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5 hidden features in iOS 5

From panoramic pictures to 3D and autocorrect, here's a handful of things you didn't know your iOS device could do.

Who knew Apple's iOS 5 mobile operating system held so many secrets? Developers and sleuthing hackers have been hard at work since Apple released the OS in October unearthing a number of hidden features and tweaking the OS to do things it was never intended to do.

Here are five hidden gems and tweaks to iOS 5 that may surprise you.

Panorama Camera Mode

My colleague Albert Filice reported on a way to turn on panoramic mode for picture taking without having to jailbreak your device (via Razorianfly). The process involves using a backup program, iBackupBot, to edit and add a line or two of code in a system file. Some iOS devices may crash when trying to use the newly-activated mode, but there's plenty of reports of iOS users taking extremely wide photos.

Autocorrect Keyboard Bar

Apple has apparently hidden a suggested autocorrect bar for the on-screen keyboard which looks an awful lot like something you might see on an Android device. It lists possible corrections for misspellings just above the keyboard. To bring it out into the light, you'll need to use iBackupBot again to make some changes to code, according to 9to5Mac.

Hidden 3D

Apple is one of the backers of something called WebGL, a standard for rendering embedded 3D objects on the web. It has said it will support WebGL in iOS, but only within advertisements. But an Australian developer figured out how to render WebGL 3D objects in iOS and outside of ad frames, with the help of some third-party APIs. What this means in plainer English is that developers could theoretically add 3D objects to new iOS apps, although Apple probably wouldn't approve them for the App Store. Nonetheless, it all indicates that Apple could have broader plans for iOS and 3D in the future.

Resurrecting iPad Multitouch

Some original iPad users were dismayed to find that when they upgraded to iOS 5, multi-touch gesturing capability had mysteriously disappeared. The gestures originally had to be enabled after the fact with some free developer software. iOS 5 introduced the feature officially to the iPad2, while simultaneously locking it out of the original iPad. Fortunately for users that got used to the gestures, a coder at modmyi.com came up with a fix to restore the capability without having to jailbreak the device.

Tweeting via Siri

This one is more an involved work-around than a hidden feature, but it provides a way to Tweet directly from Siri--a function many iPhone 4S users have been surprised to find wasn't baked in to iOS 5. The idea is basically to use Siri to text your tweet to Twitter. There are detailed instructions on the Buffer blog.

Follow Eric on Twitter, and at ericmack.org. Follow PC World on Twitter, too.

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