You are wasting your airtime to say nothing. This tid bit is obvious anyway, a no brainer. A useless point. Henry is right on. Paul writes in his last paragraph about privacy, same thing. What gives the right to call him names with your ignorant and chidish remarks. He was defending himself from abusive name calling. Seems your as bad as DoltPatrol. Grow up. Is this due to the background noise removal feature of the phone?
If so, is there a way to turn that off when in speaker phone mode? Again this is a useless post for the masses. It is obvious via the Accessibility menu, a no brainer. It seems it is you that is having the comprehension issue here or is it that you enjoy babbling dribble with the speaker phone on so you can annoy others with your arrogant mouth.
However this would be beneficial for the disabled. Hint Why do most cell phones come with head sets, lol, even somerhing like you should know this or do you, lol. Doohhhh, lol. Geee now I wonder why most cell phones come with ear buds. Even a dum redneck like you should know or do you. Henry, I think you need to change your tampon and ask mommy to give you an enema.
You are awful grumpy. I read everything first, then watch any video I can find on the subject before I start. Thank you for a job well done! I have a car that has horrible hands free audio quality but good quality bluetooth audio streaming. I want to find a way to get the iPhone to only stream audio — use the car stereo like speakers and not a hands free device.
In iOS 8 I have to tell the phone to ignore handsfree and use the headset every time I make or receive a call. This is annoying and dangerous. I thought this article was going to address the problem but the option to always use the headset was already selected. This is about setting the iPhone to answer and make calls with Speakerphone automatically turned on, it will not impact your car stereo.
Who would want to use their speaker phone like this, to annoy others … what in public. I understand auto-speaker iPhone mode is way over your thick head Henry, but complex systems require reasonably complex brains to comprehend.
Would you still like to use the phone? Or, what if, you know as the article says, your iPhone ear speaker broke, and you still want to use your iPhone? Well, as luck would have it, the iPhone has Speaker Mode for just such occasions and many others. The only thing useless is you and your comments. Lord Hank the schmuck has spoken! Now can you tell me how to keep the phone from displaying my last credit card charge when I turn the phone on?!
I like the idea of using this at the desk and car, very handy. Name required. Mail will not be published required. Do you know how to bring it up without hanging up on the call? When on speaker phone you hit something and it turns into the phone and you have no speaker phone to hit to return it to your phone ap.
It sounds like you left the Phone app while on the phone call, that can happen from a swipe gesture or by hitting the Home button. Open the Phone app again to return to the iPhone Phone call, whether on speaker phone or not.
The Phone app is a green button with a phone icon on it. From within the Phone app you can switch on speaker phone or turn off speakerphone. Nokia Lumia has a proximity feature, you can toggle between speakers and earspeaker automatically by only taking the phone off from the proximity of your ear and placing it back. Why is that not possible with pricey iphones? Is this normal? Name required. Mail will not be published required. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction without explicit permission is prohibited.
Thanks for checking; I'm really glad I asked about this! I never thought of looking in the older guide. Another quirk: the 4s keeps all mics live when you plug in a mic earpiece. So the friction of the phone in your pocket distracts the call and causes annoyance on both ends.
I don't think that's true generally - I keep my phone in my pocket while using Apple's earbud mic, and I've never noticed any extraneous noise. It's too early to call anyone to test, but I checked with the Voice Memos app, and no matter what I did to the iPhone's mics, including rubbing them and snapping my fingers near them, they didn't pick up any sound it all went through the earbud mic.
Perhaps your earbud mic wasn't properly seated? Or, and I did make this mistake once, if you plug in non-mic earbuds, the iPhone's mics have to stay active, which means that you're hearing through the earbuds but speaking through the iPhone's mics not sure which one and the quality is indeed lousy.
I don't have an iPhone, 4 or otherwise. But I couldn't agree more with Matt's comments regarding Apple not providing instructions. I guess the only good thing about it is that it fosters a small industry to create such guides led of course by the venerable TidBITS team.
Is Apple the most successful company in history that gives every impression of not listening to, or caring much about, its customers? Is the secret to making such superior products to rise above the masses and not be bogged down by lowest-common-denominator reactionary thinking?
I wonder if any business school case study has considered this factor in Apple's staggering domination of the markets in which it operates. It's an interesting issue, since Apple very much does care about their customers, and they sweat details that are far smaller than most companies would. But that leads to a "when it's done, it's perfect" mentality that can be at odds with the real world, because it's not actually possible to make a product so perfect that it works perfectly in every imaginable situation.
And that's when you need someone to tell you how to use it best. Which is, as you say, why there's a role for us in the industry! What about those with 'bumpers'. Is the mic covered or is there a little pin hole?
There are a lot of different cases and bumpers, but if any of them are covering the microphone holes, that would be, as my year-old says, an epic fail. Thank you for Constructive Criticism.
A concern and objection that are supportive and, I reapeat, constructive. You know, I'm still wondering why the iPhone doesn't go into speakerphone mode automagically when you take it from your ear and vice versa. There are enough sensors in the iPhone that can detect that and make using the phone a lot easier. Ironically, when Matt and I were testing some of this stuff, for a short while we thought that might in fact be happening - it seemed to once, but then we couldn't reproduce.
I must have just grazed the Speaker button with my finger at some point. I think my issue is resolved. Thanks for all the help and interest. This is a great group to be associated with. Question: Q: Accessing the "speaker phone" during a call. More Less. Communities Get Support. Sign in Sign in Sign in corporate. Browse Search. Ask a question. User profile for user: samoting samoting. Question: Q: Question: Q: Accessing the "speaker phone" during a call.
Reply I have this question too I have this question too Me too Me too. Helpful answers Drop Down menu. Jan 20, AM in response to samoting In response to samoting If when on a call you can only see the number dialer screen, Tap the "Hide" text at the bottom right corner of the screen to return to the phone options.
View answer in context. Jan 20, PM in response to samoting In response to samoting samoting wrote: Thanks for your response Phil Maybe that is my problem. The "Hide" text is missing. If I was on a call I can get to that screen by tapping "Add call" Try tapping the green bar at the very top of the screen. Loading page content. User profile for user: Kilgore-Trout Kilgore-Trout.
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