iPad&iPhone user

New Year’s resolution­s for iPhone users

Now is the time to break some bad iPhone habits and start some good ones, argues Jason Cross

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The turn of the year is when we take stock of our habits and strive to do better. Many people pledge to improve their health with diet and exercise. Others make a commitment to the environmen­t, like compositin­g. For some, this is the year they’ll finally quit smoking.

But kicking bad old habits and starting good new habits should extend to your digital life, too. Our

iPhones are ever-present tools that we spend so much of our waking hours with, so it’s important to cast our self-improvemen­t gaze on how we use them, too. Here are five New Year’s resolution­s for iPhone users that will help you form lasting good technology habits.

1. Curb excessive use with Screen Time

Apple gave us quite a gift in iOS 12 with Screen Time. It’s more than parental controls: It’s a tool anyone can use for insight into how much they’re using – or over-using – their iPhone or its apps. If you didn’t turn on Screen Time when you first installed iOS 12, you should do so now. It doesn’t really make a difference in battery life, and it doesn’t do anything by default other than give you interestin­g informatio­n about how you use your iPhone.

Once you’ve had it running for a week or more, dive into the Screen Time menu in Settings and poke around. Do you pick up your phone 200 times per day? Are you getting 500 daily notificati­ons? Maybe you average two and a half hours a day in the Instagram app alone? It’s time for an interventi­on. You can use this informatio­n to decide which ways you’re over-using your phone and make some changes. If there’s a particular app or service you’re

spending way too much time with, consider using Screen Time to force limits on yourself.

If you really lack self-control, have your other half, roommate, or friend set a passcode for Screen Time that you don’t know. It’ll be okay; there’s nothing happening on Snapchat that’s so important it can’t wait until tomorrow.

2. Get those notificati­ons under control

If Screen Time is telling you that you pick up your phone too much – well over 100 times a day – it’s likely that you’re also getting hundreds of notificati­ons a day. It’s hard not to pick up your phone if it’s screaming “Hey, look at me!” every few minutes.

By default, many apps notify you about every little thing, complete with banners and sounds and all sorts of distractin­g annoyances. Limiting notificati­ons to those things that actually need your immediate attention is a quality of life improvemen­t you’ll notice right away.

Start by going into the notificati­ons settings and examining the settings for nearly every app on your phone. No, seriously – it won’t take as long as you think.

Consider adhering to these principles: If you truly need to take action on an app’s notificati­ons right away (as with a smart doorbell, home security app, or Messages), then let it annoy you with banners and sounds. If you only need notificati­ons to tell you about something that happened but doesn’t require immediate action, then turn off sounds and banners, and maybe even lock screen notificati­ons and badges – you can see those apps only in the Notificati­on

Centre. Finally, for apps you only rarely use or those where you open the app several times a day anyway, just turn off notificati­ons entirely.

Err on the side of fewer notificati­ons. You can always go back and make them more permissive for an app if you find you’re missing anything important.

Next, go into apps where you do need notificati­ons, and limit the sorts of things you get them for. You’ll have to do this in each app’s settings menu, and every app is different. Take Twitter, for example – you may want to leave notificati­ons enabled but turn them off for everything except Direct Messages. (You don’t really need a notificati­on popping up to tell you that someone retweeted you, do you?)

Even if you don’t feel like your notificati­ons are a problem, you’ll be surprised how much more you enjoy using your phone when you only see notificati­ons you truly need. It’s opening your mailbox every day and never finding junk mail or fliers.

3. Finally delete all the old apps you never use

Do you have home screen after home screen full of apps, even though you only really use about eight of

them? You’re not alone. It’s so easy to download an app and try it out, and the next thing you know you’ve got an iPhone loaded with icons you haven’t tapped in months (some of them still producing copious notificati­ons… see above).

Do you really need that airline app for the flight you took two years ago on an airline you don’t usually fly? Aren’t you done with the free-to-play game that updates itself every week even though you haven’t launched it in six months?

If you really need any of those old apps, you can always download them again without repurchasi­ng them. The whole point is to get some of those icons off your home screen, though, so don’t lean on the ‘Offload App’ option too heavily. Set a rule for yourself: if you haven’t used an app in over a month, get rid of it. You can even delete many of Apple’s built-in apps and grab them again later if you want to.

4. Start taking password security seriously

By now you’ve heard it a hundred times: it’s extremely important to use a unique, strong password for every

site and service, and you should use a password manager to help make that easier. For your most important sites and services, you should use two-factor authentica­tion (2FA). That means popular social media accounts, banks, email, and large ‘ecosystem’ accounts like your Microsoft, Amazon, or Google accounts.

And yet year after year, we read stories about password breaches where millions of people got compromise­d by re-using passwords. The most common passwords, year after year, are ‘password’ and ‘123456’.

This is the year you start to take this stuff seriously. Apple’s got your back. In iOS 12 there’s a fairly good built-in password manager that even warns you about re-using passwords. If you want to use a

third-party password manager (handy if you use nonMac computers, browsers other than Safari, or share passwords with family members for things like your Netflix account), iOS 12 works better with them than ever. Password managers can now auto-fill passwords and forms in web pages and apps and use Touch ID or Face ID for authentica­tion.

Don’t know where to start? We suggest either 1Password or LastPass for password managers, and Authy is a great app for generating codes for two-factor authentica­tion. Using an authentica­tion app like Authy is more secure than relying on SMS messages for 2FA. At the very least, you should set up 2FA for your Apple ID.

Oh, and make sure your six-digit numeric passcode to unlock your iPhone is not the same one you use on any other device or site. If it’s not, it’s time to change that, too. 5. Stay on top of your backups

Should anything happen to your phone – if it’s lost forever or damaged beyond repair – would you be able to get back everything on it? All those photos you can never re-take? Your painstakin­gly created playlists? Those saved games with hours and hours of progress in them? This is the perfect time to make sure you’re up to date with backups. For starters, turn on iCloud backup. Open the Settings app and then tap your account name – it should appear at the very top – then tap iCloud, then iCloud Backup. Make sure that is enabled.

But your iCloud backup doesn’t keep everything on your phone. To do that, you want to make an encrypted backup to iTunes. Connect your iPhone to your Mac or

PC, launch iTunes, select your iPhone by clicking the little phone icon in the toolbar, and under Backups, choose This Computer. Check Encrypt local backup, so your account passwords and Health data gets backed up too – just be sure to use a password you won’t forget. Click the button to Back up now.

It’s not necessary to do an encrypted iTunes backup all the time. Once a month should suffice. Want an easy way to remember? Just say, “Hey Siri, remind me every month to back up my iPhone.” Siri will set up a monthly recurring reminder for you.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Don’t trust yourself with your Screen Time settings? Let your friend or spouse set a passcode
Don’t trust yourself with your Screen Time settings? Let your friend or spouse set a passcode
 ??  ?? Do you really need sounds, banners, and badges on all your apps?
Do you really need sounds, banners, and badges on all your apps?
 ??  ?? The iPhone Storage menu will help you weed out space-taking apps. But honestly, you should just clear out everything you don’t regularly use
The iPhone Storage menu will help you weed out space-taking apps. But honestly, you should just clear out everything you don’t regularly use
 ??  ?? You really need to have two-factor authentica­tion set up on your Apple ID
You really need to have two-factor authentica­tion set up on your Apple ID
 ??  ?? Make keeping on top of iPhone backups one of your New Year’s resolution­s
Make keeping on top of iPhone backups one of your New Year’s resolution­s

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