How to protect your iPhone a complex password that is easy to remember
Tips Makradar / / December 19, 2019
Alien soul - darkness, as they say. A private space where this folk soul somehow turned on, should be, if not an enigma, then minimally protected. One of the most popular attempts to violate personal space every day, make your friends, colleagues, classmates. This begins with an innocent attempt to "forbid to use the Internet with your iPhone", ends... Nothing good ends.
If your holiness is not in doubt, the phone is not personal data, and a halo over his head can be seen for five hundred meters, then do not even try to read more. The rest I will tell you how best to protect their photos from hardcore party with the help of hard-to-crack, but easy to read password.
From the outset it was clear that this is a password on the lock screen. To Snoopy Barbara did not have access to the innermost. Even if this is hidden on your iPhone is not found, then you are sure to feel uncomfortable just because someone shamelessly rummaging in your phone.
"Well, again, these strange people from Macradar edition advise us the obvious", - in the best case, you exclaim. But I am taking you to the next obvious thought: on the lock screen, you can use special language characters in the password. For example, the fine letter of the Polish or Czech language, which can be seen by holding your finger on the letter "I" or "C" longer. The problem is that, by default that iOS does not allow these characters in the password to use. It depends on whether you have a simple password option is enabled. To find out, go to Settings - General - Password protection - Simple password. Disable simple password and click "Enable password" in the upper part of the same menu.
Now enter the password using the language special symbols. For example, simply enter macradar, instead of using all the vowels with an accent symbol, as in the screenshot. You can enter any, even a simple word, but to crack a password to very few people come to mind.
With this method, the password setting is only one, albeit small, problem. Remember the first rule of fight club?