Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Apple
  4. Mobile
  5. Evergreens

How to use Siri Shortcuts

iOS 12's Siri Shortcuts help Apple close the digital assistant gap

Add as a preferred source on Google

Apple has finally released iOS 12 to the public, bringing with it improved notifications, ways to track how long you spend on your phone, and the ability to set up shortcuts to make doing things easier and faster through the Siri Shortcuts app. Siri Shortcuts could supercharge the aging Siri, making it much more useful in a world with Google Assistant and Amazon’s Alexa.

Thankfully, using Siri Shortcuts is relatively easy. Like any Apple app, it is well-designed and clean, plus you don’t have to start from scratch — there are dozens of shortcuts you can choose from to get started, without having to create your own.

Recommended Videos

If you want to create your own Siri shortcut, however, it’s thankfully very easy to do, and we’re about to show you how. For the purpose of this, we’re going to create a shortcut that you could use in the morning to start your drive to work and play a music playlist — perfect for when you first get in the car.

  1. Open the Siri Shortcuts app and head to the Library tab. Press Create Shortcut.
  2. Scroll down to the first action you want to the shortcut to perform. Here, we want the shortcut to begin our drive to San Francisco.
  3. Enter the address you want the shortcut to navigate to in the box that appears.
  4. On the bottom half of the screen, scroll down to the Music app.
  5. Tap on the app, and select a playlist or music that you want to listen to.
  6. Rename your shortcut by tapping on the Settings button under the Done button on the top right. Then tap Done.
  7. Press Done on the top right-hand side of the screen.

Once your shortcut is created, you can run it from the Shortcuts app, but there are probably easier ways to run it. For example, you can add a shortcut to Siri by going into the Shortcut’s settings and tapping Add to Siri. You’ll then be prompted to add a voice command, which will be used to run a specific shortcut.

You can also add shortcuts to a widget. First, add the widget by scrolling down to the bottom of your widgets, tapping Edit, and adding the shortcuts widget. If you only have a few shortcuts, they’ll all show up — but you can tweak the shortcuts that show by heading to the settings for each shortcut and either enabling or disabling Show in Widget.

Of course, there are plenty of Siri Shortcuts to choose from. For example, you can easily log your weight or how much water you’re drinking into the Health app without having to open the app. It’s worth going through the list of shortcuts on offer to see if any would be helpful to you.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
I’ve tried nearly every iOS 27 feature, and these 3 are why I’m still excited about the update
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

It's been a little over a week since Apple's WWDC keynote, and the iOS 27 beta is already out in the wild. While Apple spent plenty of time talking about its Gemini-powered Siri, the thing I was most excited about was getting the update onto my iPhone 16e and seeing what it was actually like to live with.

I've been using the beta every day since then, and one thing has become pretty clear: not every new feature lived up to the hype for me. Some felt more interesting during the announcement than they do in everyday use, while others simply haven't found a place in my routine. But a few features have been the complete opposite. They're the ones I've found myself returning to again and again without even thinking about it. After spending more than a week with iOS 27, these are the three features that have stood out the most — and the biggest reason I'm still excited about this update.

Read more
Did you know that your iPhone bursts on-screen fireworks when you call a person on their birthday?
Not every iOS 27 gem made it into the keynote. This one's worth finding.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Apple buried dozens of small features in iOS 27, ones that didn’t get any mentions at WWDC 2026, but this one might be the most delightful discovery so far. 

If you call someone on their birthday with iOS 27 installed on your iPhone, it quietly displays a fireworks animation on the call screen. I tested this feature by setting my sister's birthday to today, June 20, 2026, in a beta build of iOS 27, and it worked just fine.

Read more
Your old iPhone may have a security flaw Apple can’t fix
Security researchers find a new BootROM exploit affecting iPhones with A12 and A13 chips
iPhone 11 Pro in hand

iPhones are widely seen as some of the most secure smartphones for everyday users. Still, Apple devices are not immune to serious security flaws, as recent threats like Coruna and DarkSword have shown. Now, security researchers at Paradigm Shift have detailed a different kind of exploit called usbliter8, which affects some older iPhones and targets a deep part of Apple’s startup process known as the BootROM.

The BootROM is the basic startup code that runs before iOS loads. It helps the iPhone begin the boot process and verify what should run next. Because it is built into the chip itself, it is much harder to fix than a normal iOS bug. Apple can usually patch software flaws through an update, but it cannot rewrite BootROM code on devices that have already shipped.

Read more