Mac Format

Do more with iCloud

Power up your productivi­ty with these secrets of Apple’s online services

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The iCloud.com website has become increasing­ly useful over the years and now gives you access to webbased versions of Pages, Numbers and Keynote to work on documents even without an Apple device to

hand. As of High Sierra and iOS 11, the iCloud service and its website have some new features, in addition to compelling ones that were already only available at the website. Here’s how to make more of iCloud and iCloud.com in your work.

1 Share files in iCloud Drive

You can share files created in apps other than Pages, Numbers and Keynote. In iOS 11’s Files app, locate a file in iCloud Drive that you want to share, tap Select, tap the file, tap Share, and then tap Add People in the bottom row of the sheet. In Finder in High Sierra, choose Go > iCloud Drive,

click the file and choose Share > Add People. In the iCloud Drive app at iCloud.com, select a file and click the rightmost icon in the top-centre group.

Wherever you do this, you can specify whether people can edit the file and if an explicit invitation from you is required to access it – just like in Pages, Numbers and Keynote.

2 Share online storage with your family

As you make greater use of iCloud Drive, your free 5GB of iCloud storage might run out. If you and additional family members need more space, you can share a 200GB or 2TB plan (bit.ly/iclshare), rather than each person separately paying for more.

3 Create contact groups

At iCloud.com, open Contacts, click the + near the bottom left and choose New Group. Name the group, then click on All Contacts and drag people to the group to add to it. This capability is also available in Contacts for Mac, but not the iOS version; for group management there, use Interact Contacts (£3.99, bit.ly/intcntcts).

4 Recover deleted items

At iCloud.com, click Settings and scroll down to the Advanced section and click Restore Files. Fill checkboxes next to the files you want to recover, then Done to restore them. Alongside this are options to bring back contacts, calendars, reminders, or bookmarks.

5 Create email aliases

Email aliases can be very useful if, for example, you need an email address to use when you sign up for a mailing list and don’t want to hand over your regular address. You can have up to three iCloud aliases.

To create an alias, open Mail at iCloud.com, click the gear icon at the bottom left, choose Preference­s, then click Accounts. Click ‘Add an alias’ and type the words you want to use as the alias (the part that appears in front of @icloud), and next to ‘Full name’ type the name you want to appear in the ‘From’ field. Assign a label and label colour if you want, then click Done.

You can use rules to define how messages to your alias are dealt with, such as moving them out of your inbox to another mailbox. Rules are available in Mail for Mac, but it’s best to perform filtering by alias on the server, which you can do in Mail at iCloud.com. You’ll find Apple’s brief guide to setting up server-side rules at bit.ly/filtermail.

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