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Tag: iOS

  • iOS 16.4 May Unlock 3Gbps 5G Speeds

    iOS 16.4 May Unlock 3Gbps 5G Speeds

    Apple’s iOS 16.4 may bring a nice surprise for iPhone users, potentially unlocking 3Gbps 5G speeds.

    Apple just released the first beta of iOS 16.4. The new version brings a number of new features including Web Push, a new way of implementing push notifications for web apps.

    According to 9to5Mac, another new feature is vastly improved 5G speeds:

    Among the new features and changes with the first developer beta of iOS 16.4, a new toggle has arrived in the Cellular settings for iPhone. The new option brings support for the 5G Standalone (SA) service offered by T-Mobile. Notably, 5G SA can deliver wildly fast speeds up to 3Gbps and it looks like iPhone could be the next device to take advantage of the tech.

    T-Mobile is already leading the US 5G race. Having the iPhone support its latest network technology will be a big win for the magenta carrier, and could help drive even more defections from other carriers.

  • PSA: iOS 16.3.1 Breaks Google Photos

    PSA: iOS 16.3.1 Breaks Google Photos

    Google Photos appears to be randomly breaking for some users on iOS 16.3.1, with users advised to wait before upgrading.

    Apple released iOS 16.3.1 Monday and users almost immediately began reporting issues with Google Photos. First spotted by 9to5Mac, Twitter quickly filled with comments by impacted users.

    While not everyone is affected, users are advised to hold off upgrading iOS until Apple or Google come up with a fix.

  • Apple TV Users Can Now Accept iCloud Terms Without iOS Device

    Apple TV Users Can Now Accept iCloud Terms Without iOS Device

    Apple has issued a support document clarifying that users can now accept iCloud terms via the web if they don’t have an iOS device.

    Christopher Koch, a senior engineer at Google, tweeted last month about new iCloud licensing terms that were showing up on his Apple TV. Unfortunately, without an iPhone or iPad running iOS or iPadOS 16, there was no way to accept the terms. As a result, a message would repeatedly display on the Apple TV prompting the user to accept the terms via an iOS device.

    It appears Apple has heard the complaints and has issued a support document to clarify:

    If you don’t have an iPhone with iOS 16.0 or later or an iPad with iPadOS 16.0 or later, you can sign in to iCloud.com to accept the new iCloud Terms and Conditions.

    1. Go to iCloud.com, then sign in with your Apple ID.
    2. If necessary, follow the prompts to review and update your account settings.
    3. Review and agree to iCloud Terms and Conditions.

    It’s nice to see Apple making sure non-iOS users can still use some of its products and services. As we wrote in our initial coverage of Koch’s tweet, Steve Jobs understood the importance of making Apple’s less expensive devices as accessible as possible in the hopes of winning over customers. It’s good to see Apple is sticking with that approach, despite how this situation initially appeared.

  • Epic CEO: Fortnite Is Returning to iOS in 2023

    Epic CEO: Fortnite Is Returning to iOS in 2023

    Fortnite fans may be in for a nice surprise, with Epic CEO Tim Sweeney saying the game may come back to iOS in 2023.

    Fortnite has been absent from the App Store since Epic and Apple’s legal squabbles. Epic decided to stop paying Apple’s App Store fees, resulting in Fortnite being banned from the App Store and sparking a legal fight between the two companies. After Apple largely won the legal battle, it appears Epic may finally be ready to make peace and try to get Fortnite back on Apple’s platform.

    Sweeney tweeted about the possibility on the last day of 2022:

  • The Walled Garden Cracks: Apple to Allow Third-Party App Stores

    The Walled Garden Cracks: Apple to Allow Third-Party App Stores

    Apple’s walled garden is finally beginning to open, with the company preparing to allow third-party app stores to comply with EU legislation.

    Apple famously maintains control of its iOS ecosystem, forcing developers to use its App Store as the primary means of distributing apps. Despite attempts to force Apple to allow third-party app stores, or other means of side-loading apps, the company has so far refused to bow to the pressure.

    A new report by Bloomberg, however, indicates the EU’s latest regulation may finally force the company to open up. Apple’s software engineers are reportedly already at work trying to make the necessary changes to iOS in time for the 2024 deadline.

    The EU’s Digital Markets Act (DMA) is one of the most comprehensive attempts to reign in Big Tech’s power and influence. The bill is aimed at “gatekeeper” companies that control entire platforms, putting Apple and Google squarely in the crosshairs.

    The DMA is designed to level the playing field for smaller companies, preventing gatekeepers from preferring their own apps and services over third-party options. The DMA would also force platforms to ensure their services, such as messaging services, “open up and interoperate with smaller messaging platforms, if they so request.”

    While the DMA only impacts the EU, it’s only a matter of time before other jurisdictions follow the EU’s playbook and pass similar regulation. As a result, the DMA represents the first crack in Apple’s walled garden, a crack that will likely bust it wide open.

  • Elon Musk’s Next Business Could Be An iPhone Competitor

    Elon Musk’s Next Business Could Be An iPhone Competitor

    Elon Musk is already eyeing his next business, threatening to make an iPhone and Android competitor if Twitter is removed from app stores.

    Twitter is in the midst of a massive upheaval following Musk’s buyout of the company. The tech mogul has slashed the moderation team, leading to reports of increased hate speech on the platform. The situation has caused some to wonder what would happen of Twitter’s issues eventually lead to it being removed from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store.

    Musk has weighed in with his plans:

    It’s hard to imagine what a Musk-owned phone would be like. Despite his companies’ innovations, they are hardly consumer-friendly. For example, Tesla’s paid over-the-air updates are credited with being the inspiration for other automakers locking built-in vehicle features behind paywalls, something is easily the most consumer-unfriendly, greedy behavior in the industry.

    With the cellphone industry having a well-established practice of offering free upgrades, and finally moving toward right to repair, it’s disconcerting to think of how much damage Musk could do with his own phone.

  • Microsoft Is Killing Off SwiftKey for iOS

    Microsoft Is Killing Off SwiftKey for iOS

    Microsoft is killing off its SwiftKey predictive keyboard for iOS, with plans to remove it from the App Store as of October 5.

    SwiftKey is a predictive keyboard that gained popularity on Android and iOS before being bought by Microsoft. In recent years Apple’s own iOS keyboard has included many of the features SwiftKey became famous for, such as predictive text and swipe gestures.

    It appears Microsoft is now ending support for the iOS version of SwiftKey, according to ZDNet, removing it from the App Store as of October 5. Chris Wolfe, Director Product Management at SwiftKey, gave the following statement to the outlet:

    “As of October 5, support for SwiftKey iOS will end and it will be delisted from the Apple App Store. Microsoft will continue support for SwiftKey Android as well as the underlying technology that powers the Windows touch keyboard. For those customers who have SwiftKey installed on iOS, it will continue to work until it is manually uninstalled or a user gets a new device. Please visit Support.SwiftKey.com for more information.”

    Microsoft refused to provide any comment as to the reason for the change of plans, but ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley theorizes the decision may be in response to Apple’s walled garden policies. In the name of privacy Apple restricts access to core elements of iOS, making it difficult for a product like SwiftKey to integrate as fully as the built-in keyboard.

    Microsoft may have simply decided it could no longer deliver the product and experience that it can on Android.

  • PSA: Update Your Apple Devices Immediately

    PSA: Update Your Apple Devices Immediately

    Apple has released patches to fix a major zero-day exploit impacting iOS, iPadOS, and macOS, an exploit that may already be in use.

    The updates to Apple’s operating systems (OS) address issues with the kernel and the WebKit rendering engine that powers Safari. In the case of the kernel, Apple says “an application may be able to execute arbitrary code with kernel privileges.” This would apply to all three platforms.

    In regard to the WebKit issue, Apple says “processing maliciously crafted web content may lead to arbitrary code execution.” Again, this impacts all three platforms.

    In both cases, Apple says it is aware of reports that these bugs have been exploited in the wild, making it even more important to update as soon as possible.

    Once the update is complete, the patched version of your OS should iOS 15.6.1, iPadOS 15.6.1, and macOS Monterey 12.5.1.

    Here’s the full release notes for iOS and iPadOS, as well as for macOS.

  • iOS 16 On Target, iPadOS 16 Will Be a Month Late

    iOS 16 On Target, iPadOS 16 Will Be a Month Late

    A new report suggests Apple will delay iPadOS 16 by a month, although iOS 16 should ship on time.

    Apple introduced iOS 16 for iPhones and iPadOS 16 for its tablets at WWDC 2022. The new versions of its operating systems bring a number of changes, although iPadOS is by far the bigger upgrade, introducing an all-new multitasking experience.

    The scope of iPadOS’ changes appears to be taking longer than Apple originally planned, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. While iOS 16 is still expected in the September window Apple originally announced, Gurman’s sources say iPadOS 16 won’t be released until October.

    Multitasking has long been considered the iPad’s Achilles heel. While the hardware is powerful enough to rival many traditional computers, it has always been held back by an OS that is extremely limited when compared with macOS. While iPadOS 16 addresses many of these criticisms, the beta has not been without its hiccups.

    Many developers and beta testers have complained of bugs and confusing workflow issues, neither of which are in line with Apple’s reputation. In addition, many have complained about the multitasking features requiring an M1 iPad.

    It seems Apple would rather take a little extra time to get it right, and that’s a good thing for its users.

  • YouTube Finally Expands Picture-in-Picture on iOS

    YouTube Finally Expands Picture-in-Picture on iOS

    YouTube has finally expanded a widely requested feature on iPhones and iPads: Picture-in-Picture (PiP).

    PiP is the ability to display a video in a floating window while performing other tasks on the device. YouTube has been one of the last platforms to adopt PiP on Apple devices, only adding it for YouTube TV at the end of March. The company is now [rolling out PiP to more iOS and iPadOS devices](Picture-in-picture expanding to more people and devices – YouTube CommunityPicture-in-picture expanding to more people and devices – YouTube Community) — although with one big caveat: some features will be for Premium members only.

    Picture-in-Picture (PiP) is now rolling out to iPhone and iPad devices (running iOS and iPadOS 15.0 or higher) over the next several days. We recognize this has been a slow roll out for a highly requested feature, and want to thank everyone who shared feedback during experiments (including recently on youtube.com/new), and waited patiently for this moment!

    Despite the limitations, YouTube’s announcement is good news for iOS and iPadOS users.

  • Tim Cook: ‘We’re Not Against Digital Advertising’

    Tim Cook: ‘We’re Not Against Digital Advertising’

    Tim Cook has set the record straight that Apple is not against digital advertising, it simply wants to give consumers more control.

    Apple is at odds with the advertising industry over changes to iOS. Apple recently began enforcing privacy labels, forcing app developers to disclose what user information they collect and track. iOS will soon include App Track Transparency (ATT), forcing apps to ask users for permission to track them.

    Unfortunately, the advertising industry seems to suffer the belief that it has an inalienable right to track users, and build detailed profiles of them, with or without their permission. Thankfully, Apple is opposed to that view, and holds to the idea that people should be able to decide for themselves whether they are tracked and profiled — not the have the decision made for them by advertisers.

    In an interview with the Toronto Sun, via AppleInsider, CEO Tim Cook clarified the company’s stand.

    “We’re not against digital advertising,” Cook said. “I think digital advertising is going to thrive in any situation, because more and more time is spent online, less and less is spent on linear TV. And digital advertising will do well in any situation. The question is, do we allow the building of this detailed profile to exist without your consent?”

    Cook framed Apple’s actions in the context of protecting its users.

    “We feel so much that it’s our responsibility to help our users be able to make this decision. We’re not going to make the decision for them. Because it’s not our decision either. It should be each of ours’ as to what happens with our data. Who has it and how they use it,” Cook continued.

    Cook also addressed why companies like Facebook and Procter & Gamble are so opposed to Apple’s efforts. P&G has even gone so far as to work with a Chinese ad agency to find ways of bypassing ATT.

    According to Cook, these companies are only concerned because they’re facing a reality where they may not have access to the same amount of data as before, and they would only lose that access if customers choose not to give it to them. Rather than accept that change, their approach is: “You don’t want to give us access to all your data, so we’re going to try to find ways around your choice and collect your data anyway.”

    Regardless of whether you’re an Apple or Android user, Apple’s stance on privacy is a refreshing one — one where the customer comes first.

  • Open Web Advocacy Is Taking On #AppleBrowserBan

    Open Web Advocacy Is Taking On #AppleBrowserBan

    A new organization is trying to challenge Apple, calling for the company to allow third-party browser engines on iOS.

    The Open Web Advocacy (OWA) is a group of developers who want Apple to crack open its walled garden, at least in the context of iOS browsers. While iOS has a number of browsers on the App Store, Apple does now allow those browsers to use their own rendering engines. Instead all of them are required to use the same engine that powers Safari. Whether a user prefers Firefox, Brave, Opera, Chrome, or anything else, they’re essentially just using a differently themed version of Apple’s native browser.

    The OWA wants to challenge the status quo, calling on “regulatory or legislative change” to help ensure the open nature of the web, and protect the ability of developers to use technologies to “write once, deploy anywhere.”

    The OWA says the #AppleBrowserBan makes development far more costly, and inhibits developers’ ability to easily create cross-platform applications.

    Critically this browser ban prevents the emergence of an open and free universal platform for apps, where developers can build their application once and have it work across all consumer devices, be it desktop, laptop, tablet or phone. Instead it forces companies to create multiple separate applications to run on each platform, significantly raising the cost and complexity of development and maintenance. These costs are in addition to the 15% 30% tax charged by the App Store. This greater cost is ultimately passed on to consumers in the form of higher fees, more bug prone applications and the applications not being available on all platforms.

    It remains to be seen if the OWA will be able to gain serious traction, although founding members of the group have already been interviewed in major publications. In the current climate, the group certainly has a much better chance than they would have several years ago.

  • Google Abandoned the Pixel 3 For No Good Reason

    Google Abandoned the Pixel 3 For No Good Reason

    Some users are not happy with Google’s decision to stop supporting the Pixel 3, and there appears to be no technical reason for the decision.

    Google has been working to build support for its line of smartphones, with the recently released Pixel 6 and 6 Pro sporting the company’s Tensor chip. One of the benefits Google touted about the Tensor was the five years of security updates and support the company would provide, something very uncommon in the Android world.

    Earlier versions of the Pixel, however, still run Qualcomm’s Snapdragon line of processors, and Google only ever committed to three years of updates for those devices. With Android 12, the 2018 flagship Pixel 3 and 3 XL reached the end of their life, and did not receive the update.

    According to Ryne Hager, over at Android Police, there’s no technical reason why Google needed to abandon the Pixel 3, and it appears the company simply decided it had met its minimum obligation and didn’t want to extend it.

    “With these options for updates available, there’s only one conclusion to draw: Google just doesn’t want to keep updating the Pixel 3,” writes Hager. “That three-year promise has been satisfied, and it’s not making more money from Pixel 3 customers. Why go above and beyond?”

    Google went all-out with the Pixel 6 in an effort to grab more market share. Perhaps the company would also do well to listen to the feedback it’s receiving about the Pixel 3, and compare its policies to Apple’s. Apple recently released iOS 15, including support for devices as old as the iPhone 6S from 2015.

    If Google really wants to be a serious hardware player, it needs to appreciate that customers remember when companies go above and beyond, as Apple has done in its support for older models, instead of doing the bare minimum to make a buck and move on.

  • Apple Users Should Update Their Devices Immediately

    Apple Users Should Update Their Devices Immediately

    Apple has released updates to iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and watchOS that fix a major vulnerability in Safari.

    A vulnerability was discovered in Safari earlier this month by FingerPrintJS, one that let “any website track your internet activity and even reveal your identity.” The issue revolved around Apple’s implementation of IndexedDB, a common API that most browsers use to store data. Unfortunately, Apple’s implementation leaked user data.

    While Apple doesn’t go into detail on the specifics of security fixes when it releases an update, to prevent the issue from being further exploited, the most recent OS updates specifically list CVE-2022-22594, the ID used to identify the flaw. The release notes also credit FingerPrintJS for discovering the bug.

    Impact: A website may be able to track sensitive user information

    Description: A cross-origin issue in the IndexDB API was addressed with improved input validation.

    CVE-2022-22594: Martin Bajanik of FingerprintJS

    Needless to say, all Apple users should update their various devices immediately. This is especially important on iOS, since all iOS web browsers use Safari’s rendering engine.

  • Twitter Communities Comes to Android

    Twitter Communities Comes to Android

    Twitter has brought its Communities to Android, after first rolling out the feature to iOS in September 2021.

    When Twitter introduced Communities, it billed it as a way to for like-minded people to engage in more intimate conversations.

    Some conversations aren’t for everyone, just the people who want to talk about the thing you want to talk about. When you join a Community, you can Tweet directly to that group instead of to all your followers. Only members in the same Community are able to reply and join the conversation so it stays intimate and relevant. 

    Now the feature has made its way to Android, significantly expanding the room for engagement.

    Android is HERE!

    if you’re on Android, you can now engage in Communities via the Twitter app (make sure to update to the latest version!)

    — Twitter Communities (@HiCommunities), January 19, 2022

  • T-Mobile Blocking iOS Private Relay

    T-Mobile Blocking iOS Private Relay

    T-Mobile may bill itself the “Un-carrier” that puts customers’ needs first, but its latest move is a little more “Big Brother” as it begins blocking iOS Private Relay.

    Apple included Private Relay (still in beta) in iOS 15 and macOS Monterey. The feature is similar to a VPN in that it “hides your IP address and browsing activity in Safari and protects your unencrypted internet traffic.”

    Given that it bills itself as putting customers first, and given it has suffered a number of high-profile hacks, one could be forgiven for thinking T-Mobile would welcome a feature that better protects its users’ privacy. Unfortunately, one would be mistaken.

    First noticed by Mac user Jon Guidry, it appears T-Mobile is taking a page from European carriers and is starting to block Private Relay in the US.

    ”@TMobileHelp What the hey? Why are you keeping us from using @Apple’s #icloud private relay?”

    — Jon Guidry (@guidryjd), January 10, 2022

    9to5Mac has confirmed that T-Mobile is indeed moving to block the feature, although it hasn’t completed its efforts, meaning Private Relay may still work for some US users.

    In March 2021, we wrote about T-Mobile opting customers into a targeted advertising program that would use their data to deliver personalized ads. The carrier also said it would sell that data to third-party companies as well.

    It seems clear, based on its attempt to block Private Relay, that T-Mobile doesn’t want anything interfering with its data mining operation. Evidently, it’s not enough to actually charge for a service, and deliver one record quarter after another. The company evidently believes it has the right to mine data from its paying customers, and will stop at nothing to block attempts to prevent it from doing just that.

    John Legere used to famously refer to Verizon and AT&T as “dumb and dumber.” Perhaps T-Mobile should start lumping itself into that category too.

  • Yes, the Blackberry 5G Phone Is Still Coming

    Yes, the Blackberry 5G Phone Is Still Coming

    Despite delays, a 5G Blackberry phone is still in development, complete with the iconic physical keyboard.

    Blackberry devices were once some of the most popular PDAs and smartphones on the market, before getting trounced by Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android. Despite its fall from grace, the Blackberry maintains a loyal customer base, with many preferring the physical keyboard to software-based, onscreen options.

    Blackberry no longer manufactures its own devices, but has licensed the rights to do so to outside companies. TCL lost its license to make Blackberry devices in February 2020, but OnwardMobility gained the contract in August 2020, and promised to deliver a new, 5G model in 2021.

    Despite 2021 having passed with no new Blackberry, OnwardMobility wants its customers to know they are coming.

    To all of you who have patiently waited so long for updates from OnwardMobility, we are humbly aware that we owe you some form of communication as we enter 2022. And to misquote Mark Twain, as so many do, “Contrary to popular belief, we are not dead.”

    The company also promises to provide more updates to future customers moving forward.

    While we encountered various delays that prevented us from shipping in 2021, we will be providing more regular updates starting this month that will clarify and answer many of your questions about the ultra-secure 5G enterprise smartphone (still with a keyboard!) we’re bringing to market.

  • Samsung S22 May Offer Google’s New Fuchsia OS

    Samsung S22 May Offer Google’s New Fuchsia OS

    Samsung’s S22 line may be the first mainstream smartphone and tablet devices powered by Google’s new Fuchsia operating systems (OS).

    Android may be the most widely-used mobile OS on the market, but Google has been working on its replacement, Fuchsia, for some time. The company only acknowledged the existence of Fuchsia in 2019, after working on it in secret.

    According to reports, Fuchsia is designed to be Google’s end-all, be-all OS for all of its devices, including those with and without a screen. According to BGR, Samsung is preparing to offers its S22 devices, including a Note-like model, with Fuchsia.

    As BGR points out, one of the biggest advantages of Fuchsia is seamless updates, a major downside of Google’s current Android OS. Whenever Google releases an Android update, it cannot simply push the update to all Android devices. Instead, it must rely on carriers and manufacturers to push the update to their phones. As a result, compared to Apple’s iOS/iPadOS, the installed Android base is much more fractured, with many users on older versions of the OS.

    If the rumors are true and Samsung does make Fuchsia an option on S22 devices, it’s a safe bet other manufacturers will quickly follow suit.

  • iOS/iPadOS 15.2 Released With Major Privacy and Security Fixes

    iOS/iPadOS 15.2 Released With Major Privacy and Security Fixes

    Apple has just dropped iOS and iPadOS 15.2, and it includes 38 privacy and security improvements, and should be a top priority for all users.

    iOS/iPadOS 15.2 includes privacy and security fixes for several sections of the mobile operating system (OS), including the kernel, audio frameworks, FaceTime, I/O frameworks, Notes, Preferences, sandboxing and the Webkit engine that powers Safari.

    All users should download and install 15.2 immediately. To update, open Settings > General > Software Update.

  • Judge Denies Apple a Stay on App Store Changes Pending Appeal

    Judge Denies Apple a Stay on App Store Changes Pending Appeal

    The judge in Apple’s case versus Epic has denied the company a stay on implementing court-ordered App Store changes until appeals are exhausted.

    Apple was the clear winner in its legal spat with Epic. U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled that Apple was not a monopoly and agreed with Apple that the company’s App Store approach likely results in a more secure environment for its customers.

    The only point Epic won, out of 10 counts, was to force Apple to allow developers to place in-app access to outside payment methods, making it easier for customers and developers to bypass Apple’s payment system. Despite Apple’s overwhelming victory, the company appealed the one count it lost and wanted a stay that would allow it to continue operating unchanged until the appeals process is exhausted.

    Judges Rogers has shut down Apple’s request, saying the company must implement the changes while it pursues its appeals.

    “In short, Apple’s motion is based on a selective reading of this Court’s findings and ignores all of the findings which supported the injunction, namely incipient antitrust conduct including supercompetitive commission rates resulting in extraordinarily high operating margins and which have not been correlated to the value of its intellectual property,” Judge Rogers writes, via AppleInsider.

    Not surprisingly, Apple plans to appeal Judge Rogers’ decision not to stay her decision during the appeal (at what point does appealing decisions about an appeal take on an Inception feel?).

    “Apple believes no additional business changes should be required to take effect until all appeals in this case are resolved. We intend to ask the Ninth Circuit for a stay based on these circumstances,” the company told Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman.

    Despite being an Apple user and fan for more than two decades, given the current sentiment toward Big Tech, this writer believes Apple should take its win, thank the judge, make the change and drop the appeals. Doing so would likely go a long way toward heading off further scrutiny from lawmakers, and certainly help the company come across as less of a bully to developers.

  • Netflix Games Comes to iOS

    Netflix Games Comes to iOS

    Netflix has brought its Netflix Games service to iOS, including both iPhones and iPads, as the company expands its offerings.

    Netflix has been working toward entering the video game market for some time, even hiring former EA exec Mike Verdu to head up its efforts. The company said its mobile game service would be ad-free and available at no extra cost.

    Netflix Games is now available on iOS/iPadOS, roughly a week after debuting on Android.

    Starting today, members everywhere can play five mobile games: Stranger Things: 1984 (BonusXP), Stranger Things 3: The Game (BonusXP), Shooting Hoops (Frosty Pop), Card Blast (Amuzo & Rogue Games), and Teeter Up (Frosty Pop). Whether you’re craving a casual game you can start from scratch or an immersive experience that lets you dig deeper into your favorite stories, we want to begin to build a library of games that offers something for everyone. We’re in the early days of creating a great gaming experience, and we’re excited to take you on this journey with us.