggio del prodotto e/o della
sua batteria al momento dello smaltimento aiutano a conservare le risorse naturali e assicurano
che il riciclaggio avvenga nel rispetto della salute umana e dell’ambiente.
Europeiska unionen—information om kassering: Symbolen ovan betyder att produkten
och/eller dess batteri enligt lokala lagar och bestämmelser inte får kastas tillsammans med
hushållsavfallet. När produkten har tjänat ut måste den tas till en återvinningsstation som utsetts
av lokala myndigheter. Genom att låta den uttjänta produkten och/eller dess batteri tas om hand
för återvinning hjälper du till att spara naturresurser och skydda hälsa och miljö.
Brasil—Informações sobre descarte e reciclagem
O símbolo indica que este produto e/ou sua bateria não devem ser descartadas no lixo
doméstico. Quando decidir descartar este produto e/ou sua bateria, faça-o de acordo com
as leis e diretrizes ambientais locais. Para informações sobre substâncias de uso restrito,
o programa de reciclagem da Apple, pontos de coleta e telefone de informações, visite
www.apple.com/br/environment.
Apple and the environment
At Apple, we recognize our responsibility to minimize the environmental impacts of our
operations and products. For more information, go to www.apple.com/environment.
APPLE CONFIDENTIAL
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KApple Inc.
© 2013 Apple Inc. All rights reserved.
Apple, the Apple logo, AirPlay, AirPort, AirPort Express, AirPort
Extreme, Aperture, Apple TV, Cover Flow, FaceTime, Finder,
iBooks, iCal, iLife, iMessage, iMovie, iPad, iPhone, iPhoto, iPod,
iPod touch, iSight, iTunes, Keynote, Mac, Mac OS, Numbers,
OS X, Pages, Passbook, Safari, Siri, Spotlight, Time Capsule,
and the Works with iPhone logo are trademarks of Apple Inc.,
registered in the U.S. and other countries.
AirPrint, EarPods, Flyover, Guided Access, the Made for iPhone
logo, and Multi-Touch are trademarks of Apple Inc.
Apple Store, Genius, iAd, iCloud, iTunes Extras, iTunes Plus, and
iTunes Store are service marks of Apple Inc., registered in the
U.S. and other countries.
App Store, iBookstore, and iTunes Match are service marks of
Apple Inc.
IOS is a trademark or registered trademark of Cisco in the U.S.
and other countries and is used under license.
NIKE and the Swoosh Design are trademarks of NIKE, Inc. and
its aliates, and are used under license.
The Bluetooth® word mark and logos are registered
trademarks owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and any use of such
marks by Apple Inc. is under license.
Adobe and Photoshop are trademarks or registered
trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the U.S. and/or
other countries.
Other company and product names mentioned herein may be
trademarks of their respective companies.
Mention of third-party products is for informational
purposes only and constitutes neither an endorsement nor
a recommendation. Apple assumes no responsibility with
regard to the performance or use of these products. All
understandings, agreements, or warranties, if any, take place
directly between the vendors and the prospective users. Every
eort has been made to ensure that the information in this
manual is accurate. Apple is not responsible for printing or
clerical errors.
019-2539/2013-09
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150
At a glance
Use FaceTime to make video or audio calls to other iOS devices or computers that support
FaceTime. The FaceTime camera lets you talk face-to-face; switch to the rear camera (not available
on all models) to share what you see around you.
Switch to the rear
camera (available on
some models).
Switch to the rear
camera (available on
some models).
Drag your image
to any corner.
Drag your image
to any corner.
Mute (you can hear
and see; the caller
can see but
not hear).
Mute (you can hear
and see; the caller
can see but
not hear).
With a Wi-Fi connection and an Apple ID, you can make and receive FaceTime calls (you might be
prompted to sign in using your Apple ID, or create a new account).
Note: FaceTime may not be available in all areas.
Get your FaceTime
Make a FaceTime call. Tap FaceTime, then Contacts, and choose a name. Tap <camera icon> to
make a video FaceTime call or <receiver icon> to make an audio FaceTime call. If you don’t see
the FaceTime button, make sure FaceTime is turned on in Settings > FaceTime. For FaceTime calls,
your phone number is displayed even if caller ID is turned o.
FPO
FaceTime
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Chapter 34 FaceTime 151
Get a FaceTime call. When someone uses FaceTime to call you, you can Answer, Decline, or
choose another option. Tap “Remind me later to set a time or circumstance for a reminder (for
example, When I get to work”). Tap “Respond with text" to send the caller a text message from a
list of responses or one you type yourself (for example, “I’ll call you later”).
Call again? Tap Recents, then choose a name or number.
Use your voice to start the call. Press and hold the Home button until Siri (or Voice Control)
appears and you hear a beep. Then say “FaceTime,” followed by the name of the person you want
to call.
See the whole gang. Rotate iPhone to use FaceTime in either landscape or portrait orientation.
To avoid unwanted orientation changes, lock iPhone in portrait orientation. See Change
orientation on page 21.
Take advantage of Favorites. Tap Favorites. To add a favorite, Tap , then choose a contact and
add to Favorites as FaceTime Audio or FaceTime. To call a favorite, tap a name in the list.
Manage calls
Multi-task during a call. Press the Home button, then tap an app icon. You can still talk with
your friend, but you can’t see each other. To return to the video, tap the green bar at the top of
the screen.
Manage those calls. Keep in mind that FaceTime calls are not forwarded. If another call comes
in when youre on a FaceTime video call, you can either end the Facetime call and answer the
incoming call, or decline the incoming call.
Add a contact. Tap Contacts, tap , then enter the persons name and the email address or
phone number that they use for FaceTime. For a contact outside your region, be sure to enter the
complete number, including country code and area code.
Set options for FaceTime. Go to Settings > FaceTime. Options include specifying a phone
number, Apple ID, or email address to use with FaceTime, setting your caller ID, and blocking
unwanted callers.
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