My parent is perfectly fine with iPads and iPhones but after a decade of practice can’t point the camera at a thing I need to see.
Last time I was there I put some numbers on a piece of paper and we practiced pointing the camera at the numbers.
They understand conceptually that what they see in the “me” box during a FaceTime call is what I see of their camera.
Nevertheless they’ll show me the glass corner of the scale for a second, then the display, then at a critical moment during setup the glass corner again.
It doesn’t seem to be a device heaviness issue.
Any tips for permanently teaching my elderly parent how to point the camera at something and keeping it in view?
I suppose that orienting it in portrait mode might be a more "normal" tilt operation, but none of my awesome background photos are portrait mode. :-)
At least, in portrait mode, the camera is centered left-to-right.
I am elderly, if that matters.
And by the way, when you hold an iPad in landscape mode, the totally natural position for the left hand is over the camera lens for face ID.
Is the "me" box on Face Time at a different corner than the camera lens?