Speakerphone on iPhone is very easy to use, but if you’re new to the iPhone platform it’s possible that you’re not familiar with how it works, how to active speakerphone, and how to turn it off once it’s on. Many iPhone users likely already know how to use speakerphone, so this article is obviously not for you if you’re adept in this stuff. Instead this is aimed at newer and beginner iPhone users who are less familiar with some of the features of the device.
You can make a call and immediately place it on speakerphone, or you can put any active call onto speakerphone on the iPhone at any time. However you want to use it, accessing the feature is simple, and the same. Likewise, you can disable speakerphone at any time. Let’s review how to perform both actions. That’s it, your iPhone is now using speakerphone mode. The iPhone will now play all audio from the phone call through the devices external speakers rather than the earphone piece.
You can also use Speakerphone mode with a FaceTime Audio call from an iPhone if desired, it works the exact same way. Disabling speakerphone on iPhone is just as easy. You can turn off speakerphone at any point when it’s active, either when a call is dialing, or when a phone call is already in place and you just want to take it off speakerphone mode.
You can toggle off, or back on, speakerphone at anytime on any active phone call. Again this works the same on a regular phone call, or with a FaceTime Audio VOIP call. The iPhone has some other interesting speakerphone usability tricks up its sleeve. Well, if you didn’t know before, now you know how to use speakerphone on iPhone, either turning it on or off as necessary for your phone calls. Have any handy tips about speakerphone on iPhone,
Share them with us in the comments below! Subscribe to the OSXDaily newsletter to get more of our great Apple tips, tricks, and important news delivered to your inbox! Phone Sound Not Working with Headphones, Loud Buzzing Sound in Earbuds, In addition to the thousands of people with various disabilities worldwide who, like me, use the speakerphone because they can’t physically hold the iPhone up to their ears. I notice there is a delay when I say hello, they don’t hear me and I have to wait a few seconds And say it again. Guess it’s getting slow over there at OSX Daily again. Seriously another one of the simplest things, if you need instruction how to use the speakerphone function, you really shouldn’t have an iPhone.
Delivering 5VDC up to 5W is fairly easy to achieve. Otherwise compare my laptop's power supply that delivers 18V @ 6.5A (117W): it is not much bigger than the iPhone's charger (considering its high power features). The only innovation I see is the fact of distributing components along the 3 dimensions instead of distributing them in 2 dimensions, as usual. Great read I like reading this kind of tech info.
It sure beats having to do it one self. Was always curious as to what was inside that device a lot more than I was expecting. Thanks for the write up! Do you have a recommendation for a less-expensive alternative to the original Apple charger that's still built well enough to be safe,
30 a pop sure adds up fast. Would love to know anyone's recommendations for an alternative that's cheaper but at least safe to use. I'd love to see your thoughts on some of the alternatives like the one's Monoprice sells. Thanks Ken for a really interesting article, I'm saving your link to "tiny, cheap, dangerous: Inside a (fake) iPhone charger" for anyone who advises buying one from eBay. The traditional rule of thumb for pricing electronics is (nowadays perhaps was) the whole is six times the cost of the parts. 6 retail price increase.
An old rule of thumb for price estimation in consumer electronics is that the whole is six times of the cost of the parts. Don't forget to figure in the cost of the PC boards, case, the power "cord", and the packaging. Thanks a lot Ken, this was really interesting!


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