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How to Password Protect Photos on iPhone and iPad

Sometimes, you need to protect your iPhone or iPad photos from prying eyes that might also have access to your device. Unfortunately, Apple doesn’t provide an obvious, secure way to do this. However, there’s a work-around thanks to the Notes app.

You probably already know about the “Hidden Photos” folder in the Photos app on iPhone and iPad. In iOS 14 and iPadOS 14, you can hide that folder, as well. However, images hidden in the Photos app aren’t password-protected. There are other ways you can hide private photos on your Apple device, but they often involve third-party apps.

We’ll show you how to use the Notes app (which is on every iPhone and iPad) and a feature first introduced in iOS 9.3 to secure certain photos on your device. First, you’ll have to insert your photos into a note, and then, you can lock them behind a password, .

How to Password Protect Photos Using Notes

If the photos you’d like to lock behind a password aren’t already on your iPhone or iPad, move them there. Next, open the Notes app and tap the New Note icon (the pencil and paper) to create a new note.

Tap the New Note icon in Notes.

On the first line of the new note, type some text that won’t attract too much attention. This will appear in the list of notes, even after you lock it.

A note called "Gravel Statistics."

Tap the Add Photo icon (the camera) in the toolbar. On an iPad, you’ll find this at the top. On an iPhone, it’ll either be above the on-screen keyboard or at the bottom of the screen.

In the menu that appears, tap “Choose Photo or Video.”

Tap "Choose Photo or Video."

On the following screen, tap the thumbnail of each photo you want to add (a checkmark will indicate they’re selected). When you’re done, tap “Add.”

Tap the photos you want to add, and then tap "Add."

Notes will insert the photos you selected into the note file. To lock the note, tap the Ellipsis icon (the three dots in a circle).

Tap the Ellipsis icon.

In the window that appears, tap “Lock.”

Tap "Lock."

If you’ve previously set a Notes password, you’ll be asked to type it; after you do so, tap “OK.”

Haven’t set a password? No problem! Notes will ask you to create one. Just remember, you’ll have to use this password to view all locked notes. If you’ve enabled the Notes app to sync to iCloud, this same password will also apply to other Apple devices signed into iCloud.

Type a password and a hint. If your device supports it, you’ll also have the option to lock Notes using Touch or Face ID. After you’ve typed your info and made your selections, tap “Done.”

Type a Notes password, verify it, and then tap "Done."

Notes will confirm the lock has been added, but don’t walk away yet! This only enables the lock setting—you’ll still have to lock the note itself to make it secure.

To do so, open the note, and then tap the Padlock icon in the toolbar.

Tap the Padlock icon.

You’ll then see a confirmation that says “This note is locked.” If you want to double-check, just tap “View Note.”

Tap "View Note."

When Notes asks for your password, type it, and then tap “OK.”

Type your password, and then tap "OK."

You’ll then see all the photos you added to the secure note.

Make sure you also visit the Photos app and delete the images you just password-protected. After that, you’ll need to visit the “Recently Deleted” folder in Photos and delete them there, as well.

How Secure Are Locked iPhone or iPad Notes?

Locked notes on an iPhone or iPad are encrypted to the extent that it would be difficult to extract them, even with forensic tools. It’s not ironclad state-security-level encryption, though. One research firm recently discovered some weaknesses in the Notes app. These could allow a determined attacker with unrestricted access to your device to guess the partial contents of a locked note.

These circumstances are rare, but there might also be other undiscovered bugs in Notes that could potentially compromise a note’s security.

For casual privacy purposes, however, locked notes are secure enough for most people to prevent opportunistic snooping. Just make sure you don’t create a password that’s easy to guess!

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How to install Windows 10 20H2 manually with enablement package KB4562830

The October 2020 Update for Windows 10 (version 20H2) is now slowly rolling out to compatible devices, and while the recommended way to install the feature update is using the Windows Update service, you can also download and install the enablement package (KB4562830) manually using the standalone installer.

This option is only available for devices running version 2004. If you’re using version 1909 or an older release, you can’t use the enablement package to upgrade. The reason is that Windows 10 version 2004 and 20H2 have a common core system with the same system files. As a result the new set of features have already been deployed in a dormant state to computers running version 2004 using quality updates throughout the year. These new features will remain inactive until the KB4562830 update is installed, which is what Microsoft is rolling out to users starting October 20.

Using this approach significantly reduces the time to upgrade from version 2004 to version 20H2, and lowers the restart times to only one. In this guide, you’ll learn the steps to download and install the enablement package manually to upgrade your device to Windows 10 20H2

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How to enable startup boost on Microsoft Edge

Microsoft Edge “startup boost” speeds up the browser start time, and this is how you enable or disable the feature. Microsoft is updating its Chromium version of Edge with a new feature known as startup boost, which launches the browser processes in the background as soon as you sign in to Windows 10. Using this technique significantly reduces the time it takes to open Microsoft Edge when opening the browser to get online or clicking a link from an email or any other app.

Once the core set of processes are loaded into memory, they will continue running at low priority when the browser is not in use to prevent impacting the overall system performance. The new feature boost the startup time of Microsoft Edge appears starting with version 88 available in the Canary Channel, and you can enable or disable it from the System settings page.

In this guide, you’ll learn the steps to enable or disable the startup boost feature to get online faster using Microsoft Edge on Windows 10.

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