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All you need to know about the most popular smartphone on the market-in terms anyone can understand
iPhone For Dummies, 2025 Edition, covers the iPhone basics, as well as the features of iPhone 16 and earlier models. You'll also learn how to navigate the new iOS 17 release to make phone and FaceTime calls, send texts and messages, get online, play games, shoot video, and all the other amazing things your Apple smartphone can do. Guy Hart-Davis, a longtime Apple expert and Dummies tech author extraordinaire, shows you how to set up your phone to work with your life. Customize your settings, including privacy and app permissions, and make sure your phone is protected. Connect the new iPhone models to your other devices, sync your data from your previous phone, and learn about the new stuff you can do with updated hardware on the latest models. This beginner-friendly book makes it easy to become an iPhone power user.
Whether this is your first iPhone or your umpteenth, iPhone For Dummies is the must-have resource for using your new device to its fullest.
Guy Hart-Davis is the author of more than 100 technical books, including several books in the For Dummies and Teach Yourself VISUALLY series.
Introduction 1
Part 1: Up and Running with Your iPhone 5
Chapter 1: Setting Up and Navigating Your iPhone 7
Chapter 2: Mastering Essential Moves 25
Chapter 3: Getting in Sync 47
Chapter 4: Using Control Center and Siri 65
Chapter 5: Setting Your iPhone Straight 79
Chapter 6: Finding and Managing Apps 113
Part 2: Communicating and Organizing 125
Chapter 7: Making Phone and FaceTime Calls 127
Chapter 8: Going on a Mobile Safari 147
Chapter 9: Texting 1, 2, 3: Messages and Notes 167
Chapter 10: The Email Must Get Through 183
Chapter 11: Managing Your Calendar and Commitments 211
Chapter 12: Using Maps, Stocks, Voice Memos, and Health 225
Part 3: Creating and Consuming Multimedia 247
Chapter 13: Enjoying Music and Podcasts 249
Chapter 14: Shooting, Editing, and Sharing Photos 267
Chapter 15: Shooting and Watching Videos 295
Part 4: The Part of Tens 309
Chapter 16: Ten+ Essential iPhone Apps and Features 311
Chapter 17: Ten Helpful Hints, Tips, and Shortcuts 323
Index 335
Chapter 1
IN THIS CHAPTER
Meeting your iPhone's hardware
Setting up and activating your iPhone
Starting to use your iPhone
Locking and unlocking your iPhone
Powering down your iPhone
Getting to grips with Apple Intelligence
Congratulations on getting an iPhone! You've made a great choice.
In addition to being a first-rate cellular telephone, the iPhone is an excellent music player, a gorgeous widescreen video player, and a fantastic camera and camcorder system, not to mention a powerful internet communications device.
This chapter starts by making sure you know your way around your iPhone's hardware. It then shows you how to activate the iPhone and set it up either manually or by picking up settings from your current iPhone or your iPad. You then learn to navigate the iPhone's Home screen pages and dock, lock the iPhone when you're not using it, and power it down for those rare occasions you don't need to keep it running.
At the end of this chapter, you learn about Apple Intelligence, Apple's new strategic direction that incorporates artificial intelligence (AI) into its products, and where to turn in the book for coverage of Apple Intelligence on your iPhone.
On the outside, the iPhone's hardware is sleek and simple. This section explains what you find on the front, the back, the sides, and the bottom.
On the front of your iPhone, you find the following (labeled in Figure 1-1):
Receiver/front microphone: The iPhone uses the receiver (speaker) and front mic for telephone calls. The receiver naturally sits close to your ear when you hold your iPhone in the "talking on the phone" position; the mic is used for noise cancelling and FaceTime calls.
If you require privacy during phone calls, use a compatible Apple or third-party headset - wired or wireless.
Photo courtesy of Apple, Inc.
FIGURE 1-1: Touch ID iPhone models (left) have a Home button, whereas Face ID iPhone models do not.
On the back of your iPhone are one to three camera lenses that look like little circles or ovals in the top-left corner. The iPhone also has one or more little LEDs next to the camera lens for use as a flash for still photos, as a floodlight for videos, and as a flashlight that you can turn on or off via Control Center. For more on using the camera and shooting videos, see Chapters 14 and 15, respectively; for more on the flashlight and Control Center, see Chapter 4.
Here's what you'll find on the sides on your iPhone (see Figure 1-2):
SIM card tray: If your iPhone model uses a physical SIM card, open this tray, insert the card in it, and then replace the tray. iPhone 14, iPhone 15, and iPhone 16 models sold in the US use an e-SIM (a virtual SIM) rather than a physical card. The SIM card tray may be on either the right side or the left side, depending on the iPhone model.
A SIM (Subscriber Identity Module) card is a removable smart card used to identify mobile phones. When you switch phones, you can move the SIM card from your old phone to the new phone, provided the phones use the same SIM card size. Current iPhone models that use a SIM card use the nano-SIM format.
FIGURE 1-2: Here's what you'll find on the sides of your iPhone.
Silent mode is overridden by alarms you set in the iPhone's Clock app; by music, audiobooks, and other audio you play; and by you auditioning sounds such as ringtones and alert sounds in the Settings app. Also, when you configure a focus, such as Do Not Disturb, you can permit specific apps to interrupt it.
If your phone is set to ring mode and you want to silence it quickly when it starts ringing, press the side button or either of the volume buttons.
The iPhone 14 Pro models and all iPhone 15 and iPhone 16 models have a feature called Dynamic Island, a resizable display element that appears near the top of the screen to provide context-sensitive controls and information, such as playback controls for music, telephony controls for phone calls and FaceTime calls, or map directions for your current journey. Tap an icon in Dynamic Island to go straight to the app for the feature that icon represents.
These models also have a feature called Always-On Display that shows key information, such as notifications and upcoming events, on the Lock screen. On iPhone models without Always-On Display, locking the phone turns the screen off completely.
On the bottom of your iPhone, you find microphones, the USB-C port or Lightning port, and stereo speakers, as shown in Figure 1-3:
Microphones: The built-in microphones let callers hear your voice when you're not using a headset.
The iPhone sports three or more microphones - the main ones are on the bottom - which work together to suppress unwanted and distracting background sounds on phone calls using dual-mic noise suppression plus beam-forming technology that makes the microphones listen in the right direction.
FIGURE 1-3: On the bottom of your iPhone (some models differ slightly).
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