iPhone X, XR, XS, and XS Max for Seniors: A Ridiculously Simple Guide to the Next Generation of iPhone and iOS 12
By Brian Norman
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About this ebook
The iPhone does everything...but what if you don't want to do everything?! Sure, it's great that you can log into a private network or set up an iMAP / POP email account--but what if you are retired and just want to know the basics--like how to do a group Facetime with all the grandkids!
This book walks you through what you need to
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iPhone X, XR, XS, and XS Max for Seniors - Brian Norman
Introduction
The iPhone does everything...but what if you don't want to do everything?! Sure, it's great that you can log into a private network or set up an iMAP / POP email account--but what if you are retired and just want to know the basics--like how to do a group Facetime with all the grandkids!
This book walks you through what you need to know step-by-step--including how navigation works now that the Home button is gone on some of the phones. It covers only what you need to know--so you don't have to comb through hundreds of pages of tech-speak just to find out how to do a common feature.
This book is based on the bestselling book The Ridiculously Simple Guide to iPhone X, XR, XS, and XS Max
but includes sections specifically for seniors (including accessibility features that make text easier to see).
Are you ready to start enjoying your new iPhone? Then let’s get started!
[1]
What Happened to the Home Button?!
Take Me Home?
Chances are you’ve had an iPhone or, at the very least, used an iPhone. You know all about that button on the bottom of the phone—that glorious round thing with a square in the middle that always takes you home. It’s amazing. Or it was! Because it’s gone!
So the real elephant in the room with the iPhone X and up is the Home button or lack thereof. In the next chapter, I’ll talk about getting set up, so I know this all sounds a little backwards, but because so many people are upgrading to the new iPhone from an earlier model, it’s worth talking about the main things that will be different about it here.
If you have used the iPhone before, then I bet you’ll spend a good day continuously putting your thumb where the button used to be! Don’t worry! You’re going to get through it. In fact, after you get used to it not being there, you’ll actually start seeing it’s more effective without it.
Before diving into the gestures, let’s cover some other things that look different about this phone.

Macintosh HD:Users:clsherwood1961:Desktop:iPhone X screenshots:Screen Shot 2017-12-01 at 4.05.13 PM.pngThe top portion of the phone (it’s known as the top notch) has a lot for there then other phones, doesn’t it? All of that helps your phone work better. To the far right is a Dot Projector. It sounds like something that will project your iPhone onto the wall, doesn’t it? I wish! That’s actually the camera that scans your face for Face ID (I’ll cover that in just a second). Next to that is the camera; it’s 7MP, which isn’t as good as the 12MP camera on the back, but it’s certainly an improvement from what was on earlier phones. There’s a few other sensors and cameras to the far left. They all sound fancy, don’t they? Proximity sensor. Flood illuminator. Fancy is...well fancy! But what on Earth does that mean in simple terms? It means that the front-facing camera can take pretty impressive selfies! If you’ve used the iPhone 8 or 8+ then you’re probably familiar with Portrait mode? If not, in a nutshell, it gives a blurred, professional look to your photo. To do that, you need some extra sensors; the iPhone X and XS have those features and both the front and back of the camera. That means you can get the same quality photos no matter what you use (front or back camera).
Okay, so all that’s interesting, right? But you don’t actually do anything with the notch. What about the buttons on the phone itself. Good question! Thanks for asking!
The button placement isn’t too far off from previous iPhone’s.

https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/wWti05DY1yhoe0KQLAs0CApJEyHcdP4HltvCCldjrgzTxUAncecLWMwDy6PHaIsjA_xRwjTZRTskuz878AzSmzczDfOTZJUI0EGU6xo32XCxtLF6VwFYrpn06bW0Kwhf6GPAnEMWOn the right side, you have your volume up and down, which does, you guessed it! Turns your volume up and down! There’s also the switch above it that will silence sound.
On the left side you have your Side Button.
Legend has it, they named it the Side Button because it’s on the side of the phone! That button is on other phones--albeit a tad shorter--but it functions a little bit different here.
The Side Button is and isn’t the Home button replacement. That sounds vague, huh? Here’s what I mean: you won’t use this button to get back to the home screen, but you can use it to activate Siri (or you can just say Hey Siri
). You also use this button to power the phone on and off--or to put it in standby (which is the mode you put it in after you finish playing Angry Birds in the bathroom and need to set the phone down for a minute to wash your hands).
The most common use for the Side Button is to wake up your phone. Picking up your phone and staring at it with an annoyed or confused expression will also do this. But if you ever find yourself stuck and picking up the phone isn’t waking it up, then just push down on the Side Button and you should be just fine.
That side button is also going to come in handy when you want to use Apple Pay--double push the button and then stare at your phone sadly as money is magically taken away.
Face ID?
Things were going okay with you and the Home button. You could rub your thumb over it and like a genie in a bottle, it would magically read your DNA and turn on. Why’d Apple have to go an ruin a good thing?
Sure getting rid of the button gives you more screen real estate, but plenty of other phones have added a button to the back of the phone so you can have the both of both worlds. It’s like Apple is trying to force you to love it, isn’t it? I don’t know why Apple does everything, but if past history teaches us anything, we have