Just content on making money online, stocks, crypto, forex and many more!

Saturday, April 15, 2023

How to Hide Apps on Your iPhone

So you are feeling a bit of insecurity because you don' want your friends to see some of your apps on your home screen.



Normally you will have to delete it when you are with your friends and later install it when you are alone, but in this case I'll take you through a different approach to dealing with it.


On recent versions of the iPhone, you can completely hide apps from the home screen without deleting any of their data. And you can still quickly open them from the App Library screen. This feature was introduced with iOS 14, which is compatible with all models going back to the iPhone 6.


Hiding apps comes in handy for several reasons. First, it helps declutter your iPhone home screen. Second, hiding helps keeps apps private. Essentially it prevents others from snooping on your personal information. With the hide function, pages of multiple apps can also be removed from the home screen.


However, since apps hidden this way are still be visible in the App Library and on the search bar, you'll have to delete them entirely if you don't want them to be seen at all.


Use the App Library to Hide Apps

There are a few ways to hide apps on your iPhone. The easiest way is to move them from the home screen to the App Library. Here's how:


  • Touch and hold the app icon on the home screen.
  • Tap Remove App.
  • Tap Remove from Home Screen.

The app icons will now be hidden from your iPhone's home screen. If you're looking for all the apps you've hidden, head to the App Library and they will be there. If you still can't find hidden apps, tap Siri and ask for help.


How to Hide Pages on iPhone's Home Screen


With iOS 14 and later, you cannot only hide apps on your iPhone, but you also can hide and remove an entire page from the home screen completely.

  • Touch and hold an empty area on your Home Screen.
  • Tap the dots near the bottom of your screen.
  • Tap the circle under the page that you want to hide.
  • Tap Done.
To unhide a page, repeat the steps above. Then use the App Library to quickly find apps hidden on different pages.

In the Settings app, you can also set downloaded apps to be sent to the App Library by default. That way they won't appear on your iPhone's home screen again.

Go to Settings > Home Screen.
Select an option such as Add to Home Screen or App Library Only.


How to Hide Purchased Apps


Any deleted or hidden app will still appear in your App Store purchase history, but that can also be hidden in a few extra steps.

  • Open the App Store app.
  • Tap the account button, or your photo or initials, at the top of the screen.
  • Tap Purchased. If you use Family Sharing, tap My Purchases.
  • Find the app that you want, then swipe left on it and tap Hide.
  • Tap Done.
Apps can then be unhidden by scrolling down to the bottom of your purchase list and tapping the Hidden Purchases button, selecting the one you want and clicking Unhide.

Reference

Hey, We are Talking About Peppers, What is The Hottest In The World

I was scrolling down the headline of HowStuffWorks, an found this article which I think you can benefit especially if you love pepper, hot pepper of course.

Our tolerance for spicy food runs the gamut. Some of us taste a serrano pepper slice and run for a fire extinguisher. 

Others would happily drink a full bottle of hot sauce if table decorum allowed it. In fact, some people are so committed to capsaicin (the substance that makes food taste spicy) that they scour restaurants and grocery stores in search of the world's hottest chili peppers.

But what is the hottest pepper in the world? To determine that, we first need to understand what defines "hot."




6. Scotch Bonnet Pepper (350,000 SHUs)



Also known as Bonney peppers or Caribbean red peppers, Scotch bonnet peppers take their name from their visual resemblance to a Scottish tam o'shanter cap. They are close cousins of the habanero pepper and about equally spicy. 

Scotch bonnets grow abundantly in tropical South America, West Africa and the Caribbean. This makes them a popular choice if you're doing some Caribbean cooking and want to impart authentic flavor. Before the 1990s, the Scotch bonnet was one of only two peppers to measure above 350,000 SHUs. (The other was the habanero.)

5. Bhut Jolokia (Ghost) Pepper (1,001,304 SHUs)



Known as the ghost pepper in the United States, the Bhut Jolokia comes from northeast India. Its name translates to "Bhutanese pepper." 

This naturally occurring pepper is routinely consumed in neighboring Bhutan, a country sometimes heralded as having the world's spiciest cuisine. The ghost pepper is twice as spicy as the red Savina and took over its Guinness title of "world's hottest pepper" in 2006.

4. Naga Viper Pepper (1,382,118 SHUs)



The Naga viper pepper originally comes from the U.K. — not because it naturally grows in that country's cool, damp climate, but because a pepper breeder in Grange-Over-Sands, Cumbria created it by hybridizing the Naga Morich, Bhut Jolokia and Moruga Scorpion peppers. 

In 2011, this particular pepper briefly held the title of hottest pepper in the world from Guinness World Records.

3. Trinidad Scorpion Butch T Pepper (1,463,700 SHUs)



This pepper first appeared in Trinidad and Tobago using seeds that breeder Butch Taylor produced in Mississippi. These chili peppers consistently rank among the spiciest in the world, although they're certainly not for everyone.

 "Asthmatics should stay away. It could literally take their breath away," Taylor told Country Roads magazine in 2014. "If you eat a Trinidad scorpion pepper straight, it burns immediately and keeps getting hotter. ... On an empty stomach it might make you puke."

2. Trinidad Moruga Scorpion Pepper (2,009,231 SHUs)



Unlike the Trinidad scorpion Butch T pepper, the Trinidad Moruga scorpion is a longstanding native of Trinidad and Tobago, and it thrives there as a stable, non-hybrid species. 

On first bite, this super hot pepper has a surprisingly fruity flavor that gives way to intense heat that lasts several minutes. In 2012, the pepper was rated the world's hottest by the New Mexico Chile Conference. 

It has since ceded that title, but it remains popular in a variety of hot sauces that draw upon its unique blend of sweetness and spice.

1. Carolina Reaper Pepper (2,200,000 SHUs)


In 2013, Guinness World Records officially declared the Carolina Reaper the hottest pepper in the world, a title it still holds. 

The pepper is a cultivar developed by "Smokin'" Ed Currie of South Carolina, who owns the Puckerbutt Pepper Company. Like the Trinidad scorpion, this pepper is a blend of sweetness and heat. The pepper averages 1,641,183 SHUs but can get as hot as 2,200,000 SHUs.

The League of Fire, a society that ranks chili-eating champions, oversees a Carolina Reaper pepper challenge to determine the most spice-tolerant eaters on the planet. 

An Australian man named Gregory "Iron Guts" Barlow holds the contest record, consuming 160 Carolina Reapers in a single sitting. For most mortals, even a whiff of the pepper's aerosolized oils might have us panting for breath.