iPad&iPhone user

iOS 13: How to hand off music or phone calls from your iPhone to a HomePod

Want your iPhone to play what your HomePod is playing? Just bring the two devices close together. Leif Johnson reports

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With iOS 13.2 (13.2.1 for HomePod), it’s easier than ever to hand off music or a phone call from your iPhone to your HomePod. Such handoffs were possible before iOS 13.2.1, but they were a bit of a hassle (as we’ll see below). Now, though, Apple

provides a ‘quick way’ and a ‘long way’ of making these handoffs. Here’s how to do both.

The quick way

If your phone is playing any kind of AirPlay-compatible media – such as a song on Apple Music or Spotify, a podcast, a YouTube video, a Netflix show or even a phone call – you simply need to hold your iPhone around an inch away from your HomePod. After a one-second delay, the audio track will jump from your phone and start playing on the HomePod. That’s all there is to it.

And this works both ways, too. If you’d like to hand over your music or phone call from the HomePod to your iPhone, simply bring your iPhone to within an inch of your HomePod and the audio will switch back over. In both cases, you’ll see a notificati­on like the one above pop up on your iPhone if the transfer was successful.

The long way

Here’s how you had to do these handoffs before iOS 13.2, and this method is still handy if you’re, oh,

listening to music on your iPhone from the couch and don’t want to make the hike over to the HomePod.

1. First, make sure you have AirPlay 2-compatible audio playing – again, be it an Apple Music or Spotify song, a movie from the TV app. (The steps are slightly different for a phone call, so we’ve put the direction for that below.)

2. You could go a number of ways from here. For simplicity’s sake, though, open your iPhone’s Control Centre and then look at the audio playing in the box in the upper right-hand corner. If your audio is playing in that box, you can transfer it with AirPlay.

3. Press the AirPlay button in the upper right-hand corner of this box. It looks like a triangle intersecti­ng three rings of concentric circles.

4. Another menu will pop up showing the various AirPlay device you can beam your audio to. Toggle the circle next to your HomePod’s name.

5. The audio will immediatel­y start playing on your HomePod. You can also pause your audio or adjust the volume from this menu.

To switch your audio back over to the iPhone, simply toggle off the checkbox next to your HomePod’s name. The audio should switch back over to your iPhone (and, depending on what you’re listening to, it may even pause). To manually hand off a phone call, press the Audio button that appears in the Phone app’s interface once you’ve started making your call. You’ll then see a list of the audio devices you can beam the call to. Select your HomePod, and you’ll be good to go.

To send it back to your phone, just repeat the process and select your iPhone.

Troublesho­oting

These steps should work by default, but if they don’t, make sure both your iPhone and HomePod are running at least iOS 13.2.

If they are (and you’re still having trouble), make sure Handoff is turned on by going to Settings > General > AirPlay & Handoff on your iPhone and checking to see if Handoff and Transfer to HomePod are toggled on.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? It’s only visible while you’re within range for the audio transfer
It’s only visible while you’re within range for the audio transfer
 ??  ?? Spelling it out, as here, makes the process seem more complicate­d than it is. This is really all there is to it
Spelling it out, as here, makes the process seem more complicate­d than it is. This is really all there is to it

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