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Very cool. Also available on my iPhone 11.
Works on my iPhone 8 as well, and works pretty well even through an Otterbox case (although I find I need to tap the phone basically hard enough so that I can hear it in order to trigger it).
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When various swipe gestures were introduced, a lot of folks (rightly) said it was an unusually undiscoverable move for Apple (the same was said of trackpad gestures on their laptops). I still see people doing far more interaction than necessary to accomplish certain tasks that have simple gestures available. And with force touch/long press, that got even more complicated, as some gestures can trigger different behavior if you press too hard/long (made more likely if your screen is cracked; I often accidentally go into the task switcher when I meant to go back in Safari).

All of that being said, while this is even less discoverable by far, it’s good that they’ve made it optional and arbitrarily configurable. Also a fairly unusual thing for Apple, though less so in the Cook era.

Which iPhone upwards does it work from? Article didn’t say.
After not being able to find the setting on my 1st gen SE, I wondered this too.

Apparently it’s: iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, iPhone XR, iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, and iPhone 11 Pro Max. (and I assume the iPhone 12 models too)

Doesn’t seem to be on my 7 plus which fits with your list.
I made a flashlight shortcut. Works well but I’d liked the gesture to be available with the screen off as well.
I felt like Apple has done so much to the OS that I downloaded the User Guides for iOS14 and macOS 14 from the Apple Book store.

These are huge guides! I just looked it up in the iOS guide and it is listed in there, but it is not listed in the “What’s New” section. I’m thinking that the “What’s New” section is only for big things, but whoa, that’s a lot of stuff to search through to find new “small” features!

Meh. This was innovative back in 2009 on Sony / Motorola phones. They actually went further and had haptic feedback, capacitive sensing on the back, or infrared sensors for “wave” type motion detection.
This is like that time a couple years ago when Apple added a way for you to use headphones with your phone.
Knuckle gestures on Huawei Android are basically the same
I’ve set mine up for Spotlight. Now from any app it’s a quick double tap to open just about anything else on my phone.
Hmm, interesting. A cheap touchscreen on the back of the phone could really improve one handed usability. The larger phones really make you reach for things. Would love to be able to claw a few gestures on the back of the phone like unselecting an autocorrect (which always has me hovering over the autocorrect bubble, but I’d love to just swipe with my index or middle finger on the back to ignore autocorrect for the word).

Two finger swipe on the back could shuffle browser tabs. This feels like a no brainer, what’s stopping this from being implemented?

> what’s stopping this from being implemented?

phone cases?

This sounds like what the PS vita had, basically a touchpad on the back of the device. That was a gaming system but IIRC almost no apps/games used it.