ios 6 whats new
ios 6 whats new
The
new Apple iPhones going on sale this week, the iPhone 6 and the iPhone 6
Plus, have crisper screens, faster processors and sharper cameras.
And, as you might have heard, they are also bigger than previous
iPhones — the 6 Plus by a long shot — joining the stampede toward bigger
handsets.
But after almost a week of trying the phones, it
became clear that the hardware was not the best part of the package. In
its quest to deliver bigger phones to a market clamoring for them, Apple
has made one phone that is actually a little too small and one that's a
little too big.
The best part of the new phones is actually
the new software inside, which is available for some older models, too,
starting on Wednesday. The software, iOS 8, combines some of the
advanced features of Android with Apple's ease of use and reliability.
Because of the software, it's hard to see many iPhone fans straying from Apple, even if they don't buy new iPhones immediately.
The iPhone 6 is a 4.7-inch device, up from four inches on the iPhone 5 and 5S. It's a little wider than those phones, too.
Those dimensions make it slightly smaller than the top Android and
Windows devices on the market, helping it fit easily in jeans pockets.
Compared with a Samsung Galaxy S5 or the HTC One (M8), though, the
iPhone 6 screen feels constrained. The iPhone 6 starts at $200 with a
new contract.
The iPhone 6 Plus is a behemoth. It has the same
size display as the LG G3, at 5.5 inches, but is significantly taller.
It's longer even than the Galaxy Note 3, which has a 5.7-inch display.
It starts at $300 with a new contract.
Both the 6 and 6 Plus
get thinner, flatter and more rounded shapes than their predecessors,
losing the squared-off sides on the more recent models. The effect looks
sleek, but feels slippery. Dropping seems imminent as you stretch your
thumb across the larger screens.
Apple takes some small steps
to mitigate the finger stretch with a feature called Reachability, which
lets you touch (not press) the home button twice to shift the screen
down to the bottom half of the display.
The feature works
nicely for one-handed scrolling and finding app icons, but it doesn't do
much else. If you're in an email, for example, you can't get access to
any actions like Reply or Archive.
Apple could have taken a cue
from other makers of so-called phablets (a blend of the words "phone"
and "tablet") and come up with powerful ways to take advantage of those
bigger screens.
For example, the forthcoming Samsung Galaxy
Note 4 will let users resize app windows using a finger or stylus and
view multiple windows simultaneously on its 5.7-inch display, as on a
desktop computer. The 5.5-inch LG G3 lets you open two apps at once and
resize them as you like.
The iPhones do include some tricks created for bigger phones, like a
zoom feature that lets you subtly increase the size of app icons and
text in native apps.
And when you turn the phones sideways,
into landscape mode, the keyboard in the built-in apps like Mail and
Messages has more options — a microphone, undo key, period and comma and
others on the iPhone 6, and even more on the iPhone 6 Plus, like
dedicated copy and paste keys.
Those extra iPhone 6 Plus keys
disappear if you choose the zoomed display, however. And the iPhone 6
Plus is so big that in landscape mode, I had a hard time reaching the
keys to type.
Even the built-in Apple keyboard doesn't get any
extra keys when holding the phone upright, the way the Samsung and LG
keyboards include number keys above the letters, and period and comma
keys.
As for the features that people love about their iPhones,
they only get better. The iPhone 6 cameras, for example, are
outstanding.
Both rear-facing cameras have new sensors that deliver faster
autofocus, better face detection and the ability to capture
high-resolution panoramas. The faster focus is immediately obvious, even
in casual use.
The iPhone 6 Plus in particular uses optical
image stabilization to deliver better photos in low light and reduce
overall shake and blur. Sadly, that nice feature is not on the iPhone 6.
And filmmakers are swooning over the iPhones' high-definition video,
faster frame rates (which lead to smoother video) and higher-quality
slow-motion capture. Cinematic video stabilization helps smooth out
video taken while moving and a time lapse mode snaps a shot every second
or so and stitches them together.
Of course, all the videos
and photos look great on the bigger screens, especially the iPhone 6
Plus. For camera buffs, that bigger phone is likely to be a must-have.
Call quality on the new phones is excellent and I found battery life on
the smaller iPhone 6 to be impressive. I went almost two full days
without a charge. Battery life on the iPhone 6 Plus is more like a day
of constant use and not much more, but that's not terrible on a phone
that size.
The real magic, though, happens because of Apple's new operating system.
The iOS 8 software doesn't look greatly different, but many refinements
make it more powerful and flexible. Some of the features catch up to
competitors and some are totally new.
The upgrade adds iCloud
Drive, for example, which lets you more easily share documents across
devices, as you can with Dropbox or Google Drive. A Family Sharing
feature will let you share your purchased books, movies, music and some
apps with up to six family members, so they don't have to log in to your
account to watch a movie or use an app you have purchased.
After OS X Yosemite, the new operating system for Macs, is released in
October, Apple's Continuity feature will let you view incoming text
messages across all devices, hand off documents between a phone and
computer and send a text or make a call from your Mac.
Smaller
improvements — expiring messages and voice memos, Spotlight searches
that include web results, and recently used contacts that show up when
you double-press the home button to switch between or close apps — add
up to a refined mobile OS.
Some of the features aren't perfect,
and many of the sexier features are still down the road. Right now, for
example, the Health app simply doesn't do much. It depends on
integration with third-party apps (scheduled for release with the
phones) and the coming Apple Watch.
The new operating system
comes on the new phones and can be installed this week on the iPhone 5S,
5 and 4S. People who have those phones and whose two-year cellphone
contracts have not yet expired can rest easy. They will get many of the
best features of this year's upgrade cycle.
The slim new
iPhones aren't a big-screen slam-dunk, but they work well, as we have
come to expect from Apple. Ultimately, it's what's on the inside that
keeps them just in front of their competitors.
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