u/Particular-Car2399

LPT: Keep a running packing list in your notes app so you stop forgetting the basics

I just got back from a quick weekend trip and, of course, forgot the same small essentials I always forget. Not the big stuff, but the little things that force you to pay convenience store prices or waste time hunting for replacements when you're worn out.

LPT: Make one master packing list in your notes app or a plain text file and treat it like a living checklist you update after every trip. It only takes maybe 10 minutes to set up and saves so much hassle later.

Why this helps: When you pack from memory your brain is already juggling timing, laundry, and last-minute errands. A saved list removes that extra load, cuts decision fatigue, and prevents the same annoying mistakes from repeating.

How to do it:

  1. Create a note called "Packing Master List."

  2. Break it into sections you reuse: Toiletries, Clothes, Tech, Documents, Misc.

  3. Add a short "Before you leave" section for things you pack at the last minute, like chargers, glasses, or a refillable water bottle.

  4. After you get home, add anything you bought or borrowed to the top of the right section, and remove items you never use.

That last step is what makes it worth doing. Let the list get smarter with every trip so packing becomes copying a proven template instead of starting from scratch. Small system, big payoff.

reddit.com
u/Particular-Car2399 — 10 hours ago
▲ 21 r/iphone

Update: iPhone keyboard tweaks that actually stuck for one-handed typing

A couple weeks ago I asked for keyboard setting suggestions because my typing got worse after an iOS update. Quick follow-up: I tried a bunch of tips and let things settle before deciding what actually helped.

What stuck and why:

  1. I turned off Auto-Correction but left Predictive text on. This was the biggest win. I still get the suggestion bar when I am moving fast, but the phone stopped confidently replacing normal words with something weird. I much prefer tapping a suggestion than fighting a replacement.

  2. I turned on Slide to Type. I was skeptical, but for quick one-handed replies while carrying groceries or tools around the house it is faster and I make fewer typos.

  3. I left Character Preview off. Less visual noise for me, and I stopped second-guessing every keypress.

  4. I enabled one-handed mode by holding the globe/emoji key and I actually remember to use it now. I thought it was a gimmick, but it really helps reach keys on bigger phones.

What I tried and reverted: turning off Predictive entirely made me slower, and messing with text replacement rules became a maintenance chore. My decluttering brain hates systems that need constant upkeep.

Curious what you all landed on. Do you keep autocorrect on and just accept it, or have you moved to a more manual setup?

reddit.com
u/Particular-Car2399 — 4 days ago