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Xbox Series X|S Features That You're Missing Out On

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Xbox Series X|S Features That You're Missing Out On

Xbox Series X menu
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By Elijah Rawls/Nov. 24, 2022 3:00 pm EST

If you're just now upgrading to an Xbox Series X|S, congratulations on joining the next generation of Microsoft gaming consoles. Outside of the new SSD and lightning-fast processor — which have received the most attention — Microsoft's latest machines come with a litany of new features designed to take your gaming experience to the next level. Whether you're looking to game in Dolby Vision or expand your storage capacity with a Seagate Expansion Card, the Xbox Series X|S consoles are ready for the next generation.

Even though Microsoft's new consoles have been on the market for over two years, many of these features are not well-known throughout the Xbox community and could use more recognition. The best part is most of these new features apply to both the Series X and the Series S, and given the steep price of the two consoles, you'll want to ensure that you are taking advantage of all of these features to ensure you're getting the best gaming experience for your money.

Enhance your gaming experience with Dolby features

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The Xbox Series X|S devices are the first ever consoles equipped with Dolby Vision and an accompanying audio element called Dolby Atmos (via Dolby). These two features work in concert to provide your console with an enhanced audio and visual experience that you'll find nowhere else.

Currently used in movie theaters across the country, Dolby Vision technology enhances the quality of visuals by automatically improving aspects like color, brightness, and contrast. When toggled on, it can bring you 40 times brighter color highlights and 10 times darker blacks when compared to standard HDR, according to Dolby. With the release of the Xbox Series X|S, the company has brought this visual enhancement to gaming as well. While not all games are available in Dolby Vision, you can expect many more of your favorite titles to feature this moving forward. It's also important to note that you will need a Dolby Vision-enabled TV to take advantage of this feature.

Dolby Atmos is the accompanying audio feature to Dolby Vision and also comes equipped on the Xbox Series X|S. Whether you game with headphones or surround sound speakers, Atmos will provide 360-degree audio that accurately reflects in-game motion and action. It's worth noting that you will need to download the app from the Microsoft store on your Xbox to enable it.

Boost your console's storage with a Seagate Expansion Card

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With game installs and updates seemingly taking up more and more space every year, managing your console's storage space is becoming a necessary task rather than just an optional one. However, if you're tired of needing to handpick games to delete on your Xbox Series X|S every time "Call of Duty" has an update, you can use a Seagate Expansion Card to boost the storage significantly.

The expansion cards slide neatly into the back of your Xbox Series X|S and provide your console with the same seamless gameplay you'd expect from your internal SSD, according to Seagate. It's also worth noting that the only way you can play games optimized for the next generation Xbox on an external drive is if it's installed to a Seagate Expansion Card, so it's worth considering spending the extra money if you're in the market for an external storage device. Seagate currently offers 512GB, 1TB, and 2TB storage options.

Share gaming clips easily with friends using the new controller

Xbox series X controller
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You no longer need to cumbersomely screen record and export gaming clips from your console to your computer using a cable. If you haven't noticed, the new Xbox Series X|S controller has a built-in share button between the menu and view buttons, allowing you to easily save and share any of your most recent gaming moments, according to Microsoft. The process is quite straightforward:

  1. While gaming, press the button once to take a screenshot or hold the button if you want to make a clip of the last two minutes of your gameplay.
  2. To share those clips with friends, click the share button twice, and it will bring you to a screen with all of your recent captures.
  3. If you're signed into the Xbox mobile app with the same Xbox Live account as your console, you can easily send them to the app and circulate them through your social media accounts.

The Xbox app will allow you to export them to your mobile device's photo and video library or share them directly from the app to social media. You can also view your saved gaming clips on the app and reminisce about your previous gaming activity.

Download and install games to your console using the Xbox App

xbox app on mobile phone
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If you're away from your Xbox Series X|S and want to manage your console's storage and game library by downloading and installing games, you can do so with the Xbox App, according to Microsoft. However, you must first enable remote control settings on your console. To do this:

  1. Open the guide on your Xbox Series X|S by pressing the "Xbox" button on your controller.
  2. Navigate to Profile & system > Settings > Devices & connections > Remote features.
  3. Enable remote features by checking the box.
  4. Select "Standby" under Sleep mode.

Once you've enabled remote control of your console, you can download and install games using the app. However, if you have multiple consoles in your inventory, be sure you have them uniquely named so you can choose the correct one for your new game. This is simple, too:

  1. On the Xbox App, search for the game you want to download and install to your console remotely.
  2. Choose Download to Console and choose the correct console from the list.

If you're running low on storage for your Xbox Series X|S, you can uninstall games using the Xbox app. You will find "Manage Installed Games" under the app's Home tab. Select the console icon. Then, choose the game you want to uninstall.

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12 Hidden Netflix Features You Probably Didn't Know About

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By Cassidy Ward/Updated: March 7, 2022 1:27 pm EST

Netflix has become a ubiquitous part of our lives, having replaced the video rental stores of yesteryear and spawned colloquial slang like "Netflix and Chill." Having Netflix on in the background is so common the company went as far as checking in on you every few episodes to make sure you're alright.

It's easy to forget Netflix's humble beginnings as DVD-by-mail service launched in the late '90s — you can still rent DVDs and Blu-ray's from them through a separate subscription, if you're so inclined — and no one could have predicted how successful they'd become, certainly not their competitors.

Despite how completely the streaming service has embedded itself into our lives, there are a number of features the average user may not be familiar with. In order to maximize the value of your monthly subscription fee, we're here to show you twelve lesser-known features you can use to make the most of your binge session.

Remove the "Are You Still Watching?" Prompt

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Binge watching may not be the healthiest habit but we're all guilty of it sometimes. While we appreciate Netflix checking in on us to see if we're still awake, gently prodding us with a digital stick to take a break, get up and stretch, maybe even go outside and step into the Sun, sometimes it's a little much.

If you're going to binge, you're going to binge. The last thing you need is some faceless user interface guilt-tripping you every time you watch more than three episodes in a row. For a service so closely associated with the word "chill," Netflix has a shocking lack of it sometimes. Luckily, there's a solution.

Browser extensions like Never Ending Netflix can override the prompt, letting you watch your favorite show from sunup to sundown in peace. It also offers additional features for streamlining your viewing experience including skipping title sequences and skipping the "Next Episode" countdown.

Did you really watch 28 episodes in a row, or did you just watch one really long movie? That's a question for your therapist and future philosophers, you've got snacks to eat and a body-shaped couch imprint to make.

Host a Digital Watch Party

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Sometimes you want to watch a movie with your friends and family, but you don't actually want to see anyone in person. Maybe there's a global pandemic on, or maybe you're having one of those introvert/extrovert days when you want two contradictory things at once. The human mind is an enigma, and we won't pretend to understand it.

Teleparty — previously called Netflix Party — is a browser extension which allows you to host virtual movie nights. The extension is free and set up is relatively simple. All you have to do is install Teleparty, pin it to your toolbar, open the video you want to watch, and start your party. Once you hit play, everyone in the party can watch the same content at the same time and there's even a chat window in a sidebar to make it feel a little closer to actually watching a movie together with your friends.

As of earlier this year, Teleparty added support for additional streaming services including Hulu, Disney+, and HBO, and they're planning to add more services in the future.

Customize Your Subtitles

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If you spent your younger years going to loud concerts and turning up the volume too high in your headphones, you might be experiencing some hearing loss and prefer to hit the subtitles when you watch TV or movies. Subtitles aren't just for the deaf or hard of hearing, though. Surveys suggest a growing number of people prefer to have the subtitles on regardless of their hearing status and that's especially true among young people.

Streaming also gives viewers access to content from other parts of the world they might not previously have had access to. Netflix has a growing library of foreign language content, from indie foreign films to manga. We don't want to get into the subs vs. dubs debate, that's a conversation for another time, but we do want to make sure you know how to get the most out of your subtitles.

Netflix's subtitle preference menu offers a number of customization options. You can choose from seven different fonts, three text sizes, and eight colors. There are also five options for shadows, and the ability to add a background or window, to make the words pop a little more clearly on the screen.

You can preview any combination of these options in the preference menu. Unlike some of the other features in this list, these preferences aren't limited to computer viewing. They'll show up on any supported device.

Turn Your TV Into an Audio Experience

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From the silent films of early cinema up through the modern day, television and movies have largely remained a visual experience. The nature of the medium has had a tendency to alienate, however unintentionally, those with visual impairment, but not anymore.

Whether you're experiencing vision loss, or you just want to enjoy your favorite shows and movies without being tied to a screen, Netflix offers audio descriptions for a large and growing selection of their content.

You can access this feature through a browser, a phone app, or on your television. Once you've started a show, simply navigate to the Audio and Subtitles menu — it looks like a speech bubble — and select Audio Description.

Now a narrator will add brief descriptions of actions and settings between lines of dialogue to paint a picture of what's happening on screen, transforming a traditionally visual medium into and auditory one. If you're a fan of audiobooks or radio plays, this might be for you.

The translation isn't perfect, but no adaptation from one medium to another ever is. Still, it's great for experiencing content you're already familiar with in a new way while you're otherwise occupied, and it offers an enhanced experience for people for people who might otherwise have to rely on the dialogue alone.

Delete Your Viewing History

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We're living in a world of ever-decreasing privacy. It sometimes feels as though every move we make is laid down inside our digital permanent record. The GPS in your phone tracks where you go each day, all of your internet searches and online traffic are catalogued and codified, and the embarrassing things you posted to Twitter, or Facebook, or Myspace, when you were a teenager live on the internet forever.

The same is true of your Netflix viewing history. The streaming platform uses that information to serve up new content you might be interested in, but that doesn't mean your roommate, partner, or parents need to know about it.

There are a number of reasons you might want to remove a title from your viewing history. Maybe you don't want your roommate to know you've been watching the same guilty pleasure on repeat for two weeks. Maybe you don't want your partner to know you watched the latest episode of your favorite show without them. Either way, Netflix has you covered.

By visiting the viewing activity page, no one ever need know what you've been watching. Simply go to your history, click the icon to hide the offending content from your viewing history, and it will be removed from your records within 24 hours.

It's important to note, however, that doing so also removes it from the recommendation algorithm. So, Netflix won't offer you similar content unless you watch that title again.

Password Protect Your Profile

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It's not uncommon for people to share a single Netflix account with friends and family. Sharing an account can be convenient but it can also be annoying, especially if someone else's viewing habits are interfering with your streaming experience.

Some of that can be alleviated by creating separate user profiles but there's nothing to stop another user — your kid, for example — from accessing your profile and watching content you'd rather they not be exposed to. There's also nothing to stop them from watching 156 episodes of Pokémon in a row and messing up your recommendations.

Except that there actually is something to stop them. Everyone knows a password is protected to access the account, but you can also pin lock your profile so that other users sharing your account can't access it.

Open up Netflix in a browser and hover over the arrow in the top-right corner, then click Account. Scroll down to the Profile & Parental Controls section and select your profile. There, you'll find a Profile Lock option which allows you to set up a pin code for access.

You'll never have to deal with your sibling messing up your watch history again, and you can also avoid some of the viewing history deletions from the previous section. With only four digits your privacy and algorithmic integrity is secured.

Add Ratings From Trusted Sources

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With so much new content dropping all the time, it can be hard to know what's worth watching and what you should avoid. Recommendations from friends and family go a long way, but only if you have similar tastes and even then, you can burn through a season quickly, leaving you searching for something new.

In the age of the internet there's no need for you to make those decisions alone, almost anything can be crowdsourced and finding content recommendations is no exception. There are a number of reputable review aggregator sites like Metacritic and IMDB which provide ratings scores from professional critics and viewers. Getting to that data, however, means looking up movies or TV shows one at a time. Luckily, there's an easier solution.

The Trim browser extension lets you incorporate ratings information from IMDB, Rotten Tomatoes, and Metacritic without having to pull out your phone or open a separate tab. Ratings appear right on the Netflix home screen at a glance. It also allows you to fade out selections based on minimum rating scores and release date, making finding your next obsession that much easier.

Download Videos to Watch Offline

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Streaming allowed us to do away with bulky physical media collections and access an endless supply of movies from our phones, computers, or televisions. The only catch is it requires a secure internet connection in order to work.

That's all fine if you're at home or have access to a reliable wireless connection while you're out and about. What happens if your power or internet goes out? What about if you're on a road trip, travelling through remote areas where wireless connections can be spotty? Losing access to the internet also means losing access to your entertainment. Netflix has a workable solution and this one doesn't require any extensions; it's built into the service by design.

Netflix allows you to download select movies and episodes to your phone or computer for offline viewing. It requires a little advance planning but is a perfect solution if you find yourself without a good connection.

Downloading isn't available for every title and there are some limitations to the amount of time you can keep a title once it's downloaded, but a well-planned stockpile should get you through a connection drought.

The process is simple, just open the app on your phone and navigate to the title you want. If it's available for download, you'll see a button just below the play option. Once it's on your device you can watch to your heart's content, or until it expires. Never pay for an internet connection on an airplane again.

Request a Title

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The nature of streaming services means that titles come and go. Something you intended to watch might disappear before you get the chance, or it might never have been available at all. Relying on streaming services means being at the mercy of whatever content they've negotiated licensing agreements for. It's sort of like being at a friend's house and only being able choose from what they happen to have on the shelf.

If you find that there's something you'd really like to see, but it isn't available among its more than 15,000 titles, don't despair. You can help Netflix decide what to add to the platform by requesting a title.

Decisions about which titles they acquire are complex and often involve a number of factors including existing rights agreements. They also take regional tastes into account, and that's something you can impact, by sending them your wish list.

Netflix provides a simple form for sending requests. It's unlikely that an individual request will result in the sudden appearance of your favorite underappreciated movie or show, but every flood is made of single drops of water and enough request could move the needle.

Casting your vote for new content could alert Netflix to shifting tastes and it doesn't cost you anything to make your voice heard.

Use Category Codes to Find the Perfect Watch

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Netflix has thousands of titles available but only a fraction of them are presented on your homepage. The interface takes your viewing activity into account when deciding what to populate, but it's still only a small glimpse into the deep collection of content available. Your next favorite show might be hiding beneath the rubble where you'll never find it, at least not without help.

Sure, you can search for titles one at a time and hope to get lucky, or you can make the job easier by whittling down the choices to precisely what you're looking for with category codes. Netflix categorizes all of its content with tags and each of those tags has an associated code. The trick is knowing what they are. Lucky for you, the collective knowledge of the internet has compiled a comprehensive list of Netflix's category codes.

If you want an action movie, you'll find everything Netflix has under code 1365. If that's not specific enough, you can drill down into subgenres. How about an action comedy? You'll find them with code 43040.

Open Netflix in a browser and replace the number string at the end of the URL with the code of your choosing. Voila, the user interface will refresh with only the sort of titles you're looking for. Suddenly, a suite of previously hidden content is at your fingertips and the more you use this trick, the more your ordinary homepage will reflect your tastes.

Let Netflix Roulette Choose For You

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When we were kids, we were happy to watch the same movie on repeat for weeks or months at a time. Having only a small collection of VHS tapes or DVDs to choose from meant figuring out what your favorites were and sticking with them.

Streaming services have the opposite problem. The sheer number of options can be overwhelming, and you can easily find yourself scrolling and scrolling until your food goes cold and your eyelids grow heavy, paralyzed by indecision.

When that happens, it's time to take yourself out of the equation entirely and leave the decision up to someone — or something — else. In this case, a computer. Netflix Roulette is a fun tool by Reelgood which allows you to select a genre, IMDB score, and a number of other options before hitting a randomizer which decides what you should watch.

If you're feeling especially brave you can leave all of those options blank and choose from everything Netflix has to offer. Creating an account opens up the options even wider by allowing you to incorporate content from other streaming services like Amazon Prime, HBO Max, Disney+, and more.

Life requires plenty of difficult decisions, choosing your entertainment doesn't have to be one of them.

Become a Beta Tester for the Newest Features

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The above features should go a long way toward enhancing your Netflix prowess and making you the master of your own personal streaming domain. However, if you find that they aren't enough to satisfy your viewing experience, you can sign up to become a beta tester and get access to all of the newest features before anyone else.

Netflix is constantly working to improve their user interface but, like any company feeling out a new version of their product, they benefit from feedback before a full rollout. Signing up to be a beta tester gives you the option of being the guinea pig for new features before they become available to the wider customer base.

Log into your Netflix account on a browser, hover over the arrow next to your profile picture in the top-right corner and select Account. Under Settings, you'll see an option for Test Participation. Toggle the switch to the On setting and you're off to the races.

You may not see any immediate changes but when Netflix is ready to test a new feature, you'll be among the first users to experience whatever the future of streaming entertainment has to offer.

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