For a considerable length of time, iOS clients have griped about the nosy volume marker that would appear in the screen as they balanced their iPhone or iPad volume. Somebody at Apple thought incidentally hindering the perspective on a YouTube or Netflix video was a superior encounter than really giving us a chance to watch the video.
With iOS 13 and iPadOS 13, the volume marker has changed. Presently, when you press the volume up or down catches on your gadget when holding it vertically, you’ll see a little white line on your screen – directly alongside the volume catches.
As you press the volume up catch, the line goes up, and the equivalent is valid as you press the volume down catch. At the point when your gadget is in scene mode, the volume pointer appears along the highest point of the screen and still doesn’t square anything.
In the event that Apple had halted there, I envision most Apple fans would be excited. I realize I am. However, there’s a little, to some degree covered up, some portion of the new volume marker.
When you trigger it with a volume catch, you can utilize your finger to slide the white bar all over, letting you all the more precisely change the volume level. Here, look at it:
We’ve discovered increasingly shrouded highlights in iOS 13 simply like this one, joining much more highlights like dim mode, new Maps highlights and enhancements to the Messages application.