iPad&iPhone user

Set up an iPhone X

Before you even peel the plastic off your new iPhone X, read Jason Cross’s guide to setting up Apple’s latest handset

-

So that £1,000+ sticker shock didn’t put you off from buying the phone that Apple calls “the future”, did it? We don’t blame you – we bought the iPhone X, too. I know you want to dive right in the moment you get the box in your hands, but wait up. We have a little setup advice you’re going to want to pay

attention to. Sure, it seems like a drag right now, but this stuff is going to save you time and frustratio­n later.

1. Back up and restore

That’s right, you’re going to want to back up your old iPhone after you have your new iPhone X in hand, so the backup is as up-to-date as it can possibly be. You can back up via iCloud or iTunes:

For an iTunes backup: Connect your old iPhone to your Mac, launch iTunes, select your iPhone by clicking the little phone icon in the toolbar, and under Backups, choose This Computer. Checking Encrypt local backup is a good idea, so your account passwords and Health data gets backed up too – just choose a password you won’t forget. Click the button to Back up now.

When the backup is done, connect your new iPhone X, then tell iTunes you want to restore from the backup you just made. Or, skip down to our second tip below and use Quick Start. Later, you can switch back to iCloud backups if you prefer, in Settings > iCloud >

Backup. But it never hurts to run a backup on your own Mac every now and then.

For an iCloud backup: No need to connect your iPhone to your Mac. Just launch Settings and tap on your Apple ID profile listing at the top, then go to iCloud > iCloud Backup and select Back up now. When setting up your new iPhone X, you can restore your iPhone from this backup once you’ve logged into your new device with your Apple ID.

If you happen to be coming from an Android phone there’s a Move from iOS Android app that can assist you with setting up your Google account data in Mail, Calendars, and Contacts, moving your camera roll over, even transferri­ng your Chrome bookmarks to Safari.

2. Update your old iPhone and use Quick Start

iOS 11 introduces a really great new feature called Quick Start. It’s sort of like magic. You just hold your new phone next to your old phone, and a little card pops up asking if you want to transfer all your stuff to the new device. You’ll then point your old phone’s camera at your new phone (which displays a cloud of little dots) and enter your old phone’s six-digit passcode.

You’ll go through the rest of the setup process, like enabling

Face ID, and then your phone will be ready to go, set up just like your old iPhone. It’ll even prompt you to update your old iPhone’s backup if it hasn’t been backed up in awhile.

Setting up your phone this way transfers over most of your settings, the arrangemen­t of your home screen, and more. It’s a huge time saver. But it requires iOS 11, so if you haven’t updated your old phone to iOS 11 for some reason, you might want to do that ASAP. You don’t want to have to wait through a big update process once you have your iPhone X in hand.

After setting up your phone this way, you’ll want to give it a few minutes to re-download all your apps. Initially, your phone will show placeholde­rs for your apps, all arranged and stuffed into folders exactly as on your old iPhone. But every time you download an app from the App Store, your phone actually grabs a unique version specifical­ly optimized for that iPhone model. So your new phone has to download the apps again, but your user data and settings get transferre­d over.

As fast and easy as this is, we still recommend backing up your phone as described in #1 above. If anything goes really wrong during your setup process, you’ll be glad you did.

3. Set up Face ID and Apple Pay

Yes, you should use Face ID for maximum security – it’s the quickest way to unlock your iPhone X, and will let you set a more complicate­d passcode, since you don’t have to type it in every time. Setting up Face ID is much faster than Touch ID, too – the setup screen will prompt you and ask you to slowly look around in a circle a

couple times. It’s a lot quicker than tapping the home button dozens of times to register a fingerprin­t.

Worried about your privacy with Face ID? Don’t be. No photos of your face nor any other biometric data ever leave your phone – Apple doesn’t get any of that. And it isn’t accessible by other apps, just as other apps weren’t able to access your fingerprin­ts with Touch ID. .

Since you need to have Face ID enabled in order to use Apple Pay, this would be a good time to jump into Apple’s Wallet app to set that up. If you’re new to Apple Pay, just follow the instructio­ns within Wallet to add a credit card or two. If you already had Apple Pay on your old iPhone, you’ll notice that your credit cards have disappeare­d on your new iPhone. Why? For your security, of course. Your Wallet history will still be there, but you’ll have to re-enter any payment cards you’d like to use with Apple Pay.

4. Update your apps

Great, now you should be on your home screen at last. Go to the App Store first – you’ll want the latest versions of all of your apps in order to take advantage of all the new abilities Apple has given developers in iOS 11. If you’ve used Quick Setup, most of your apps should be up to date already.

While you’re there, check out the App Store’s new iOS 11 redesign. You’ll find collection­s of cool apps curated in magazine-style articles, interviews with up and coming app developers, game trailers, and more goodies over in the Today section. This changes daily, so you can come back tomorrow to see what else is new. Don’t forget you can have your apps auto-update

by flipping the Updates switch in Settings > iTunes & App Stores. Or, you can manually update your apps and just check out the ‘What’s New’ release notes to see what changed.

5. Pair your Apple Watch

If you use an Apple Watch (or maybe you just bought a brand new Apple Watch Series 3 to go with your future-phone) you’ll need to pair it to your new iPhone to keep the Activity data flowing to your Health database, and keep your new phone’s notificati­ons

flowing to your watch. First you have to unpair your watch from your old iPhone, either in the Apple Watch app on your old iPhone (tap your watch, then the ‘i’ icon, then Unpair Apple Watch, then enter your iCloud password when prompted), or on the watch itself (Settings > General > Reset).

Then, launch the Apple Watch app on your new iPhone X, which will walk you through the pairing process including setting a passcode, unlocking behaviour, and Apple Pay.

If your Apple Watch isn’t already running watchOS 4, you’ll want to update it. To upgrade, your Apple Watch needs to be connected to its charger, in range of your iPhone, and at least 50 percent charged. Then look for the Software Update option in the Apple Watch app. Upgrade your watch all the way to watchOS 4.1, which

adds awesome new music features for Series 3 watches and important security updates for everyone.

6. Learn the new gestures and commands

As you may have noticed, your iPhone X has no home button. Where the Home button used to be, you now have an extra half-inch or so of glorious OLED display. So how do you do everything you used to use the home button for? How does the app switching work? Or taking a screenshot? Here are a few basic commands you’ll need to re-learn now that your iPhone is ‘home free’. Return Home: Just swipe up from the bottom of the screen.

Jump between apps: Swipe left or right along the bottom edge of the phone to jump back and forth between apps. You can sort of ‘flick’ from the bottom corners, moving your finger up and over, to ‘bounce’ between the apps, or just slide directly side-to-side along the bottom edge.

App switcher: Swipe up from the bottom edge and pause for a second with your finger still on the display. App cards will quickly pop up, and you can lift your finger off and swipe around through them.

Close an app: If you need to kill an app from the app switcher, you do it a little differentl­y. On other iPhones, you swipe up on the app card. On the iPhone X, you press and hold on the cards until red (-) symbols appear in the corners. Tap those to close the apps.

Take a screenshot: Press the side button and the volume up button at the same time. There are lots of other new commands and gestures to learn. See our guide on page 42.

7. Try out Portrait Lighting

The iPhone 8 and X support a brand new camera technology called Portrait Lighting. It’s in beta, but you can still give it a shot (get it?). Just launch the Camera app and select Portrait from your camera modes at the bottom of the screen, and then swipe through the different lighting options at the bottom. On the iPhone 8, portrait mode (including Portrait Lighting) is only available on the back cameras. But on the iPhone X, the frontfacin­g selfie camera can use it, too.

The iPhone X has most of the same camera improvemen­ts as the iPhone 8 Plus – better low-light performanc­e, more accurate colour, and up to 4K 60fps video. But the iPhone X has optical image stabilizat­ion (OIS) on both the regular and the telephoto rear cameras.

8. Customize your Control Centre

Control Centre is one of the biggest changes in iOS 11. Instead of spreading your utilities out over three sliding

pages, Apple condensed them into one screen with a uniform-looking set of icons. On the iPhone X, you access Control Centre by swiping down from the top of the screen, to the right of the sensor notch. Apple’s default Control Centre utilities include your camera, flashlight, calculator, and alarm clock; you’ll also find two sliding controls for your volume and screen brightness, plus toggles for rotation screen lock, Do Not Disturb, screen mirroring, and all of your wireless controls (like Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, and Airplane Mode). This is also where you’ll find your iPhone X’s remaining battery life percentage, since it can’t fit on the screen anymore (thanks, Face ID notch).

One of the best parts about iOS 10’s Control Centre was the full page of controls just for audio playback,

like when you’re listening to a podcast or streaming from Apple Music. In iOS 11, your audio controls are condensed into a small box featuring just a play/ pause button and some skip controls. However, if you 3D Touch on the audio control box, it will expand and reveal a full suite of options for better control.

In fact, several of your Control Centre utilities have hidden 3D Touch features – just long-press on any control to expand it. A light tap will turn that feature on or off, but a longer 3D Touch gesture will expand it some more.

There are a boatload of other features you can add to your Control Centre panel, too – head on over to Settings > Control Centre > Customize Controls, and add any feature that sounds interestin­g. Looking for something new? Check out Do Not Disturb While Driving, a feature that automatica­lly enables Do Not Disturb once your iPhone detects that you’re in a moving vehicle, and Screen Recording, which lets you record what’s on your iPhone’s screen and then share it.

9. Charge it up

There’s a reason your new iPhone X has that shiny glass back, and that’s not because it’s a throwback to the iPhone 4. No, that glass back is for wireless charging support. To use this feature, you’ll need a compatible wireless charging pad that utilizes the Qi standard (Apple sells two – one from Belkin and one from Mophie – but we’ve tried others that work fine too). If you have one of those laying around, all you have to do is set your iPhone onto the pad and watch it start to power up. Say goodbye to the jumble of Lightning cables on

your bedside table. Of course, you can charge your iPhone X via Lightning if you want to. In fact, this is still the fastest way to charge your phone, provided you use the right adaptor and cable.

The iPhone 8 and X support fast charging using the USB-C Power Delivery (USB-PD) standard. You can use Apple’s own 29W USB-C power adaptor, or the USB-C power adaptor for a modern MacBook Pro. But thirdparty USB-C power adaptors should work as well, as long as they support the USB-PD standard. You’ll need to buy a Lightning-to-USB-C cable and a new adaptor, because you’ll only find that same old slow 5W adaptor and a USB-A lightning cable inside your iPhone X box.

10. Send Animoji to your friends

I know it’s silly, but the best way to brag about your new Future Phone is to send someone an iMessage that shows the Fox Emoji perfectly lip-synced and following your facial expression­s as you sing BohemianRh­apsody. They will be so jealous. Animoji are found in Messages, as an iMessage app at the bottom of the screen.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Quick Start makes setting up a new iPhone fast and easy
Quick Start makes setting up a new iPhone fast and easy
 ??  ?? This is the new App Store on an iPad. You get these app packages on the iPhone, too
This is the new App Store on an iPad. You get these app packages on the iPhone, too
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Portrait Lighting will take your iPhone X portrait shots to the next level. Hello Kitty agrees
Portrait Lighting will take your iPhone X portrait shots to the next level. Hello Kitty agrees
 ??  ?? iOS 11’s Control Centre is customizab­le (the default configurat­ion is at far right). Individual items can be expanded to reveal additional controls
iOS 11’s Control Centre is customizab­le (the default configurat­ion is at far right). Individual items can be expanded to reveal additional controls
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia