OS 9 release date rumours: iOS 9 'already being publicly
tested'
When will iOS 9
come out, what features will it offer and which iPads, iPhones and iPod touch
devices will it run on? Web analytics suggest that iOS 9 is already being
publicly tested... although we're not convinced. Plus: our wishlist of features
we'd love to see in iOS 9.
by David Price
| 12 Jan 15
iOS 8 has been with us for a couple of months, but we're already
thinking about iOS 9. When will it come out, what features will it offer and
which iPads, iPhones and iPod touch devices will it run on?
In our iOS 9 rumour roundup article
we will gather together all the clues and hints about iOS 9, and update it
regularly with all the information available about iOS 9's launch details.
At the moment, with five months to go
before we're likely to even see a preview of iOS 9, we've not got much to go
on. Mind you, we can make pretty confident predictions about iOS 9's launch
date based on past behaviour (Apple is very much a creature of habit when it
comes to iOS updates, so we've got a decent idea of when iOS 9 will come out),
and there have been some reported sightings of iOS 9 in web analytics -
although we're not convinced that this means iOS 9 is being publicly tested, as
we explain further down.
We can also talk about the features
Apple fans would like to see in iOS 9. After our discussion of iOS 9 launch
date rumours, read on for our wishlist of features we'd love to see in iOS 9.
iOS 9 release date rumours: When will
iOS 9 come out?
Apple updates its iOS software
platform for iPad,
iPhone and iPod touch once a year, as
regular as clockwork. iOS 9 will launch in 2015, and the chances are very good
that it will be unveiled at WWDC 2015 in the summer (and made available for
beta testers and app developers), and then launch to the public alongside the next generation
of iPhones in September.
Update, 12 January 2015:
The launch of iOS 9 is presumably
still months away; we expect the unveiling at WWDC 2015 in June, followed by a
full launch alongside the iPhone 6c/iPhone 6s/iPhone 7
in September. But it's possible that Apple staff are already publicly testing
prototype builds of iOS 9. Consider us unconvinced, but here's the theory.
A tech writer named Roman Zavrel
contacted Macworld recently, after discovering that versions of iOS 9 seemed to
be showing up on web analytics for his site.
Zavrel works for a Czech-language
technology website called letemsvetemapplem.eu.
According to the site's traffic data, three visits were made in January using
iOS 9.0.
We looked into this using our own
analytics, and sure enough, Macworld has recorded ten page views from devices
running variants of iOS 9.x in the past few months. (Six were recorded as iOS
9.0, three were iOS 9.2 and one was 9.0.9.)
If you're not familiar with Google
Analytics, we generate these figures by drilling down within the 'Browser &
OS' section of the service's Audience section, and choosing to look at versions
of iOS 9. We scroll down past the most popular versions and a few rogue page
views appear under variants of iOS 9.x: these are clearer if we run a search on
the number 9. Here's how that looks for the past couple of months:
Our understanding is that Apple
developers normally only test pre-release OS builds internally, so this
external testing process seems to be a new strategy.
Interesting stuff, and an excellent
spot, but Macworld remains broadly sceptical, at least for now. If you look at
the picture of our analytics above, you'll notice that iOS 9.x variants aren’t
the only ones to come up when we ran a search on the number 9. We also got iOS
'10.9.5'. Which suggests that Apple is really ahead of itself.
What's more, the earliest of the iOS
9.x variants to visit the site was on 23 October (iOS 9.0). So if this theory
is right, work on iOS 9 has been underway for a long time.
We're not sure how easy it is to
spoof the version of iOS that shows up on a jailbroken device, or how often
Google Analytics gets confused about OS version numbers, but we're more
inclined (in the absence of further evidence) to believe that these are
analytical anomalies rather than evidence of iOS 9 public testing. We'd love to
be proved wrong, however.
iOS 9 rumours: Which iPads, iPhones and
iPods will be able to run iOS 9?
Each time Apple updates iOS, it adds
a couple of new iPads and iPhones to the list of compatible devices, and knocks
one or two older ones off.
At time of writing, the following
devices are compatible with iOS 8:
iPad 2, iPad 3,
iPad 4, iPad Air, iPad Air 2
iPad mini, iPad
mini 2, iPad mini 3
iPhone 4s,
iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus
iPod touch
(fifth generation)
iOS 9 will very likely launch
alongside a new iPhone (or set of iPhones) and will of course be compatible
with them. Most likely it will be followed by new iPads a month later, and
again, will work with them. But we can also expect to lose some devices from
that list. Here's our prediction of the iPads, iPhones and iPod touch models
that will run iOS 9:
iPad 3, iPad 4,
iPad Air, iPad Air 2, iPad Air 3*, iPad Pro*
iPad mini 2,
iPad mini 3, iPad mini 4*
iPhone 5,
iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 7 series*
iPod touch
(fifth generation)
Devices marked with a * are
unconfirmed, and may have different names - or never launch at all. I've only
put one entry for the new iPhones, but there's a decent chance we'll see more
than one: perhaps an iPhone 6c and an iPhone 7? Opinions on this are divided in
the Macworld offices.
What's our thinking with these
predictions? Well, iPad compatibility has historically moved upwards quite
slowly: the iPad 1 was the bottom rung for three versions of iOS/iPhone OS, and
now the iPad 2 has done the same. The iPad 2 has also been recorded as
suffering some speed issues with iOS 8. We think its time has come.
The iPad minis are harder to predict,
because we've got no historic data to go on: all three iPad mini models run iOS
8, and we have no idea how long Apple expects them to last. But the iPad mini 1
is starting to feel pretty slow compared with the two newer models, and could
well drop off compatibility with iOS 9.
iPhones tend to move quicker, lasting
as the bottom rung for one or two versions. The iPhone 4s has been bottom for
only a single version (the iPhone 4 could run iOS 7) but plenty of people have
claimed that iOS 8 slowed down their iPhone 4s handsets. We don't expect the 4s
to be able to run iOS 9.
And finally, it would be a dramatic
move for Apple to remove the iPod touch line entirely from iOS 9 compatibility,
so this may depend on whether Apple updates the iPod touch. If it doesn't, we'd
expect the 5G iPod touch to remain compatible with the latest update.
So much for the rumours and
speculation about when iOS 9 will launch, and which devices it will run on. But
what features can we expect in iOS 9? Hopefully Apple will include some of
these:
iOS 9 features wishlist: 1. Proper
parental controls
iOS 8 has reasonably decent parental
controls: you can go into Settings and set quite detailed restrictions on the
categories of music and films that can be played, the apps that can be used,
the websites that can be visited and the settings that can be changed. The
problem is that these then apply globally, to anyone who uses the device, until
you enter a passcode and switch them all off.*
Microsoft has demonstrated a better
way to do this, with Kid's Corner on Windows Phone 8, and
Android devices also offer more user-friendly parental controls.
More powerful, too. As well as
per-account restrictions (which links to request number 2, below), we'd like to
see extra types of parental control in iOS 9: one possibility would be time
limits on certain apps so that you can allow access to games but for a limited
duration. If you could specify content types as well - so that all games are
restricted en masse but educational apps are positively encouraged - that would
be ideal.
* You can also use Guided Access to
keep a child in a single app, of course, although that creates other headaches
and definitely doesn’t encourage general familiarity with the device. And by
the way, have you tried using Restrictions? Disallow certain apps, allow them
again and - abracadabra - the app icons have all been moved around the screen.
It’s a bit of a mess, to be honest.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 2.
Multiuser support/user accounts
Following naturally on from parental
controls, many users would love to be able to log into iOS under a specific
user name or account, enabling their preferences, bookmarks, apps and media
content to be kept separate from someone else who uses the device regularly.
This would be convenient and allow for a more personalised experience, as well
as making parental controls easier to implement. And you could have a 'guest'
account to stop visiting family from jumping on to your social media accounts
and viewing all your photos.
Perhaps Apple would prefer us to all
buy our own personal devices, but its creation of the Family Sharing feature
suggests that it might be open to this concept in iOS 9.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 3.
FaceTime video messages
My retired parents and parents-in-law
all have far busier social lives than I do, and it's not unusual to find that
they're out when my son and I call them on FaceTime. By the time they call back
the youngster has often gone to bed, and they have to settle for a conversation
with me.
Wouldn't it be nice for us to be able
to leave them a video message? I always find it odd that you can't. Perhaps
someone has worried that they would use up too much storage, but you could
always make it an optional feature that's enabled at the recipient's end - and
you could cap the messages at 30 seconds, which at 720p shouldn't take up all
that much space.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 4. Group
FaceTime calls
And another thing about FaceTime…
Skype allows group conversations
between up to 10 people, and it feels like Apple is handing an advantage to its
rival by limiting FaceTime calls to just two.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 5.
Split-screen multitasking
This was heavily rumoured in the
run-up to iOS 8's launch, and is again doing the rounds in reference to Apple's
semi-mythical iPad Pro. There's a
reason for that: it's an incredibly appealing idea.
iOS 8 allows a degree of app
multitasking, but rather than just previewing screens in multitasking we'd love
to be able to interact with two screens in tandem: comparing a web page with a
Pages document while making notes, for example, or checking a text of suggested
dates against your availability in Calendar. They wouldn't even need to be
related: many of us would like to be able to view an entertaining video while
putting together a piece of work, even if it might affect productivity
somewhat.
Concept illustration by
Ramotion. Check out the full set here.
This of course makes more sense
visually on the iPad, because of its larger screen, but the iPhones are getting
so big now that it's not an impossibility in the smartphone format.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 6. The
ability to change default apps…
Apple is a brilliant company that
leads the world in multiple fields but (say this quietly) it isn't
automatically the best at everything. Building browsers, for instance: you've
got to be a reasonably hardcore Apple fan to reckon that Safari is indisputably
the finest mobile web browser available to humanity, even if most of us think it's
okay.
Nope: a lot of iOS users would like
to use Chrome, or Dolphin, or another rival web browser on our iPads and
iPhones - but while that option is available, you can't make anything other
than Safari the default browser, so Mail links, Twitter links and so on will
always default back to Safari when you tap them. The same applies to mail apps,
calendar apps and various other areas where Apple has a horse in the race but
wouldn't beat all-comers if it hadn't hobbled the competition.
We'd love to see the option to pick
your own default apps so you don't have to use Apple's if you don't want to.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 7. …and to
delete or at least hide the defaults
For that matter, it's annoying that
you can't delete any of the pre-installed Apple apps that are waiting on your
device when you first power it up, for reasons of space and tidiness. Some are
hard to object to, such as Messages (even though some prefer to use WhatsApp,
at least on iPhone). Others, such as Stocks and Newsstand would get the bum's
rush the second Apple allowed it.
And if we can't delete them, Apple,
at least let us hide them properly - the days of a forlorn folder on the last
screen labelled 'Apple crap' should be past. A simple toggle in the Settings
app to show or display each app is the least we ought to expect.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 8.
Battery-saving mode
Ask someone what they want from the
next generation of iOS devices and they will nearly always mention one thing:
"Better battery life!" Of course we agree, but we also recognise that
battery life is a question of compromises, and just asking it to be better
carries the implication that something else - price tag, weight, size - will get
worse, or fail to get better when it could have done.
So instead let's get specific about
what we'd do to improve matters. We think everyone would benefit from an
optional, platform-wide battery-saving mode that would reduce brightness and
volume, switch off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, shut down unused apps and switch off
location data and notifications. Competitors such as Samsung and Sony have
introduced similar features to help prolong that vital last 10 per cent of a
smartphone's power, and there's no reason why Apple can't do likewise.
iPhones are notorious for
fast-draining battery life so the option to disable all power-hungry functions
with a single toggle in Control Centre, or to tell iOS 9 to automatically enter
this mode when it reaches a certain point of battery life, would be extremely
welcome, and could save a few iPhones from dying at crucial moments.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 9. Ability
to add apps and settings to Control Centre
We mentioned Control Centre just now.
We adore the convenience of this little bundle of regularly used toggles and
sliders, but we think it could be even better with a tiny bit of customizability.
Say you never use Do Not Disturb
mode, or prefer to access the Camera from the lock screen rather than from
Control Centre (don't we all?). Wouldn't it be great if you could swap those
controls out of the Control Centre and replace them with other settings you use
more often - such as switching vibrate on or off, or activating a preset range
of Restrictions so you can hand the device straight to your child (this would
require some tweaking of the parental controls, as mentioned in request number
1, since at the moment switching off Restrictions makes iOS forget everything
you selected).
Our colleague Jim Martin also
demands that the Wi-Fi SSID should be shown in Control Centre so that you can
swipe up and quickly check which network you’re connected to, instead of having
to jump into Settings to sort it all out. Good idea, Jim.
You could even add frequently used
apps (or settings for those apps) to the Control Centre, or harmless
kid-friendly games you don't mind being accessible without inputting a
passcode.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 10. Local
Siri
The problem with Siri (other than
self-consciousness when you're using it in a busy area) is that it sends every
voice command back to HQ for decoding by Apple's back-end servers, which means
it doesn't work when disconnected from the internet.
Surely the easier stuff - setting
reminders and alarms, and firing off text messages - could be handled locally?
This would be a great help when driving home with no mobile signal and trying
to send a hands-free message ("I'm running late!") to a spouse.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 11. Home
screen widgets
With iOS 8 Apple cautiously opened up
to the idea of user customisation, allowing third-party system-wide keyboards
and - yes - widgets to be installed (although Apple calls them Extensions).
These are miniature versions of apps that sit in the Notification Screen and
perform limited functions.
This is all great, but it would
better still if we could install the widgets in other places - such as on the
Home screen itself, which is where widgets found fame on Android. Having a
weather widget constantly sitting in the background of the Home screen could be
handy, as could a sports news ticker.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 12.
Smaller file when upgrading iOS
This one, I'm afraid, is a little bit
like the non-specific request for a better battery life. We'd just like the
install file, when we upgrade from one version of iOS to another, to be
smaller. We don't know the details, and we don't care how - we just want it to
be smaller.
Yes, it's non-specific, and yes, it's
probably incredibly annoying to hear if you're a software developer at Apple.
But given the amount of storage available to the average iOS device - and
remember that iOS is developed for Apple devices only, so this is a totally
controllable environment - it is unacceptable that iOS 8 demanded 5GB or even
6GB in order to update. Many users had to clear all of the media and most of
the apps from their devices, and many more didn't update because they didn't
want to do this - and a mixed-OS user base is the last thing Apple wants.
(Yes, as we pointed out at the time,
you can install iOS 8 on to iTunes
and get around the storage requirements that way. But not everyone,
unbelievably, reads Macworld; and not everyone who owns an iPhone or iPad also
owns a Mac or PC.)
iOS 9 features wishlist: 13.
Calculator on iPad
A small complaint, again from our
colleague Jim Martin.
iPads, for some inexplicable reason,
don't get the Calculator app, which is a perfectly useful thing to have
(particularly since it sits in Control Centre on the iPhone). It would be nice
for iPad owners to get the same feature.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 14. iMessage
improvements
There are plenty of ways iMessage
could get better. For one thing, it would be convenient to be able to tell
Messages to always (by default) send messages as a text rather than an iMessage
if the signal is bad. At the moment you have to wait for a message not to send
before you can tap and select Send as Text, and that's pretty frustrating.
We’d also like to be able to set up
groups for messages - and even better if you could alter those in the group
list from time to time, perhaps updating it to add new friends or colleagues.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 15. Mail
improvements
And Mail isn't perfect at handling
groups either - it should be much, much simpler to emails a select group.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 16. Wider
social-media integration
Apple has allowed select social-media
partners into the fold (sometimes it's hard to escape the feeling that these
decisions are made with one eye on the political ramifications: what the
partner can offer in return, and how it will affect Apple's direct rivals). But
there are plenty of popular companies that don't make it into the default
sharing pane.
Vine is an obvious absentee from the
sharing options from a video in Photos, but we really ought to be able to
customise the list of options.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 17. Public
transport directions in Apple Maps
Simple, really: Apple Maps is playing
catch-up with Google Maps in a few areas, but the most notable and important is
public transport directions.
Google Maps can offer advice on which
bus will take you where you want to go: where to board, and what time the bus
will arrive. It does the same for train journeys. Apple Maps… can't do these
things, and it's about time it did.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 18.
Improved integration between Contacts and Facebook
Contacts' ability to scrape contact
information and images from Facebook can be quite handy, but it can also create
headaches and muddled-up data. It's a process that could do with a bit of a
spring-clean: to help avoid duplicated contacts, for one thing, and to neaten
the whole thing up.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 19. A
better, easier Photos app
We're pretty sure this will get
sorted in iOS 9, but it's still worth mentioning. Let's put it this way: Photos
isn't the most user-friendly it's ever been.
Try creating an album and adding
photos to it: you'll find them in both the camera roll and the photo stream.
Neat-freaks (like us) who try to tidy them up by deleting them from the camera
roll will find that they are promptly removed from the album.
We'd like iOS 9 to incorporate a
Photos app that doesn't involve so much duplication, and is generally a bit
easier to use.
iOS 9 features wishlist: 20.
Subfolders
I use folders a lot: my first screen
is mostly single app icons, but the second one is almost entirely folders. This
is how I keep it to two screens.
But without wishing to overcomplicate
matters, I'd love to be able to set up folders within folders. Take my big Games folder, for
instance: this would benefit from subfolders for RPGs, driving games and so on.
It's not very Apple, and not very 'mobile' either - but it
would help those of us with lots and lots of apps.
Source: http://www.macworld.co.uk/feature/iosapps/ios-9-release-date-rumours-features-wishlist-3585031/
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