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Notification Center is a feature in iOS, iPadOS, macOS and watchOS that provides an overview of alerts from applications. [1] [2] It displays notifications until the user completes an associated action, rather than requiring instant resolution. Users may choose what applications appear in Notification Center, and how they are handled.
In iPhone OS 3, Spotlight was introduced, allowing users to search media, apps, emails, contacts, messages, reminders, calendar events, and similar content. In iOS 7 and later, Spotlight is accessed by pulling down anywhere on the home screen (except for the top and bottom edges that open Notification Center and Control Center).
In iOS 7, it replaces the control pages found in previous versions. It gives iOS and iPadOS devices direct access to important settings for the device by swiping down from the top right corner on the iPhone X and newer, and on all iPad models starting with iOS 12 or iPadOS, with previous models using a swipe from the bottom of the screen.
A notification LED on a smartphone. A Notification LED is a small RGB or monochrome LED light usually present on the front-facing screen bezel (display side) of smartphones and feature phones whose purpose is to blink or pulse to notify the phone user of missed calls, incoming SMS messages, notifications from other apps, low battery warning, etc., and optionally to facilitate locating the ...
To change this view, go to your settings on a computer. Sign in to your AOL account. Click on Settings in the upper right corner. Select More Settings. Click Viewing email. Click Unified Inbox at the bottom. You may need to sign out of the app and then back in to reset the app settings. Tap on the Profile icon in the upper left. Tap on Manage ...
The Notification Center's "Today" view was removed. [26] Notifications, now larger, [27] could expand to display more information; all unread notifications could be cleared at once using 3D Touch. [28] Apps that need to be updated frequently were able to have notifications that update live.
To change this view, go to your settings on a computer: Go to mail.aol.com. Once signed in, click on Options in the upper right corner. Select Mail Settings. On the general settings tab, in inbox setting click the radial button next to Use Unified Inbox Style. Click Save Settings at the bottom.
The iPhone doesn’t have a privacy mode, as Android phones do, but there are Apple privacy settings users can enable to reduce the likelihood their personal information will be compromised.