Hello Everyone,

In my opinion, the following MacWorld article is a must-read.  I have edited
the piece, removing URL and links to exterior photos.  Please forgive any
oversight, on my part.

The link to the original article is located at the end of the text.

Good Luck and Enjoy,

Mark

Settings in iOS 9: Every notable change you need to know
Once you upgrade to iOS 9, take some time to peruse the  Settings app to
tweak it just to your liking.

The Settings app is like the bedroom on every episode of Cribs: It's where
the magic happens. Whenever you update iOS on your iPhone or iPad, it pays
to peruse the settings to find, enable, and configure any new features just
to your liking. 

iOS 9 doesn't have quite as many settings changes as iOS 8 did, and the best
addition by far is a Search box at the top of the main Settings menu, so if
you can't remember, say, where to enable Personal Hotspot (spoiler:
Cellular) or how to turn off shake-to-undo (Accessibility), all you have to
do is start typing in that Search box to pinpoint exactly where your desired
setting lives. Such a time-saver. 

Here's a rundown of the major changes in Settings in iOS 9, as well as some
key settings that didn't change, but you still might want to revisit. If
you've got any questions, hit us up in the comments. 

Cellular
Not much is new in the Cellular settings, with the exception of SIM PIN,
which used to be in the Phone settings, and now is here in Cellular. This
lets you put a separate PIN code on your SIM card, so if someone had your
stolen or misplaced phone, they couldn't use your SIM card in another
device. Your iPhone or iPad will prompt you to enter the SIM pin whenever
you swap out the SIM (which you probably won't do much, if ever) or when you
reboot the device. 

 SIM PIN is off by default, so if you want to use it, first you'll turn it
on. Your SIM has a default PIN on it already: For AT&T and Verizon, it's
1111. For Sprint and T-Mobile, it's 1234. (Great PINs, y'all.) Once you
enter that-and you have to get it right within three tries or your SIM will
be locked, but I believe in you-you can tap Change PIN and change it to
something good. You can stick with four digits, or use more, up to eight
digits total, all numbers. Again, pick something memorable because if you
enter the wrong PIN too many times, your SIM will be permanently locked and
you'll have to ask your carrier for a new one. 

The other addition to this screen is Wi-Fi Assist, located down below the
huge list of apps with toggles to allow them to use cellular data. That's on
by default, and it'll use some of your cellular data to boost a poor Wi-Fi
signal. If your Wi-Fi network barely reaches every corner of your abode, you
might want to leave this on. If you use up your monthly data allotment every
single month, you might want to turn this off. 

Notifications
Notifications settings didn't change a lot, but there is a new sort order:
Recent. When you select that, you'll see the notifications in reverse
chronological order, meaning the newest one is always on top. That's great
for when you notice a banner just as it's going away, or when you hear your
phone beep from across the room. 

 In Recent mode, you also get a switch for Group By App, which means each
app's notifications will appear together, newest on top. When a newer
notification comes in, all the notifications for that app will jump to the
top of the list. If you don't group the notifications by app, they'll be
grouped by day, letting you dismiss an entire day's worth of notifications
at once. 

If you always want a certain app's notifications on top, change Recent to
Manual, and then you get a list of every app that sends you notifications,
and you can slide them to your preferred order. Manual mode removes the
Group By App switch, since Manual grouping always groups your notifications
by app. 

Below, is the list of your apps that have requested notifications, in
alphabetical order. That makes it easy to find the app whose notifications
you want to tweak, but the controls themselves haven't changed since iOS 8.
You can still decide if notifications can appear in Notification Center, on
the Lock Screen, or both, and if you want to be notified in the form of
vanishing banners, must-be-dismissed alerts, a badged home screen icon, or a
sound. Even without much change in the Notifications settings, it's a good
idea to "audit" your notifications from time to time, since they lose their
impact if you have so many coming in that you start ignoring them
altogether. 

General
A few small changes can be found in the General section of the Settings app:


Siri
You can change Siri's accent without having to change her language. The
language settings in both iOS 8 and iOS 9 include English localizations for
Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, Singapore, the UK, and the US. 
 
In iOS 8, you could change Siri's voice from female to male, but in iOS 9,
you can choose both Siri's gender and accent: American, Australian, or
British. (Yes, Siri can sound British even though your language is still set
to United States English. Jolly good.) 

Spotlight Search
The top toggle on this screen is Siri Suggestions. Turn that on, and the
Spotlight page will come pre-populated with suggestions before you even
search for anything. This is a great new feature of iOS 9, so you should
definitely try it out, but if you ever find it annoying, you can turn it off
here. 
 
Below, there's a list of everything that can come up in the search results,
since Spotlight can now search inside of apps as well as content like your
email, contacts, and calendars-well, once developers update their apps to
take advantage of the new Spotlight Search API. 

Note that one of your choices is Settings. iOS 9 lets you search the
Settings app now, both from Spotlight and with a search bar right inside the
app, which is a godsend when you can't remember where a particular setting
lives. 

Handoff & Suggested Apps
Handoff lets you pass a task from one device to another, for example
starting an email on your iPad and finishing on your Mac. You can turn off
this behavior here, and the setting hasn't changed since iOS 8. 

Suggested apps are shown on the bottom-left corner of your lock screen and
in the app switcher, based on your location or usage patterns. For example,
when you are near a Target or a Starbucks, those apps' icons will appear on
your lock screen, assuming you have the apps installed and have given them
permission to access your location. 

In iOS 9, this gets one switch, labelled "Installed Apps." That means only
apps you have installed will show up here. Aside from location, iOS 9 can
suggest apps based on your patterns-when you plug in your headphones at the
end of a workday, your phone could suggest the podcast app you usually
listen to on your commute home. 

iOS 8 had two switches here: One for My Apps, and another for App Store,
which would allow your phone to suggest apps you don't even have. That
option is gone in iOS 9. 

CarPlay
iOS 9, like iOS 8.3 before it, supports wireless CarPlay connections,
there's a CarPlay setting here to let you set up pairing between your car
and your iPhone. Keep in mind that CarPlay is iPhone only-no iPads or iPod
touches allowed. You have to have an iPhone 5 or later, running at least iOS
7.1, and wireless connections require iOS 9. 

Accessibility
Quite a few small tweaks were made in General > Accessibility. This isn't a
comprehensive list, just the biggest changes. 

Touch Accommodations: This all-new menu in iOS 9 lets you tweak behaviors
like how long you have to touch the screen to register a tap-and-hold, the
duration in which multiple touches should only register as a single touch,
and so on. If your normal touches and swipes don't always result in the
intended action, some experimenting with these controls could really help. 

The new Keyboard setting "Show Lowercase Keys" means that your software
keyboard will toggle between lower-case and upper-case letters so you can
always tell what kind of letter you're about to type. Turn this switch off
to keep the old always-capital keyboard from iOS 8. 

Shake to Undo: You can finally turn off the shake-to-undo feature here. 

Vibration: This master switch lets you turn off all vibration on your
device, including those for emergency alerts. 

Storage & iCloud Usage
This is a better-named version of "Usage" in iOS 8. (In iOS 8, this is where
you'd see your battery usage, but that's moved to Settings > Battery in iOS
9.) This is where you'll manage the storage on your device, as well as the
files and device backups you keep in iCloud. 

Restrictions
This is where you can restrict certain things: Say, if you were giving this
device to a kid and didn't want them to have Safari or be able to install
new apps or make in-app purchases. Two notable options here include switches
to disable Apple Music Connect and the new News app. (Hey Apple, when can I
ditch other built-in apps like Stocks?) And if you hate apps asking you if
they can connect to Facebook, go to Restrictions > Facebook, and tap Don't
Allow Changes. 

Touch ID & Passcode
This Settings menu in iOS 9 contains a couple of new switches to allow
access to the Wallet app (formerly Passbook) and to Reply With Message from
the lock screen. 

Battery
The all-new Battery menu lets you manually enable Low Power Mode. (Your
device will also offer to go into Low Power Mode when you reach 20 percent
battery remaining, and again at 10 percent. 
 
You can also see which apps have been gobbling up the most of your battery
life, by percentage. iOS 9 has a new little clock icon; tap it and you'll
also see how much time each app has been running, both on your screen and in
the background. I had no idea Facebook ran in the background so much. 

iCloud
The iCloud settings have a new switch to sync the data in the News app
between multiple iOS devices over iCloud. Note that News isn't currently
available for Macs, but perhaps it will be someday. 

Mail, Contacts, Calendars
Scroll down to the Contacts section of this menu for a new switch: "Contacts
Found in Mail." This is on by default, and it lets your iPhone scan your
email (on the device, not sending it up to the cloud) looking for contact
information like phone numbers and email addresses. That way, it can suggest
auto-complete addresses in Mail, or make an educated guess on the
incoming-call screen as to who's calling you, if that name and number aren't
in your Contacts list yet but are stashed in your email. If you don't want
this to happen, turn this switch off. 

Down in the Calendars section, the "Events Found in Mail" switch is also on
by default. This lets the Mail app sniff out events mentioned in your email
and offer to add them to your calendar for you. 

Notes
New Notes settings let you specify which account Siri will use when you
dictate a note to her, as well as which field you want to start new notes
with by default: Title, Heading, or Body. 

HomeKit
iOS 9 has HomeKit settings to allow remote access to any HomeKit-enabled
devices you add to your home network, as well as to invite other people with
iCloud accounts to securely connect to and control those devices.

Podcasts
It's a small thing, but there's a switch in the Podcasts settings to use
Custom Colors in the app, based on the artwork for each podcast. If you like
how the Music app (and iTunes on the desktop) change colors based on what
you're listening to, keep this enabled.

Original URL:
http://www.macworld.com/article/2985017/ios/settings-in-ios-9-every-notable-
change-you-need-to-know.html



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