This hidden iPhone feature lets you use a device with a cracked screen - Tom's Guide
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Screen or Home Button totalled? Here’s how to use Assistive Touch on iPhone
Knowing how to enable Assistive Touch on iPhone can save an otherwise awful situation if you’re ever unlucky enough to break your iPhone’s screen or Home button.
In fact, a friend of mine was in this very situation once. After dropping a hammer on his iPhone SE and totaling the Home button, he was unable to unlock or use his phone. The home function, actioned with a swipe up on newer models and via the home button on older ones, is crucial to the use of the iPhone, and without it you’ll find yourself unable to open your phone or switch apps. If you’ve shattered your screen or broken your home button, there’s not much you can do with your iPhone, right?
Well, wrong. One of the things that makes iPhones some of the best phones around is that, very often, when you encounter a problem, Apple has already thought of a way around it. And this situation is no exception. What many don’t realize is that you don’t need the swipe up gesture or button to use the home function. Assistive Touch is there to help.
Designed primarily as an accessibility feature for those experiencing difficulties touching the screen, Assistive Touch handily doubles up as a balm for breakages. It won’t solve an unresponsive phone, nor will it help you if your screen is completely destroyed. If you’ve lost swipe up or Home button operation, however, it should at least allow you to use the phone’s basic functionality, such as calling and messaging.
Here’s how to use assistive touch on an iPhone.
The first thing you’ll need to do is unlock your iPhone. This is going to be an issue if you’re no longer able to swipe or press the Home button. Thankfully, unlocking is still possible.
1. Long-press the side button to wake Siri, or say “Hey Siri” if your device is set up to listen for the wake word.
Peter is the How to Editor at Tom’s Guide, based in the UK. As a writer, he covers topics including tech, photography, gaming, hardware, motoring and food & drink. Outside of work, he can usually be found telling everyone about his greyhounds, obsessively detailing his car, squeezing as many FPS as possible out of PC games, and perfecting his espresso shots.
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