Google+ 6 essential settings to make your iPhone and iPad display easier on the eyes by By Ben Patterson ~ High Tech House Calls
Expert Computer Consulting for Homes and Small Businesses

Let there be hope...

Life has changed there is no doubt and we wanted to reach out to see how you are doing.

As we go through this interesting time, we are trying to look at this as an opportunity to focus on our family and on friends like you. Let us use this extra time to catch up and talk more. Let us cook food that is not fast, but interesting and satisfying. Let us learn to enjoy a time to try new things. Let us find ways to enjoy time at home!

Computer Security

If my client base is any experience, anyone can be a victim of a Ransomware, Malware or Virus attack.

What can you do about it?

I conduct audits of your entire computer infrastructure and apply best practice solutions to plug the security holes on your computers, Smartphones and networks.

Now offering consultations to give you the best protection possible:


404.229.0839
carlthorne@hthcatlanta.com

Jack of All Trades, Master of Many

Jack of All Trades, and Master of Many

We provide technical support for:


Homes and small businesses

Windows and the Mac OS platform

iPhones and Android Smartphones

Wireless and wired networks

New device setup

Old device upgrade or repair

One-on-one training

Remote assistance


How To Stop Malware

Monday, February 13, 2017

6 essential settings to make your iPhone and iPad display easier on the eyes by By Ben Patterson



Nope, you don’t have to settle for itty-bitty text on your iPhone screen, nor must you deal with buttons that don’t look anything like buttons. Once you know which settings to change, you can boost the size of on-screen text on your iPhone or iPad, make words a bit more bold, zoom in with a virtual magnifying glass, warm up—or cool off—Night Shift, and more.

Change text size

You don’t have to squint if the text on your iPhone or iPad is a little too small. There are a couple of ways to boost the size of text on an iOS device.
Make onscreen text bigger—or smaller Ben Patterson
iOS’s Display Zoom feature boosts the size of both icons and text on your iPhone or iPad display.
First, you can use the Text Size setting to boost the font size of onscreen text—or, if you really want, you can make text on your iPhone or iPad look even tinier. Tap Settings > Display & Brightness > Text Size, then drag the slider one way or the other.

If you want to make everything look a bit bigger—icons and buttons included—you can try the Display Zoom setting. Tap Settings > Display & Brightness > Display Zoom, then flick on the switch. Keep in mind that you’ll see less stuff on the screen with the Display Zoom setting enabled, including one fewer row of icons on your home screen. Note that you’ll need to restart your iOS device each time you toggle the setting on and off.

Give text a bold boost

Size matters, sure, but maybe you’d like the text on your iPhone or iPad to look a tad thicker, too. If so, give this setting a try.
Give onscreen text a bold boost Ben Patterson
If the text font on your iPhone or iPad is too slim for your liking, try iOS’s Bold setting.
Tap Settings > Display & Brightness, then toggle on the Bold setting. Once your iPhone or iPad restarts, your iOS system text—everything from icon labels on the home screen to the words in plain-text mail messages—will look thicker and darker.

Zoom in with a virtual magnifying glass

Not to be confused with the Display Zoom setting, the iOS Zoom feature will zoom the entire display on your iPhone or iPad—and with the help of a “windowed” mode, you can drag a virtual magnifying glass around the screen.
Zoom in with a virtual magnifying glass Ben Patterson
The windowed mode for iOS’s Zoom feature puts a virtual magnifying lens on your iPhone or iPad display.
Tap Settings > General > Accessibility > Zoom, then toggle on the Zoom setting to enabled iOS’s Zoom mode. Next, double-tap with three fingers to zoom, then double-tap with three fingers and drag up or down to zoom in and out. A simple three-finger double-tap will also zoom all the way out on a zoomed-in screen.
Next, try this: back on the Zoom settings screen, tap Zoom Region, then pick the Window Zoom option. Once you do, the three-finger double-tap will call up a zoomed-in window that looks like a rectangular magnifying glass. You can drag the handle at the bottom of the magnifying lens to move it around the screen, or double-tap the handle and tap Resize Lens to make it bigger or smaller.

Make buttons more obvious

When iOS got its big makeover with the arrival of iOS 6, one of the most confusing changes was the new look for the onscreen buttons, which stripped away everything that made buttons look like buttons. Since then, buttons on the iPhone and iPad are basically just words floating on the screen. If you don’t know intuitively that a word is a button, you could be in for a confounding experience.
Make buttons look a bit more obvious Ben Patterson
The Button Shapes setting will make onscreen buttons look more like actual buttons.
Personally, I prefer to take out the guesswork and make buttons look like buttons again, and there’s an iOS setting that’ll let you do just that.

Tap Settings > General > Accessibility, then toggle on the Button Shapes setting. Once you do, buttons and other tappable elements on the screen will either be underlined or surrounded by a shaded rectangle.

Customize your Night Shift settings

If you’re having trouble falling asleep at night, the bright glare of your iPhone’s screen may be to blame—hence Night Shift, the iOS 9.3 feature that shifts your display to warmer, more snooze-friendly colors.
Customize your Ben Patterson
You can set Night Shift to switch on automatically at sundown.
Chances are that if you’re using Night Shift, you’ve got it set to turn on automatically at 10 p.m. and turn back off at 7 a.m. If that default time setting isn’t working for you or your tired eyes, just adjust this setting.

Tap Settings > Display & Brightness > Night Shift, then tap the times under the Scheduled setting to change when Night Shift turns itself on and off. Better still, you can set Night Shift to switch on automatically at sunset in your location, then go back off at sunrise.

Also on the main Night Shift settings screen you’ll find a color temperature slider. Nudge the slider to the right to warm up the hues of Night Shift, or to the right for a cooler look.

Make the screen stay on longer

Once you stop tapping on your iPhone or iPad, its display will shut off and lock itself after a brief period of time—generally, after a minute or so. That’s a security feature, since a locked device will require your passcode to unlock, which keeps your data safer if you happen to lose your device somewhere public.
Make the screen stay on longer Ben Patterson
Is the display on your iPhone or iPad too eager too lock itself? If so, try tweaking iOS’s “Auto-Lock” setting.
But if it feels like your iOS display is locking itself a bit too quickly, there’s a way to make it stay on a little longer before switching off.

Tap Settings > Display & Brightness > Auto-Lock, then pick a setting—anything from 30 seconds to five minutes. There’s also a “never” setting, but I’d recommend against using it unless your iPhone or iPad never leaves the house.

Keep in mind that if you enable Low Power Mode when your iPhone is running low, your display will dim slightly from its default setting, and lock more quickly than the setting you’ve selected here. (You’re prompted to enable Low Power Mode once at 20 percent battery life remaining, and again at 10 percent, or you can manually switch it on at Settings > Battery.)

This story, "6 essential settings to make your iPhone and iPad display easier on the eyes" was originally published by PCWorld.