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iPhone THE MISSING MANUAL - Cdn.oreilly.com

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The Text List<br />

What’s cool is that the <strong>iPhone</strong> retains all of these exchanges. You can review<br />

them or resume them at any time by tapping Text on the Home screen. A list<br />

of text message conversations appears; a blue dot indicates conversations<br />

that contain new messages.<br />

The truth is, these listings represent people, not conversations. For example, if<br />

you had a text message exchange with Chris last week, a quick way to send a<br />

new text message (on a totally different subject) to Chris is to open that “conversation”<br />

and simply send a “reply.” The <strong>iPhone</strong> saves you the administrative<br />

work of creating a new message, choosing a recipient, and so on.<br />

If having these old exchanges hanging around presents a security (or marital)<br />

risk, you can delete it in either of two ways:<br />

•<br />

From the Text Messages list: The long way: Tap Edit; tap the – button;<br />

finally, tap Delete to confirm.<br />

The short way: Swipe away the conversation. Instead of tapping Edit, just<br />

swipe your finger horizontally across the conversation’s name (either direction).<br />

That makes the Delete confirmation button appear immediately.<br />

Fancy Phone Tricks 61

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