iOS 8 is a teeming mass of code, a carefully crafted cornucopia of new features. Some, Apple has marketed to the skies. Others are quiet touchups that you'll just stumble upon.

You can read about some of the buried treasures in our story . But right here, on one handy page, are 13 more. You might call them Dave's Faves.

Why, the last one you took, of course. Or at least one of the last few. iOS 8 realizes that and saves you the hassle of burrowing through all your photos and albums to find it.

Where to find it: When you're in Messages, tap the Camera icon. BOOM: The last few photos you've taken or imported are right there in front of you. Scroll to the left to see more of them, going back in time. Tap the one you want, and then tap Send 1 Photo. (Actually, you can tap more than one, if you want.)

Thanks to this update, you now have a prayer of finding your phone again. Before it dies, your phone will send Apple its location. You have 24 hours to log in to iCloud.com and use the Find My iPhone feature to see where it was at the time of death. (After that, Apple deletes the location information.)

This trick is especially good when you're driving. If you must use your phone, doing so without looking at it or touching it is the best way.

The feature works only when your phone is plugged in to power, though.

Where to find it: At the moment you're asked for your credit card number (on a website), the Safari browser's keyboard sprouts a new button that says Scan Credit Card. Aim your phone/tablet's camera at your credit card and take a picture; Safari analyzes the photo and converts the numbers to text. (As always, you still have to manually enter the four-digit security code every time you buy something - an extra layer of security.)

Where to find it: Hold your finger down on a photo. In the shortcut menu, tap Hide. Confirm by tapping Hide Photo. (Your hidden stuff is, for some reason, still visible in its original album - in Albums view. It's hidden only from the Moments, Collections, and Years groupings.)

(Note, in this shot, the Low Signal notation indicates that your phone blew through a lot of power trying to reach the Internet to get your mail or a cellular signal when there wasn't much signal.)

Until now, that is. In iOS 8, you can request the full-blown site if the mobile one isn't quite cutting it for you.

Where to find it: Suppose you're in the Safari browser and some site has dished up its mobile version, and you're gnashing your teeth.

Tap in the address box, and then swipe downward on the screen. A button called Request Desktop Site appears; tap it.

Where to find it: You can use this trick anywhere, from within any app. Double-press the home button, as though you want to open the app switcher. There, at the top of the screen, are the new headshots. Tap one to make it expand into icons for the various comm channels: Phone, Message, FaceTime Audio, and so on.

9. Delete email faster.In your list of messages, one gesture, not two, can delete a message.

Where to find it: Swipe leftward. Halfway across the screen, you'll see the More, Flag, and Trash buttons. You can tap one of those, if you're so inclined.

But if you swipe fully across the screen, you trash the message - no muss, no fuss.

Bonus tip: If you drag a message you've already read to the right, you get a Mark As Unread button. Wild.

10. Take Mail's hint. If Mail spots a name, number, flight, or date in the body of an email message (for example, the block of contact info in somebody's signature), it thoughtfully offers to record that detail into the appropriate app. For example, it can stash a new correspondent's contact info into your Contacts with one tap, or add an appointment to your Calendar.

Where to find it: It's automatic. Open any message where somebody has included contact, appointment, or flight information. Tap Add to Contacts or Add to Calendar.

11. Much, much better dictation. The phone's ability to turn your spoken dictation into typed text has always been a source of frustration (and not just on the iPhone). Well, this time around, Apple has done something about it.

When you dictate, you'll notice, first of all, that the words appear as you say them (like on Android). No more staring at a blank screen, wondering if and when you're going to get a transcription.

(But doesn't Siri need the context of the entire sentence before it knows what words you've said? Yes. That's why, often, you'll see words change before your eyes, after they've already been heard. That's Siri reconsidering what you meant, based on the full passage.)

You'll notice much better transcriptions overall - especially if you have an accent.

Where to find it: Anywhere you can type. Tap the microphone icon at the bottom of the onscreen keyboard.

12. The predictive words row.From the BlackBerry and other phones, iOS 8 adopts a new way to speed up typing. There's a row of three candidate words above the keyboard. They change as you type - and they get smarter and smarter the more you use it. In fact, the phone learns different predictive vocabulary in email and texting, since you probably use a different style in each of those contexts.

When you first start typing, these suggestions include 'I,' 'The, and 'I'm' - the three most common words to begin messages.

Suppose, for example, that you want to type: 'I'm sorry, but I can't find it anywhere.' Here's a blow-by-blow look at how the suggestions change as you type. (Left column: What you do. Right column: How the three predictive words have changed.) You use a combination of typing letters and tapping full words to save time:

Total taps: 14. If you had typed it on the old keyboard, it would have been 32 taps.

(Notice how iOS 8 adds or removes spaces correctly, even when you put in a comma.)

13. Learn your own darned tips. There's a new app called Tips. Open it to read a set of tips, which Apple will periodically update, that let you know about great little iOS 8 features like the ones described here.

David Pogue is hard at work on iPhone: The Missing Manual, Eighth Edition. Get his columns sent to you by email! Details here. Or subscribe to his weekly videos on our YouTube channel here. Or email him here.

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