11 new iOS 11 features to try
David Nield
at 15:53 PM Sep 20 2017
11 new iOS 11 features to try
The new operating system arrives
Apple
Mobile // 

This week marks the official arrival of iOS 11, and Apple’s latest operating system boasts quite a few party tricks that you’re going to want to try out. Here are some of the best new features, from playing with the magic of augmented reality to adding a dock to your iPad interface.

 To get started, either order a new iPhone 8 or iPhone X, or simply install the new software when your device prompts you to do so. In addition to the recently-announced iPhone models, many older phones and tablets will be able to download iOS 11. If your device is currently running iOS 10—in other words, if you own an iPhone 5s or later, a 5th generation iPad or later, an iPad mini 2 or later, or a 6th generation iPod Touch or later—you can install the new operating system. However, if you have the iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, or fourth generation 2012 iPad, you’re out of luck; those devices are not eligible for the upgrade.

Customize the Control Center

Swipe up from the bottom of the screen, and you’ll see that the Control Center has a new, cleaner look. To configure which options appear on this panel, head to Settings then Control Center. Here, you can decide which buttons to hide and which ones you want to see. Among the pack, you’ll see some new buttons, including an option for Screen Recording. This feature lets you record the activity on your phone as a video—which lets you troubleshoot problems, record tutorials, or preserve your gaming triumphs—and save it to your device.

Do more with Live Photos

In 2015, iOS 9 gave us Live Photos, animated clips formed by recording short snippets of video before and after snapping a pic. iOS 11 takes this feature and lets you customize it. Open a Live Photo in the Photos app, swipe up, and you will see new editing options: Apply Loop to make the clip repeat over and over, Bounce to make it play forward and backward and forward again, and Long Exposure to compress it into a single frame, creating the effect of a long exposure. These video processing options resemble those in Instagram, but you can get them without having to post your content to social media.

Drive safely

The Do Not Disturb mode in iOS has been around for a while. Now, iOS 11 will automatically apply it while you’re in your car. This means that, when you’re at the wheel, your phone will mute notifications and respond to texts on your behalf so you can concentrate on the road. To try it out, just hop in the car and start moving, and the new mode should kick in. If you’d prefer to enable it manually, or to tweak your SMS auto-replies, you can adjust these in Settings, under the Do Not Disturb options.

Play with augmented reality

Thanks to the new ARKit platform for developers, iOS 11 has extra augmented reality powers, which means it can support a wide range of AR apps. You’ll need to wait for the first wave of third-party apps, but you can test out at least one AR option right away. Open Maps, head to a city that supports the Flyover feature, and tap the Flyover button. When you begin walking around the room, you’ll move around that city, viewing it from above like an AR-powered Godzilla.

Ask Siri to put on your favorite music

The iOS 11 version of Siri comes with some extra perks: The assistant offers more natural-sounding voices and makes news and website recommendations based on your past activity. In addition, Siri can now put on some tunes for you. Just say, “Play something I like,” and the digital assistant will take care of the rest. For this to work though, you do have to be a paid-up member of the Apple Music club.

Type with one hand

On its default keyboard, iOS 11 offers a one-handed mode that makes it easier to type when you only have one hand free. It essentially compresses the keyboard and shifts it to either the left or right side of the screen. To implement it, press and hold the emoji button on the keyboard, then slide your finger over to either the left- or right-handed layout, whichever one you prefer. To go back to normal, access the same pop-up menu again.

Explore your stored files

If your phone runs iOS 10, it already has an iCloud Drive feature. That gets an upgrade with iOS 11, in the form of the dedicated Files app. Files makes all of your folders available to search—you can browse through iCloud, your device’s local storage, and even third-party storage accounts like Dropbox and Google Drive. To launch the app, tap on the Files icon.

Surf the redesigned App Store

With the arrival of IOS 11, Apple is revamping the App Store. The layout is simpler, Games has its own tab, and the algorithm should do a better job of directing you towards the latest awesome apps. On desktop computers, the App Store inside iTunes has also been upgraded to match. To see these changes, go ahead and open the App Store on your phone or tablet.

Add apps to an iPad’s dock

Install iOS 11 on an iPad, and you get a new dock at the bottom of the screen, which more closely resembles the dock on an Apple computer running macOS. In other words, you can add apps: Simply tap and hold on an icon and drag it down to make it part of the dock. To launch one of these apps, tap its icon in the dock. To open it in windowed mode, where one window appears on top of another, tap and drag the icon to the middle of the screen. To see that app in Split View mode, where it only covers part of the screen (another app can cover the rest of the screen), tap on the icon and then drag it to the left or right of the screen.

Drag-and-drop on an iPad

Drag-and-drop is another feature that iOS 11 brings to tablets. It works exactly like it sounds: In Split View, tap and hold on some highlighted text, or an image, or a file, and then drag it across to an app on the other side of the screen. You should be able to use drag-and-drop in all Apple apps—and, once developers add the functionality, many third-party titles as well.

Take notes with Apple Pencil

If you own an iPad Pro and an Apple Pencil, iOS 11 provides some extra functions. To start taking searchable notes, for example, you don’t need to unlock your tablet—just tap the Pencil on the lock screen. In addition, a new feature called Instant Markup now lets you instantly annotate a PDF or screenshot by tapping it with the Pencil. Finally, Mail now supports in-message drawings, so your emails can incorporate cute doodles or informative notes and illustrations.

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