Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Contacts and Calendar

 Melissa and Carol will report on the core apps Contacts and Calendars

We want to encourage you to read the iPhone User Guide or iPad User Guide also available in Books for off-line reading, bookmarking, highlighting and personal notes. 


Contacts 

You will want to read the guide chapter on Contacts and begin adding people, businesses and locations to your Contacts app. Our presentation will cover some uses of Contacts. Create your personal card and then marking it as 'My Card', updating contact cards, setting SOS contacts, adding a photo ... 

Contacts is a core app on your devices. It connects to other core apps, phone, maps, messages, email, Safari, Search and Siri - your personal assistant - can access Contacts! 

Contacts with many entries will not take up much space on your device. Feel free to add people from your paper address book or rolodex. And in these COVID-19 times, use your entries to reach out and reconnect with your people! Edit the contact card details as you learn more about your friend network. 

If your are a multi-Apple-device household, then designate one person to create the master Contacts list and maintain it. Then every 6 months or so, sit down and Share individual contact cards with others to get them updated. (The receiver can delete the contact card before getting the new card to avoid duplicates.) For shared contact cards, add "Updated" in the Notes field and then use Contacts > Search to find names to share. 

Share Contact Cards - open a contact and scroll up to see Share Contact, tap to bring up the Share Sheet and see the best way to share - AirDrop, or send as a Message or Email. 

Mark important cards as Favorites so they show up on the Phone app for easy dialing. Scroll up the card to see Add to Favorites.

Mark critical cards for Emergency Contact - SOS. Scroll up the card to see Add to Emergency Contacts (in red type) and tap the text > tap to choose the best phone number to be called. Mobile numbers are best. On your iPhone, review how Emergency SOS works. Settings > Emergency SOS > read info ... Also, set your Emergency Contacts in the Health App after you have created individual contact cards for each person. 

Phone and Contacts apps - do you want to avoid unknown callers? Settings > Phone > scroll up > Silence Unknown Callers > ON. What if your significant other's phone is dead and a stranger allows them to call you? Unknown Caller! Leave a voice mail message! Repeat the call 2 more times, with voice mail. Make a contract with your friends/family to review repeated Unknown Callers. 

Update a contact card from the Phone app. 

Phishing Report via Contacts - for me, Apple, Amazon and Comcast. When I get a suspicious email, it is easy to forward the message to the real vendor. 

Do a Google Search for topics on Contacts? Do a YouTube Search for Apple iPad Contacts. 


Calendars
 
Carol reminded us that there are MANY views to your calendar! Day, Week, Month and Year views are part of the experience, but also remember to rotate your iPhone to landscape for the week view to show. Open your Books app to the iPhone User Guide or the iPad User Guide to read the chapter on Calendar. Then start to play with the features that are most useful to you. 

When you get an email with an invitation to participate on a day and time --- touch and hold on the date so the pop-up appears > tap on CREATE EVENT from the list. This is the best choice (for now) and links the calendar event to this email message. Fill in the TITLE. LOCATION and Time. To finish this event tap ADD at the top right corner. 

Calendar events are most useful when you add a specific location because with a tap you can open the Maps app and get directions or travel time. Events can also have your personal Notes and even an Attachment. (Who knew? Carol was surprised at this new option in iOS13.) When you are visiting friends and you have a Contact card, just begin typing their name to see the address appear.

Many events are REPEATED on a weekly or monthly basis. Before setting a repeating meeting, know when it ends so you can set the last date for the event. OK, just make the first event date and then practice editing the event. Find the EDIT button in the top right corner. After editing, tap the DONE button in the top right corner. 

The best news is that if you have an iPad and iPhone (maybe even a Mac computer) the Calendar events can SYNC to all your devices. ADD a new event on your iPad and it will also appear on our iPhone! Open Settings app on your devices > iCloud > Calendar ON. Also, Settings > Calendar > Sync > All Events (so you can look back at all you've done and recorded on your Calendar). 

Today View on the first Home Screen of iPad in iOS 13
In the online iPad User Guide read the article View and Organize the Today View on iPad to get an overview of the process. At the top of the screen is a button to Keep on Home Screen - for an at a glance view of your favorite apps. Carol's strategy is to add the Up Next Calendar item to the top of this list. Review the list of available widgets and tap the green (+) to add to the Pinned Favorites list. Change the order of your favorites list by holding on the button with 3-vertical lines and moving the floating box up or down.

As always, Touch Every Button. You can't break your iPad or iPhone by exploring the features.

Tips for the Flashlight

Barbara shared several tips on using the LED flashlight on your iPhone. This is a reminder that there are often several ways to do something on a "computing device". 

Three ways to open the Flashlight app

  • ASK SIRI

- Hey Siri, turn the flashlight on, Hey Siri, Flashlight on please
- Hey Siri, turn the flashlight off, Hey Siri, shut off the flashlight; or tap the rotating rainbow-like symbol at the bottom of the screen to get Siri’s attention again
- Press and hold the home button or the side button to wake Siri and ask her. 

  • CONTROL CENTER

- iPhone X or newer: swipe down from the upper right corner of the home or lock screen. Tap the icon to turn on. Tap again to turn off.
- iPhone 8 or older, swipe up from the bottom edge of the screen. Tap the icon to turn on. Tap again to turn off.

  • LOCK SCREEN

On iPhone X or later, turn on from lock screen by hard pressing (3D Touch) the flashlight icon at lower left. Hard press again to turn off.

ADJUSTING BRIGHTNESS
Open Control Center. 3D Touch the flashlight icon. Swipe up to brighten, swipe down to dim. Tap screen to return to Control Center.

QUICK TURN OFF
You can turn off the flashlight without opening Control Center. From the lock screen, swipe left as though to access the camera, and release before you reach the halfway point.

MISSING FLASHLIGHT ICON?
Go to Settings/Control Center/Customize Controls/Flashlight and tap the green + button to move the flashlight function from “more controls” at bottom to “include” at top.

Did you know? To use Siri you must be connected to the internet?
To prevent Siri from responding to “Hey Siri”, place your phone face down.

 

Read Apple's online article about Siri on iPhone with iOS 13.

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

 Here are the notes from the Sept. 23 session:

Messages and Maps Basics

 

By Jennifer Kerr


iMessages: Fun with Texting


You can text not only words, but also photos, videos, music and more. And you can have a lot of fun—and impress your grandchildren! Practice with a friend or relative. You can also send messages to yourself to practice.


There are two kinds of texting: iMessages are with another iPhone or iPad or Mac; you will see a blue message bubble. If you are texting with someone on another kind of phone, those are SMS and you will see a green bubble. If texting to a group and one person is non-Apple, it will be green. Blue texts are free and everything you send or receive is encrypted; green ones use your texting minutes (but most plans are unlimited these days) and are NOT encrypted. 


To use iMessage, turn it on in iPhone and iPad in Settings > Messages. You can also do iMessages on Macs if it is on iCloud with your phone (open Messages on your Mac, choose Messages > Preferences, click iMessage, then select the Enable Messages in iCloud checkbox). You might need to put in your Apple ID.


To get Green messages to show up on your iPad and Mac, in phone Settings > Messages, tap on Text Message Forwarding and list the devices you want to send and receive green text messages i.e., iPad and/or Mac.


In Settings > Messages go down to Filter Unknown Senders. This option will list people not in your contacts in a separate list on your Message app. You can then screen them.


How to delete messages: To delete an entire conversation with one or more contacts, tap the three dots on the main Messages page and tap on Select Messages.  Mark the ones to delete, then tap Delete in the bottom right. To delete just one or more individual messages, press down on the message itself. You will see More… in a bottom bubble. Tap that and you can then check any messages you don’t want and hit Delete All in the top left.


You can send messages not only from the Messages app, but also from the Mail, Calendar, Contacts, Photos or Safari apps (anywhere you see a phone number or the “Sharrow.”)

 

To send a message, open Messages and tap on the blue circle with the “pen” in the upper right. Enter a phone number or name. Or click on the blue circle with a plus and it will go to Contacts. Once you have one person, you can add more to this message with the blue plus sign. Once you have one person or a group, you can type or dictate a message in the box below and hit the blue or green arrow to send it.  If you get an Exclamation Mark, the message can’t be sent right now (no service) but it will go when you get service.

To see when the message was sent and received, pull the message bubble to the left.


To reply to a message, dictate with Siri or tap into the box and type a reply. When you start typing, a keyboard will pop up. You will also see a symbol for emojis that you can add to a message.


For a Quick Tapback to respond to a message, either double-tap or hold a message and get your choice of gray emojis above the message. Tap one and it goes. 


You can send an audio message. Tap on the gray circle in the message place. If you start typing instead, that gray box will turn into the blue send arrow.


SPECIAL EFFECTS in iMessage. Practice these!!!


Quick and Easy: If you type one of these three common messages in the box, it will be sent with special effects: Happy Birthday (balloons), Congratulations (confetti) and Happy New Year (fireworks).


-Send with Effect: To see these, you must first write your message (or even part of it). Then the mic in the message bubble will turn into a blue arrow. Press firmly on this. NOTE: a quick tap will just send the message; you want to hold it down until you get the screen that says Send with effect.

1. The Bubble screen gives you four choices to change how your message is received: Slam, Loud, Gentle and Invisible Ink. Try these out!

2. The Screen screen gives you nine choices of special effects to go with your message (most have sound effects, too): Echo, Spolight, Balloons, Confetti, Inflating Heart, Lasers, Fireworks, Shooting Star and Celebration. Try all of these. They are fun and recipients love them!


-Photos. To the left of the iMessage space, slide over to the Camera. You can take a new picture or access one in your Photos (tap on the overlapping photos in top left). You can mark up your photo by tapping on it until it goes full screen. Tap Markup in the bottom left and you can write or draw on the photo, then send it. You can also add stickers.


-Apps. Tap the App between the Heart and the iMessage bubble. You will get a choice of different things to use. The four balls on the bottom left give you your choices:


1. #images gives you tons of funny GIFs (tiny movies). You can search to get ones on specific topics (birthday, etc.) or featuring someone or something (Star Trek, Spongebob, snakes, cats, etc.).


2. Music. If you have music on your phone, it will give you some of your recently played songs. You can send them.


3. Store. This takes you to the App Store, where you can get (free or small fee) sticker packages. Once you download them, they automatically show up right there in iMessages.


4. YouTube. You can send these in your messages.


-Other quick messages. Turn your phone sideways and look for the swirl on the bottom right. You can use any of the canned messages or hand-write your own.


-Digital Touch. You can write or draw in the box (choice of colors) or choose one of the Digital Touch tapping effects. These are kind of weird and they send themselves when you do them:

-tap to get a burst of color.

-touch and hold for a fireball

-tap with two fingers to get a kiss

-tap and hold with two fingers for a heartbeat

-tap and hold with two fingers and drag fingers to break the hears (this one is hard!)


Animojis and Memojis. These require Facial Recognition. 

Animojis map your face and put your facial expressions on an assortment of cute animals and figures. Your voice will be coming out of them as a message!


You can create a Memoji of yourself (as many as you want). Go to the left of the Animojis and click on the plus sign. You can also do a message with your Animoji doing the talking! 


There are Sticker Packs that go with them both and you can send them in Messages, too.


Practice all of these with a relative or friend. They are great for birthdays and other special occasions.


Here is a YouTube about a way to send a message using your voice.


Here is a YouTube link about creating a Memoji of you.


Search YouTube for Apple Support and Subscribe to get lots of short instructive videos like these.


Maps: A Few Quick Tips


Maps, like many apps, uses your location. If you would like to know which apps know where you are and when, and how you can control that, go to Settings > Privacy > Location Services


You will see a list of apps that seek your location. You can tap on each one and decide when to share your location with it: Never, While Using, Ask Next Time or Always. I think the best answer for most is While Using. Some should be on Never!

Note that a little gray arrow shows an app has used your location in the last 24 hours. A purple arrow that one has recently used your location. 


Open Maps. Your current location will be in the center of the map, a blue pulsing circle. If your phone is regularly connected to your car with Bluetooth, Maps will show where your car is parked when you leave it (including your garage!).


At the bottom right is the temperature and the Air Quality Index.


Tap the i with a circle around it at the top right. You can choose map settings: Map, Transit or Satellite. Traffic or not. You can also report issues. The arrow under that indicates your location is being tracked.


The top of the map is North by default. If you move around your map so it is not, a round compass will appear under the arrow.


Use your fingers to move around and drag the map. To zoom in or out, pinch with two fingers. It will show the scale in the upper left as you zoom.


Turn on Satellite and you will see 3D by the arrow. Rotate and move with your fingers to get closeup looks. Tap 2D to go back. Tap the compass to get north back at the top.


In Map settings, look for places where it says Look Inside. Like Arden Fair. It will show you all the shops and where they are in the building.  You can get details on the various stores, and restaurants, including hours and which ones take Apple Pay. But not many pictures. In bigger cities like SF, you can get lots of pictures when you see Look Inside. In some cities or places you will see a binocular symbol. Tap on that to get views of a street or attraction. Try Chinatown in SF. Note that license plates and faces are blurred for privacy.


For directions, tap in the search bar and type the city or place where you want to go. The map will show it and offer you directions for you choice of car, walk, transit or ride-share. 14 adding bicycle routes. It often will give you several route choices, its preferred one in blue. Just tap on the gray route if you want that. 


Be sure your home address is in your contacts and is labeled as your home. Then when you want directions from some place to your home, the map knows where to go!


Tuesday, September 15, 2020

HOLD OFF on iOS14 and iPad14 installations

Apple made their announcements on Tuesday, September 15th and we suggest you NOT INSTALL iPhone or iPad operating system updates until the early bugs are worked out. We'll be looking for iOS 14.02 or 14.1 before installing. 

Sunday, September 13, 2020

Zoom Day 2 Preview and Presentation Notes

Preview of presentation

Tom Holt will introduce us to the app worlds of Books (including Apple's free User Guides), Libby by Overdrive (your public library at your fingertips), Podcasts for audio listening and learning and where to store your PDF Manuals. 

This will be a resource packed meeting. Oh NO!!! 

New strategy: Join the meeting, relax with your notepaper and pen - with an emphasis on RELAX. Watch the demonstrations to SEE what is possible. Let your curiosity get sparked. Then access this website and compare the notes posted here to your thoughts and questions written at the time of our meeting. Explore the links here that match your questions. Try the Search option on this site to find past topics that match your interests. Talk with your friends about their discovery process. 

Books is the app that came on your device. Use the Search feature to find an author or title.

  • Free Apple iPhone User Guide iOS 13.6 or iPad User Guide iOS 13.6 where Get is for free books and the listed price is what will be charged for other titles. Read ebook or listen to audiobooks with the Books app. Store your PDF manuals here. Save photos and other documents to Books. 

Podcasts is another app that came on your device. Use the Search feature to find an author or title

  • In our time - we heard these speeches or read about them. Checkout Jon Meacham's It Was Said podcast now at 3 of 10 episodes. 
  • Remember, back in 2019, when you travelled? Go on an adventure again with Travel with Rick Steves.

Other apps you download from the App Store app

  • Libby by Overdrive is a free app for audiobooks and ebooks. Add a title to your queue if it is not currently available for automatic delivery when it is available. 
  • Recorded Books also offers iOS app for magazines from the library. 
  • Amazon offers Kindle and Audible as free apps if you purchase content from Amazon. 

Notes from actual presentation.  - Links to come soon. 

Apple Announcement 
  • Watch Version 6 has blood oxygen sensor, fall detection and more.
  • Refreshed iPad line 
  • Fitness+ Service will be added this fall
  • Bundled Apple ONE services (arcade, Music, News+, AppleTV+, Fitness+, iCloud) for individuals or families or Premiere at different price points 
  • iOS14 and iPad14 - released 9/16/20 > Turn off Auto Updates Settings > General > Software Update > Customize Automatic Updates > move sliders from green to gray
  • Watch Announcement at https://apple.com 

Tom covers the entertainment features of our devices 
Radio apps, TV apps, Games, and more
  • TuneIn Radio uses WiFi or Cellular Data - popular in your area, BBC, french, etc. App is FREE but Subscription is optional for premium ad-free content.
  • Audio content plays on speakers, earbuds, bluetooth speakers 
 
Podcasts 
What is a podcast? Audio available on-demand and can be automatically delivered (FREE subscriptions). Can be downloaded to device so playback is not using WiFi or Cellular Data! 

Other recommended podcasts. 
Search for your favorite topics or radio personalities.
Tap the Subscribe button (podcasts are free) 
Quick downloads because the audio is compressed and will not take up lots of room on your device. 
Tap ( ... ) to see Settings and make choices on the number of Episodes to keep and the order to playback. 

Podcasts can be created by anyone, not just famous people or radio personalities. Podcasts are supported by advertisers.

Look at all the buttons. The Library is where to see how long episodes last. 

Post your favorite podcasts to the Chat to be included on the seminar website: 
  • Tom Holt - Gastropod by Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley
  • Barbara Beddow - Sacramento Bee & NPR Up First - short news updates, also Hidden Brain, Planet Money, Money Matters, This American Life, Fresh Air, iPhone Life, Pod Save America
  • Karen Martin - The Minimalist
  • Jennifer Kerr - Star Talk with Neil deGrasse Tyson
  • Larry Clark : Good podcasts: Freakonomics, Story Corps, The Moth
  • Carol Dabrowiak : NYT Book Review
Books - on iPad (also iPhone and on Macintosh computers/laptops) 
Tom's older iPad is great to use in the kitchen as a cookbook.

eBooks v paperback and hardback 
eBooks come in three flavors: free, only available in the Apple ecosystem and available from Amazon Kindle. Copyright issues 

Amazon Kindle users? Read ebook on a Kindle device or on your iPhone or iPad using the Kindle app. 

Free books
View the RS Catalog online and Share to Books! Browse by page thumbnails, select text and highlight, add bookmark to a page, search for text, add mark up. 
  • RS website > It's Here ... see catalog > open the PDF in Safari web browser > Share button > 2nd row of icons > Books. Now RS catalog is available to read off-line. 
Books Library view shows eBooks, PDFs, 
Download manuals for new purchases: refrigerator, car, robot vacuum, iPad User Guide, iPhone User Guide, garage door opener. 

Collections view is a view to master how your books are automatically organized and you can download documents and move them into your personal collections. 

Free books out-of-copyright - search for Project Gutenberg
https://gutenberg.org - search for the complete works of Charles Dickens, Darwin's Origin of the Species, local boy Mark Twain's Roughing It. 
Use the camera on your device and point at the QR Code to open Safari to one of the books. 

iPhone User Guide iOS 14 and iPad User Guide iOS 13.6 because you don't get a guide in the box with the device. iOS 14 is FREE and tap the Get button to download. This book is searchable, add highlighting, bookmarks and your own notes. In the Books app go to Search and type "user guide ios 14" or user guide ipad 14" (not available yet). You can also view the Apple user guides as online pages (not a downloaded book) when you have wifi access - iPad 13.6 User Guide or iPhone iOS 14 User Guide and specifically read about What's New in iOS 14 for iPhone and What's New in iPad OS 14

Paid books in Book Store - Search by title or author. 
  • eBook or audiobook will be paid by your Apple ID account. 
  • Can't load an ebook to others. Just on your device or use family sharing. 
  • Family Sharing is an option for Books, Apps, Music ... 
Once you have purchased a book you can delete it. Apple keeps a record of your purchase and you can re-download at no additional expense.

Watching out for big files 
  • Videos and Photographs take up the most space
  • Sound music or recordings are sometimes compressed
  • Text is very efficient for space

Public Library Borrow Books with Libby app. 
Need a public library card and can be a member of two + libraries. Search for a book by title or author. Tap the Borrow button, 21 day period with auto return or return early. Get on the waiting list for books. 
Libby also supports Kindle format and audiobooks. 

Tip from Karen Martin - iPhone Demo - Change the Wallpaper behind Home Screen or Lock Screen. Settings app > Wallpaper > Choose a New Wall Paper > below the options from Apple are your Photos Albums! Tap an album to see thumbnail photos. Tap a photo to show it full screen and use two finger tips to move the image to the best position and pinch in or out to zoom the photo. Tap Set button and choose Set Lock Screen or Set Home Screen or Set Both. Suggestions: Change wallpaper for the seasons. Change wallpaper when you travel to show the list of dates and locations on your lock screen. 

Senior discount available $55/year - a great resource to learn more about your big investment in iPhone and iPad devices. Then, teach your grand kids new tricks! 

Question: NPR One app drops audio on my morning walks. Consider a downloaded podcast instead. Control Center Review - WiFi, Cellular & Bluetooth ON, Airplane Mode OFF.  Dropping audio could mean you are beyond the range of your WiFi connection and not on your Cellular Data connection. It could also mean you have cellular data on but you have moved into a "dead zone" that cannot reach cell towers. 

Jennifer - Messages and Maps  next week 



Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Zoom Day 1

What fun that we are all together again. Ok, apart but together. Together with our iPhones and iPads. Hurray for a new semester.  

Review the details of how to create Note pages to keep track of your Zoom classes based on iOS 13.7. 

Point your iPhone to this Quick Response Code to get right to our website. 

Come back soon - this page will have additional information and links.  There is a ton of information on this page. Don't try to absorb it all in one reading. Take small sips and then explore options hinted at on your iPhone or iPad. 

Websites recommended for more information have a green background. Just tap the words to open Safari on your device and read at your leisure. 

  • Carol gave us the button and screen tours for iPhone and iPad. Then she revealed the secrets to using the multi-touch screen > gestures! Gestures can be one finger up to five fingers, a long stroke or a flick, a tap, touch-and-hold or a long press. Gestures replace the mouse and keys used to give a computer instructions. 
  • Web browsing with Safari and using the Search field is powerful but so is Spotlight Search on your device. Swipe one finger down in between icons on your Home Screen to bring up the Spotlight Search field at the top of your screen. Search for any term or name to see results from your Contacts app, Notes app or even the Internet. You should also explore how to begin a search using your personal assistant, Siri. Try a long swipe and then try just flicking your finger down. 
  • Swipe with one finger from right to left on your Home Screen to see additional Home Screens - watch the dots just above the Dock
  • Swipe using one finger left to right and keep going until you see the Today View. Welcome to Widget-Land! These boxes are sub-components of the apps on your device. You can control what widgets are visible and the order of widgets on your list. If you add many widgets, then scroll up to see more. To add new widgets to your device, scroll the list up until you see [Edit]. Tap Edit to reveal Today View options. The top box are the current widgets and they are marked with a red (-) button on the left and an icon with three parallel lines on the right. The bottom box, More Widgets, have a green (+) button. The list of available widgets in the bottom box depends on the apps you have downloaded. Not all apps have a widget for the Today View. The widgets you show on your iPhone do not have to be the same ones you show on your iPad. Transit information (Google Traffic or Maps Destinations) are good for iPhone because you are ... on the go. 
  • On your iPad, the vertical bar in the Dock | separates your chosen apps (on the left, they always appear here) from the recent apps (that rotate as you use more apps on your iOS device. 
  • Control Center has helpful buttons for quick controls like Brightness, Do Not Disturb, Flashlight, Camera, WiFi and more. To access the Control Center on older iPhones with a physical Home button, swipe up from the bottom of your screen. On face-ID iPhones, swipe down from the top right corner. Add features to your Control Center from the gear app icon - Settings > Control Center > Customize Controls > tap a green (+) to add the feature, tap a red (-) to remove the feature from your Control Center. Use the three parallel line icons on the right side to change the position of the feature in your Control Center. 
  • Is your iPad ever stuck in landscape position? Is it broken? Did you do harm? NO! You probably turned on the Rotation Lock in the Control Center. Active / Enabled settings are light colored and inactive / off settings are black. 
  • The long press gesture on an app icon is how you bring up the option to Delete or Share or Edit Home Screen. If your apps are wiggling, you are in the Edit the Home Screen mode. Some apps will have a small (x) and tap this to bring up the Delete option - you must confirm that you want to delete this app. If you delete a game, your scores are also deleted. You can return to the App Store and re-download past purchases - at no new expense. The App Store remembers what you have downloaded and there will be a cloud-icon - tap it to download again. On devices with a physical Home button, stop the wiggling of apps by pressing the Home button. On face-ID devices, look for the Done button in the top right corner of a Home Screen. 
  • The Sacramento-based Apple Support Group is called MacNexus and membership is $40 per year. They offer two Saturday morning workshops each month as well as a general meeting on the 4th Wednesday of the month. All meetings are now on Zoom! This is a great group of skilled Apple Device users as well as newbies. You can get your questions answered here and connect with other iPhone and iPad users https://macnexus.org 
Additional comments ... 
  • Remember that to learn more, you are just a tap away from more information. There is the Tips app on your devices - Remember how Carol demonstrated the Search feature by swiping between app icons on the Home Screen. Find Tips - open it to see iPad specific tips on your iPad and open on an iPhone to see specific tips for iPhone! 
  • Know more about your device by searching for the Apple Support app. It will tell you about all your Apple devices associated by your Apple ID. Tap on the name of your iPad then tap on Device Details to see your Model, OS Version, Serial Number and the date when AppleCare expires. In the Topics box you can get more information. For example if you think your battery is not holding a charge, open Device Performance > Battery Performance and read Maximize Battery Life. Do you struggle with Touch ID (a physical Home button) or Face ID? Open Device Performance > Help with Face ID or Touch ID and read one of the articles there. 
  • Use your web browser to open the Apple Support YouTube Channel to find short videos on many topics - iPhone, iPad and Mac computer. 
  • Search YouTube for videos on topics you want to review. Type "iPhone Gestures" in the YouTube search field revealed several helpful videos: Zollotech: 10 iPhone and iPad Gestures You Might Not Know - Zollotech: 5 iPhone Gestures and Tips You Should Be Using - Apple Insider: All iPhone XS Gestures in under 5 minutes!   Your search terms should be as specific as possible. Use the iPhone model name and your question. "iPhone SE AND Contacts" where the AND creates a boolean search for the words before combined with the words after. This type of search helps reduce the number of false hits to your inquiry. Use this same technique with a Google Search or a Bing Search. 

Melissa's Email-to-Notes demonstration went by quickly and was too much to push into our brain. But that is why this website exists. Come by often and re-read past entries - you'll be pleased at what you now know and surprised at what you missed the first time. 

Several people shared their glee at learning more about the Notes app. James said it is "Under-appreciated for all it can do!" Pat shared that "After attending this seminar many times I've started to use Notes more. The best example is my grocery list! I always have my list with me." Everyone agreed that using Siri is a habit worth practicing ...