2014-10-14

iOS 8 features and problems explained

Update: No need to downgrade from iOS 8. Apple’s new iOS 8.0.2 fixes the previous version’s problems. Here’s every feature involved before iOS 8.1 releases.

Apple’s all-important iOS 8 update is available to download with new features that round of the flat iOS 7 design even if you don’t upgrade to iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus.

As we mentioned in our full iOS 8 review, instead of a dramatic redesign, this year’s mobile operating system update ties everything together with the overarching theme of "convergence."

iOS 8 features tighter Mac OS X Yosemite integration while loosening the restrictions on Apple’s Touch ID fingerprint sensor. This goes a long way to the Passbook-integrated Apple Pay.

New software kits also bring once fragmented security and health gadgets together, something that this year’s "one more thing" surprise, the Apple Watch, will takes advantage of in early 2015.

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cFjO-uGRjlM&list=UUAY_M9HyJb8oMKPV1utQQyA

Cut to the chase
What is it? The next iteration of Apple’s mobile platform
When is it out? Download it now
What does it cost? iOS 8 is free download

Compatibility

When it comes to iOS 8 compatibility, Apple requires an iPhone 4S or newer and iPad 2 or newer to update to the latest software. Only the iPhone 4 is cut from the list.

Both the iPads mini and iPad mini 2 tablets and the forever alone iPod touch 5th generation are also going to work with the new iOS, just like they did with iOS 7. No one besides 2010’s iPhone 4 gets left behind.

That said, reports of the iOS 8 software running slower on the iPhone 4S and iPad 2 means that owners of such older hardware should proceed with caution.

iOS 8 updates and problems

The latest version of iOS 8 is the safe-to-download iOS 8.0.2 update. It fixes a bug so Healthkit apps can populate the App Store and tie into Apple’s Health app. Third-party keyboards should be glitch-free too.

Release notes for this patch mirror the ones found in iOS 8.0.1, which Apple released one a week after iOS 8 launched. It was quickly pulled as it introduced problems like breaking Touch ID and cellular.

This sent downloaders scrambling to downgrade, in some cases, to iOS 7. It also slowed iOS 8 adoption. But 8.0.2 fixed problems for the unlucky Health-app-hungry masses who sprang for the flawed update.

Not all of iOS 8’s biggest bugs have been addressed by the iOS 8.0.2 update. A number of people are still waiting to have WiFi and battery drain problems resolved and there’s a precarious iCloud Drive bug that can delete your iWork docs.

iOS 8.1 may bring Apple Pay to new iPhones and iPads during the next Apple Live event on October 16, and usher in all of these necessary fixes.

Touch ID for all

Apple’s fingerprint scanner has been limited to bypassing the lockscreen and buying iTunes Store content, but iOS 8 changes all of that as app developers get access to the five-digit login tool.

All sorts of apps can use the biometric scanning home button instead of pesky passwords. It only applies to the Touch ID-enabled iPhone 5S, iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus. But the iPad Air 2 and iPad mini 3 are rumored to include the sensor.

At WWDC, personal financial management Mint.com illustrated how third-party Touch ID use will expand beyond its iOS 7 lockscreen and iTunes confines. 1Password uses the same home button authentication the easier password management.

PayPal sent its developers to Apple’s Touch ID session at the conference, meaning all of your eBay and e-commerce transactions may be complete with the touch of the home button when upgrading to iOS 8.

While PayPal doesn’t think highly of Apple Pay, the iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus digital wallet idea is likely to be ready for iOS 8.1 in October in the US and in 2015 in the UK.

In due time, "Forget password" will become a thing of the past, replaced by the pores in your fingertips. It should act as a much more unique method of protecting your valuable data.

This Touch ID convenience is on top of the fact that iOS 8 Apple Pay system of scanning credit cards via an iPhone or iPad camera and automatically filling in the details to make shopping easier.

Of course, Apple went out of its way to say that even though you trust many app developers with your bank account data, they won’t have access to your biometric information. It’s locked away in the A7 and new A8 processor.

iOS 8 camera time-lapse mode

Believe it or not, the iPhone is consistently the most used camera in the world. It’s in so many hands and so easy to use. In iOS 8, the camera app is going to get even better.

Apple added a time-lapse camera mode to iOS 8 beta 1 in order to help users capture extended moments and automatically speed up the video with a higher frame rate. It’s a stripped-down rival to Hyperlapse.

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt0bHfdYPqs

Condensing everything road trips to candles burning down to their wick to just a few seconds in demoed in the YouTube video above.

iOS 8’s time-lapse mode is basically the opposite of the slow motion video recording option at 120 frames per second that Apple added to iOS 7 last year and Slow Mo 240fps in iPhone 6 and 6 Plus.

SMS and phone calls on Mac

iMessages has been a wonderful cross-compatible tool for chatting on iOS devices and Macs – at least until you try to leave your iPhone behind for an Android.

Apple deserters, however, may be lured back to iOS 8 with SMS and voice calls being folded into iPads and Macs, just like blue iMessages currently pop up on Apple tablets and computers.

It’s a pain to have to fetch your phone for a single SMS from an Android user, especially when you’re sitting in front of a 13-inch MacBook Air screen and full keyboard capable of handling simple texts and phone calls.

Of course, enabling text messages and phone calls to a Mac requires upgrading it to the newly announced OS X Yosemite, but that’s a piece of cake since it’ll be free and arrive around the same time as iOS 8.1 in October.

Handoff and WiFi hotspot

iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite are going to be joined at the hip with the Handoff feature that lets you pick up where you left off between devices.

Starting a project or email on an iPad or iPhone will let you finish the task on a Mac with no annoying overlap. There’s no need to reopen windows or rewrite text on the computer. And it goes the other way, too, from a Mac to a an iOS 8 device.

What if you don’t have access to the internet on your computer or iPad to get the job done? That’s where the Instant HotSpot feature will come into play, easing the messy personal hotspot setup of iOS 7.

The one problem with this joint iOS 8-Yosemite feature is that it may require you to own a fairly new Mac. Handoff has been tipped to be not be compatible with Apple computers that pre-date Bluetooth 4.0.

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWGAPFo3moc

Group messages with voice and video

Group messages is also enhanced for iOS 8 thanks to new features. You’re able to add and drop people from conversations and silence non-stop incoming message annoyances via a group-specific Do Not Disturb toggle.

Sharing your current location on a map one time or persistent location for a set period of time is also a part of iMessages, tying in the concept from Apple’s underused Friend My Friends app.

Location sharing, when it was part of the standalone app, was ideal for meeting up in a crowded location like a baseball stadium or concert, and now it’ll get more use within iMessages.

Multimedia within iOS 8’s iMessages app should be more useful too. Inline voice and video messages with Snapchat-like clips that self-destruct are coming to this mobile OS update.

Interactive notifications

For the times when you do actually respond to texts and calendar reminders on your phone instead of a Mac computer, iOS 8 adds convenient interactive notifications.

Like OS X Mavericks, these notifications can be dealt with in a few simple taps thanks to inline responses. There’s no need to mess with the lock screen in order to take action right away.

iOS notifications have come a long way from taking up the entire middle of our phone screens, and iOS 8 makes them feel like even less of a nuisance.

Quicktype keyboard

Apple claims its iOS 8 keyboard is its "smartest keyboard ever," and there’s no reason to doubt that since its Quicktype feature adds highly-requested predictive texting that’s akin to SwiftKey and Swype.

The candidate row appears above the keyboard with three word-finishing suggestions and then next-word best guesses. It even varies depending on the app that’s open to match your tone for each, from casual iMessages to formal emails.

If someone asks you a question, Quicktype also automatically offers choices like "Yes" and "No" and, optionally, learns your contacts to spell everyone’s name correctly.

Better yet, the more-open-than-ever Apple doesn’t limit users to its pre-installed keyboard via developer "extensions."

iOS 8 extensions

Extensions open up iOS 8 to Android’s best input methods: Swype is here and SwiftKey breaks free of its SwiftKey Note standalone app confines. Fleksy and Minuum also give you control over keyboard sizes.

Other third-party extensions let users tinker with the default sharing options, photo editing tools, custom actions and notification center widgets.

The 1Password extension goes as far as opening up the company’s powerful password manager to you without the need to exit the app to open its standalone app. It simply uses Touch ID to get the job done.

Before, you had to close the app that required a password you forgot, open up 1Password’s standalone app, copy the password, go back into the original app and paste in the password.

There’s always a lot of potential when a platform as large as Apple’s opens up its ecosystem to outside developers. Look at what it did to the App Store.

Extensions by forward-thinking developers may be long overdue, but it’ll finally be here thanks to iOS 8.

iCloud may actually be useful

Prior to today, there was very little reason to use the ridiculously small 5GB of free space Apple included with iCloud. It was always easier to use a more capable and less expensive Dropbox account.

That all changes when iOS 8 launches alongside iCloud Drive, Apple’s new rival to Google Drive, Dropbox, Box, Microsoft OneDrive and the dozens of other file-sharing services.

It still costs money over the 5GB limit, but at least more file types can be stored and synced. This includes documents, presentations, spreadsheets, PDFs and images. Plus it’s the best method of backing up your iPhone and iPad.

What’s really cool about the forthcoming iCloud-enabled iOS Photos app is that every picture and every edit is saved across all of your Apple devices automatically. Better yet, there are new tools and filters in iOS 8 and it’ll work on the web.

iOS 8 Family Sharing

Maybe you’ll be more willing to buy into iCloud Drive knowing that you’re going to save money thanks to Apple’s new Family Sharing feature that’s part of iOS 8.

All iTunes, iBooks and App Store purchases on the same credit card can be shared among a total of six people in your family. That beats having to sneakily exchange passwords.

New parental controls force kids to ask your permission before aimlessly downloading expensive apps. This "Ask to Buy" feature beams a message to your device, so you don’t need to be the fun-depriving "bad guy" in person.

Other Family Sharing perks include collaborative photo albums, calendars and optional locating sharing. You can find your mom or dad and that iPhone they always misplace with this extension of Find My Friends and Find My iPhone.

‘Send Last Location’ for Find My iPhone

iOS 8 expands the geolocation capabilities of Find My iPhone with Family Sharing and Find My Friends by integrating it into iMessages, but in true Apple fashion, "that’s not all."

A "Send Last Location" feature is being added so that your GPS coordinates are backed up to iCloud whenever your battery life is critical.

Right before your iPhone or iPad battery shuts off, the last thing the device does is pinpoint where you left it, whether it’s between the couch cushions or still in the car.

This handy iOS 8 setting joins the real-time tracking, sonar-like ringing, message sending, device locking and, as a last resort, iPhone-wiping features of Find My iPhone.

Health app

Apple didn’t announce an iWatch-tied Healthbook app at WWDC, but it did unveil a more plainly named Health app and the developer-focused HealthKit API.

It’s intended to bring together all of the fragmented health and fitness gadgets into one secure location, whether the fitness device deals with your heart rate, calories burned, blood sugar and cholesterol.

Even without a separate fitness device, Apple’s M8 and M7 co-processor calculates steps and distance traveled. There’s also nutritional tracking and, for extra protection, there’s an emergency Medical ID card accessible from the lock screen.

Jawbone Up, Withings and other fitness firms are on board with iOS Health in order to deposit their stats into the centralized app, though Fitbit has so far refused Apple’s advances.

The more that existing products like the Fitbit Force and Jawbone Up24 join this initiative, the more iOS 8 users will find this to be the health equivalent to Apple’s coupon and ticket stub-collecting Passbook.

HomeKit

Apple also plans to tie together smart home electronics with its HomeKit framework for connected devices so that you control everything without getting up off the couch.

Locking doors, turning off lights, adjusting the thermostat and shutting the garage won’t even require tapping your iPhone touchscreen, it turns out.

Instead, these actions can be triggered with Siri voice commands as simple as saying "Siri, I’m going to bed" in order for the computerized assistant to put you into something of a human "safe mode." We’re still waiting for Apple to see this feature through post-iOS 8 launch.

FutTv : qF7X7injV3X6R

Siri and Spotlight updates

Siri does more than look after the house and save you on your electricity bill. Apple’s voice assistant is going to start responding to "Hey Siri" if your iOS 8 device is plugged in.

This safer, hands-free way of activating Siri is joined by the service’s ability to identify songs using Shazam‘s recognition software, purchase iTunes content and recognize up to 22 languages.

Siri is also going to become a better listener with iOS 8 thanks to streaming voice recognition. Now the wavy lines and words that appear on screen will match what you’re saying in near-real-time.

When voice search isn’t feasible in a loud environment, you can turn to the more reliable iOS 8 Spotlight. Like its OS X Yosemite counterpart, it searches Wikipedia, the news, nearby places, the App Store and more.

Finding things, whether it’s via Siri or Spotlight, shouldn’t be a problem in iOS 8, as Apple is finally taking on Google’s handy voice search.

Location-based lock screen apps

If you’re anything like us you have hundreds of apps, but finding the right one at the right time can sometimes mean sifting through folders and that’s if you even remember it exists. But with iOS 8 certain apps will appear in the bottom left corner of the lock screen based on where you are at a particular time.

Early examples people have found include apps for the Apple Store, Starbucks and train stations, when near each of those things. You can then get quick access to those apps by simply swiping them upwards.

It seems that it can also make you aware of new apps as sometimes the icon will be for an app that you don’t have and will instead take you to its page on the App Store. It’s a minor feature perhaps, but one which could save time and help users make purchases and access location-specific information.

iOS 8 split-screen mode in the code

Apple didn’t announce the rumored split-screen functionality when introducing iOS 8 in June, but it may be saving the unveiling as a "One more thing" for iOS 8.1 future firmware updates.

iOS 8 beta 3 code points to true multitasking on an iPad, according to leaks from developers. Apps can run side-by-side in 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4 sizes.

There’s no telling whether or not a split-screen mode will end up in iOS 8 eventually, but Apple certainly appears to be toying with the big idea given the new iPhone 6 sizes.

After all, its competitors have had the feature up-and-running for some time. The Samsung Galaxy Tab S has multi-window mode and Microsoft Surface 3 has snap mode. Like copy-and-paste a few years ago, iOS users are left envying others.

Features being saved for iOS 9?

There’s a lot going on with iOS 8, but chief among the changes Apple failed to implement officially is true split-screen multitasking, which Samsung and LG have offered on their Android tablets and larger phones.

Public transit directions via Apple Maps is missing in action as well, and Google Maps is benefiting the most from this. Hopefully its implementation was delayed to iOS 8.1 instead of next year’s iOS 9.

Apps for photo previews and a TextEdit application, also previously rumored for WWDC 2014, didn’t make an appearance either, and the status of Game Center is still unknown. Apple hasn’t killed it off just yet.

That’s every single new feature of this year’s iOS update, though some features will have to wait until Mac OS X Yosemite arrives in October.

Coupled with iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus and Apple Watch, iOS 8 is enough to keep Apple users from defecting to Android, even with those fancy, new Android Wear watches like Moto 360 already launched.

What’s the difference? Our iOS 8 vs Android L comparison

iOS 8: 10 things we want to see

So we’re starting to get an idea of some of the major changes in store for iOS 8, still, there are many other things we’d like to see Apple change by the time iOS 8 rolls around later in 2014 – although in some cases we’ve got a sneaking suspicion Apple would disagree.

FutTv : n4950K8zVLF4m

1. Change and hide default iOS apps

We’d love to be able to choose non-Apple alternatives for handling email, browsing and maps, but doubt it’ll happen. However, Apple not providing the means to hide preinstalled apps you don’t use is an irritant that goes back to the very first iPhone.

Even if there was a similar ‘parental controls’ trick for hiding apps to the one on the Apple TV, that’d be good enough.

2. A guest/child account

Apple’s mantra is everyone should own their own device. That’s lovely, but not everyone’s pockets are as deep as those of Apple board members.

OS X-style user accounts are unlikely, but it can’t be beyond Apple to provide a single-tap child account or a guest account that doesn’t affect your settings and data, and doesn’t retain settings or data of its own.

3. Better iOS app management

As of iOS 7, Apple automates app updates, but it should go further. Devs wrestle with iCloud app data, but this should be child’s play to save and also (optionally) restore whenever you reinstall an app.

And the App Store itself should offer trials and paid version updates (rather than devs being forced to use IAP or ‘replacement’ apps as a workaround).

4. Stronger inter-app communications

One of the weakest elements of iOS is inter-app communication. If a service bumps you to another app, you’re not always returned when you’ve finished performing an action.

Worse, when making document edits across several apps workflow can be a nightmare with document copies in various states strewn throughout individual app sandboxes. Hopefully this is set to improve if the new API for data-sharing makes it into iOS 8.

5. Better document management

Following on from the previous point, iOS should introduce at least some kind of centralised access to documents. Right now, Dropbox is a surrogate file system because iCloud is a bunch of silos.

It’s absurd that you can’t easily attach documents within Mail in an OS that boasts a version number of 7. The lack of collaboration opportunities within iCloud document workflow is also disappointing.

6. Group FaceTime calls

This isn’t specifically tied to iOS, but Apple’s mobile platform is where FaceTime began life, and although the one-to-one model is great, it’s about time you could call several people at once, rather than a group having to crowd around an iPhone.

7. iOS notifications like in OS X Mavericks

In OS X Mavericks, notifications are interactive – get a message and you can deal with it there and then, rather than leaving the app you’re in. This is even more important on iOS, and so we hope Apple adds similar functionality on mobile. Google does it with aplomb, so we want to see the same here.

8. More Do Not Disturb options

Do Not Disturb gained extra power in iOS 7, enabling you to silence notifications only when a device is locked. Bizarrely, it still retains only a single schedule though. Is it beyond Apple to enable you to at least set one for weekdays and a separate one for weekends?

9. Better text manipulation

Apple’s text-selection, cut, copy and paste seemed elegant when it was introduced, but only compared to disastrous equivalents on competing mobile systems.

Today, it comes across as awkward, and it’s a barrier to usability for far too many people. We’d like to see a rethink from Apple and more usable and intuitive ways of dealing with text.

10. Two-up apps

We love the focus iOS provides, but there are times when we’d like to work with two apps at once. Much like messing with default apps, we doubt Apple will ever go down this path, but OS X Mavericks now has a more powerful full-screen mode for multiple monitors.

So there’s perhaps the slightest hope a multi-screen mode might one day arrive for the iPad or a larger iPhone, and would be one in the eye for all those Samsung owners out there.

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