Modern mobile platforms tend to dumb down their interfaces as time
goes on, in an attempt to bring ever more 'feature' phone users into the
fold. And rightly so, easier to use is usually 'better', but that
doesn't mean that clever features and tricks don't still lie beneath the
surface, ready to be brought into action by informed power users like
you. Here are our top 20 Windows Phone tips and tricks for your
reference and enjoyment. An article to bookmark and to share with
others, hopefully?
Like any self-respecting geek, I've been gathering tips and tricks on
Windows Phone as I've tried the relevant devices day to day, in normal
use. Six months after Windows Phone 7.5's appearance, I thought it time
to start writing them down and sharing them with the world. Step
forwards All About Windows Phone!
____________________________
Here we go then. In no particular order:
1. The calculators you didn't know you had
Start Calculator and then rotate your Windows Phone to the left and
to the right - the interface will change into scientific and a
hexadecimal calculator respectively. Who needs a third party calculator
when all this number goodness is built in?
2. Music control with no need to unlock your screen
When you're on the move, for example on the tube or bus, the last
thing you sometimes want to do is unlock your Windows Phone screen, for
fear of being jolted into tapping or swiping things you don't want to
mess with. Yet you can still control your music. When locked, use the
volume up/down keys to adjust music volume without the display needing
to light up at all.
You can even change tracks if needed by pressing the power button to
bring up the lock screen wallpaper - inlaid in this will be music
controls and confirmation of what's playing. Having used these controls,
the lockscreen will disappear on its own in a few seconds or you can
just press the power button again.
3. Don't lose your place in 'running' applications
One quirk of Windows Phone is that when you tap on an application's
live tile or on its app list icon, a whole new instance of the
application is started up. If you'd previously been using the app then
your current screen or status will almost certainly have been lost.
Instead, to get back to an application that you've been using before and
in which you were in the middle of something, press and hold the 'back'
icon to bring up the 'fast app switching' carousel - tap on the
appropriate screen image here and you should be right back where you
were.
4. Accents and extra punctuation
Almost all the keys on the Windows Phone virtual qwerty keyboard are
special - you just didn't know it. Pressing and holding on most of the
keys pops up a short list of related alphanumeric characters - for
letter keys it tends to be accented characters, for punctuation keys
it'll be lesser used punctuation characters. Either way, long press and
experiment whenever you need something special!
5. Making your backgrounds your own
It's something of a mystery to new Windows Phone owners as to which
photos get panned and displayed in the double-width Pictures homescreen
tile and which get used as backgrounds in the main Pictures hub, once
you tap through. The secret is that Windows Phone uses those images
tagged as 'favourites', so it's well worth going into your 'Camera Roll'
or 'Saved Pictures' albums and using 'add to favourites' on the [...]
menu.
6. Groups of People
Windows Phone's People hub is a well known and pretty cool feature,
bringing social feeds and contact info all into one place, but it can be
overwhelming if you follow or befriend lots of people online. Make sure
you don't miss updates from the people that matter most, with specific
Groups, e.g. 'Best friends' or 'Family'.
Get started in the People hub by either tapping on 'Family' and
adding people from your contact list or by tapping on '+' and adding a
'new group'. Make sure you have all your social accounts set up in
Windows Phone's Settings, pin each group to your homescreen as a live
tile, and you should then be able see just updates from each group of
contacts in their own tappable tile. Very cool.
7. Lightning fast alphabetic jumping
So you've got dozens of applications. Or hundreds of contacts in your
People hub - scrolling right down to the bottom of the list is a real
pain and searching by tapping the magnifying glass icon and typing the
start of a name takes just as long. Far faster is to tap one of the
'letter blocks' (e.g. "a") - this then brings up an alphabetic grid,
just tap the letter you want to jump to. When trying to find someone
called Zoe or trying to launch YouTube, the letter block shortcuts can
save many seconds!
8. Who needs cursor keys?
Perhaps you've typed a message or sentence and one of the words is
wrong? If it's simply a case of the wrong word having been
auto-suggested, then tap it and pick from the other suggestions shown.
If you need to make a detailed correction, then note that you can long
press in any text that you're editing and wait for a large 'cursor' to
appear - now drag your fingertip down without lifting it from the screen
- you'll find that you can position it with character-perfect accuracy.
9. Delete multiple emails
Perhaps copied from other mobile OS (shhhh), but this is still a cool
way to handle deleting more than one email. In the main list of emails
in a mailbox, tap on the left edge of the display and you'll see a
column of check boxes appear - just tap on the ones you want to delete
(or file away) and then on the icon in the bottom toolbar. Usefully, if
you tick the root message of an email conversation, all the messages
therein also get automatically ticked. Very fast and productive.
10. Time for a change
It's a small thing, but you can fairly dramatically change the look
of both your homescreen and much of the interface in your Windows Phone
by going into 'Settings' and then tapping on 'theme'. If you don't have
an AMOLED-screened phone then feel free to change the 'background' to
'light', as traditional LCD displays don't use much more power when
showing a paper-white background. More creatively, check out the 'accent
colour' setting - are you in a 'magenta' or 'lime' mood today?
Experiment and have fun watching tiles and other screen elements as
you've not seen them before!
11. Gah - give me the full web site!
There's often a mismatch between the intelligence at the phone end
and that on a web server - the latter picks up that you're on a 'phone'
and serves up one mobile version or another. While this is often fine,
you may prefer to see the full web site instead. If you're lucky, there
may be a link to the 'Desktop version' on the page, but if not then
there's a very handy trick you can use in Internet Explorer in Windows
Phone. Tap on the '...' icon and scroll down to and tap on 'settings'.
Tap on 'Website preferences' and choose 'Desktop version'. Then reload
the current page and the server will think you're back on your desktop,
serving up the full width, full content page.
12. Reinstalling made (slightly) easier
Should you have to hard reset your Windows Phone in the event of a
major software fault (thankfully extremely rare), should it get wiped
during a hardware repair (also rare) or should it get stolen or lost
(more likely), you'll be faced with reinstalling all the applications
you've downloaded or bought. The long way is to delve into your account
on live.com in your desktop web browser and then type the app names into
Marketplace, one by one. The short way is to use the third party (but
free) Reinstaller,
which almost completely automates this process. You'll still have to
babysit the reinstallations, but only with screen taps - no typing will
be needed. If, like me, you've got many apps installed, then this is a huge time saver.
13. Your own email signature
'Sent from my Windows Phone' at the bottom of all your emails is all
very well, but what if you want to put in your own message? Essential
contact details, and so on? In your email Inbox, tap on '...' and then
on 'settings'. Flick 'Signature' on, if it's not already, and then tap
in the signature field to change it as needed. Note that you can add in
line feeds by pressing the virtual 'enter' key, as you might expect - so
your signature can be multi-line!
14. Instant browser tabs
When browsing in Internet Explorer and you want tap a link but also
don't want to lose the page you're currently on, long press the link and
'open in a new tab' will appear. As usual, you can skip between browser
tabs by tapping on '...' and then on 'tabs' - just pick the tab you
want to go to from the graphical browser.
15. Highlight and search
In Internet Explorer, when you come across a word or phrase that
you'd like more information on, just tap to highlight it (and extend the
highlight with the 'handles', if needed) and then tap your phone's
'search' control button. The highlighted text will searched for on Bing,
with the usual 'local', 'images' and 'web' panes of matches.
16. Filmstripped photos
When you've got a lot of photos to browse through (e.g. in your
'Camera Roll'), looking for a particular one, rather than swipe photo by
photo, display one of them, rotate the phone into landscape mode and
then pinch 'in' (i.e. the opposite of the 'splay' you'd use for zooming
in). Your photos will then be displayed in a fast-swipeable filmstrip.
Size-wise, this is halfway between the tiny thumbnails in the top level
image view and full-screen versions, and is perfect for flicking
sideways to find specific photos in a hurry.
17. Quickly silence a call
We've all been there. In the middle of an important conversation with
someone when the phone rings. It's an intrusive noise and it doesn't
stop until you've grabbed your phone and accurately swiped up and tapped
one of the on-screen buttons. Faster by far is to silence the call
'unseen', even in your pocket, by just pressing the 'power' button. The
person trying to call will simply hear ringing and will correctly deduce
that you're unavailable to take the call, nominally because you're
'away' from your phone.
18. Flight mode
Unlike on most other phones and mobile platforms, 'Flight mode' (i.e.
turning off all radios/comms/transmissions) is somewhat hidden on
Windows Phone. It's an absolute requirement when you go into most
hospitals and travel on most flights, but the good news is that the mode
does exist. 'Flight mode' is tucked away, somewhat incongruously, in
the main system 'settings', between 'theme' and 'WiFi'. Sadly you can't
pin just this one toggle/setting onto the Start screen, but hey, at
least you know how to get into Flight mode now!
19. Exactly how much battery life do I have left?
It's all very well having a little battery icon at the top of the
screen, but most of us want a little more granularity than this. Rather
than knowing the battery charge is roughly half, it would be helpful to
know if it's actually 68% or 34%, for example, i.e. you've got twice (or
half) as long left as you might have thought! Head into Settings (I
suggest you pin Settings to your homescreen as a live tile?) and tap on
'battery saver' - there on the screen (admittedly in a smallish font) is
the 'Remaining battery life' in percent. Take the 'Estimated time
remaining' with a pinch of salt, mind you - that's the standby time,
assuming you don't use the phone much!
20. Faster photos
This is a tip that most of us know but rarely remember. It's so
ingrained into our muscle memory to press the power button and then
swipe up to unlock our Windows Phone, but if you're getting out your
phone in order to snap a photo or video then there is, of course, a
faster way. Provided that you have the option turned on ('settings',
swipe left to get to 'applications', scroll down to 'pictures + camera',
etc.), simply press and hold the camera shutter button, even if the
phone's screen is locked. Even if the phone is still being taken out of
your pocket at the time. With practice, and with the phone in a trouser
or coat pocket, you can go from thinking 'I'll take a snap' to actually
starting to focus in around two seconds flat. Impressive.
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