7 things we love about iOS 7 (and 7 things we hate)

iphone-5s-5cEarlier this summer, Apple unveiled iOS 7, which is the most ambitious change to its iPhone, iPod, iPad, and Apple TV operating system that we’ve ever seen. The new update brings a complete visual overhaul and a number of updated and upgraded features. There’s a little something for everyone here. But, with every change comes some good and some bad. There are always compromises and lingering issues. Below is our review of the new OS. For your reading pleasure, we’ve formatted things a little differently than usual. Here are seven things we love about iOS 7, and seven things we hate.

Love: The new Control Center

ios 7 control center goodiOS 7 has a surprising number of small upgrades, but the Control Center is the best of them. This highly needed menu is accessed by swiping up from the bottom of the screen. It lets you easily turn on and off quick vital functions like Airplane mode, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, the new Do Not Disturb mode, and screen rotation. (We wish the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth buttons would let you choose which networks or devices to connect to, but a toggle is a start.) The also lets you change the screen brightness and play, pause, or toggle the volume of any music or podcasts you have going. There is also access to the camera, alarm/timer, calculator, and a built-in LED flashlight. We haven’t used the calculator much, but everything else has come in handy on a regular basis.

Hate: The Notification Center

ios 7 notifications all badThe swipe-up Control Center may be awesome, but if you swipe down from the top of the screen, you’ll see a feature Apple still hasn’t mastered. The Notification Center has new features like a “Today” view that tells you the temperature and your calendar for the day, but it’s still leagues behind Google’s Android notification screen. You get notifications, but they usually just accumulate in a big “All” list that you never look at. It’s still impossible to get rid of a single notification and if you do want to open one, be prepared to wait.

The entire iPhone screen still lights up every time you get a notification. We wish there were ways to customize the notification screen to fit our needs better. Currently, it feels like a place for Apple to shove a few of its own widgets, but they aren’t customizable or well thought out.

Love: The multitasking menu

ios 7 multitasking goodWe forgive you if you didn’t know that the iPhone had a multitasking menu in it. You could reach it by double tapping the Home button or, if you’re on an iPad, swiping up with four fingers. Instead of cramming it way down at the bottom, the new multitasking menu takes up the whole screen and lets you swipe up (and away) apps that you want to close, if they’re giving you a hard time or freezing up. As always, you don’t have to close apps for battery saving reasons. Apple does a great job of freezing them in place so they don’t suck up your battery life.

Hate: iCloud

ios 7 icloud bad deleteWe’re happy that Apple offers a free backup service, but iCloud still needs a lot of work. Because it lacks a central interface, the iCloud really is just a cloud. It has backed up 4.6GB of our stuff and complains that we’re running out of space, but offers no good (or easily visible) way to fix this problem, unless we just buy more storage, which is ultimately what it wants. You can disable or enable apps, but we need an interface to manage all these files. It’s not obvious how to even view photos in your iCloud (boot up iPhoto). With apps and photos continuing to take up more and more space, Apple needs to invest more in its backup solutions. It’s good to know that our stuff is backed up, but it would be better to be able to check it out from anywhere, easily, and organize.

Love: The new photo gallery

ios 7 photos good collectionsGallery app innovation has been at a standstill for years. Until now, the iPhone has just shown a grid of photos that you must endlessly scroll through. Now, the Photo app intelligently organizes your photos in some new ways. The default “Moments” view shows you your photos organized by day (and labeled by location). If you back out a level into the “Collections” view, the app bundles them more broadly, again by date taken and location. Finally, a new “Years” view shows you every picture you took in an entire year. Cooler still, you can hold your thumb over the collection of pictures to preview individual photos and jump right to them. This app is great and we hope other phones follow Apple’s lead.

Hate: Apps still don’t do much in the background

ios 7 apple apps badApple claims that it’s allowing more support for apps to run in the background, but we’ve yet to see meaningful results. We hope that things will improve as developers update their apps, but we’re not hopeful. Using iOS is like always being 5 to 10 seconds behind. Though notifications from apps come in, the apps themselves don’t begin to update until you enter them. So if you got an email, you’ll have to download it (again) to read it for real. If you happen to be on a subway or in a plane, you won’t be reading that email until you’re back in reach of cellular service. Apps that you wish would run in the background and update on a schedule, like Apple’s own Podcasts app, still don’t.

If you want new radio programs to listen to as you drive to work, you have to make sure to open the Podcasts app and let it sit open while it downloads. Apple claims that apps will begin to update themselves at select times based on our usage, but this feature doesn’t appear to be present yet. If it is, we haven’t yet benefited from it. Google’s Android OS, by contrast, offers rich background updating and real-time notifications. Apple is years behind on this feature, and it does hinder the iPhone.

Love: App Store automatic updates

ios 7 app store automatic downloads goodThe App Store has a few new categories, but the big feature this go-round is automatic app updating. We love this. Android devices have had it for a while, but that’s okay. Instead of forgetting to update and having 38 app updates waiting for you, iOS downloads updates on an invisible schedule that it sets. The system works well. We haven’t had to think about updates for some time, and we don’t mind that. By default, Apple won’t update apps using your cellular data. Instead, it will wait until you’re on Wi-Fi.

Hate: Apple’s apps

ios 7 apple apps bad 2Apple’s own first-party apps look newer, but most of them run mostly the same. We like the facelift, but still find many of Apple’s bundled apps subpar, like the Mail app, Passbook, and Reminders. There’s no way to get rid of any Apple apps. Don’t want nonessential apps like Stocks, Compass, Weather, Newstand, iTunes U, Reminders, iBooks, or Calculator hogging up your home screen space? Too bad. You can’t delete them. You’ll have to do what we do and hide them in a folder.

Love: The new Camera app

ios 7 photos good momentsApple’s new Camera app has a few new features, some of which you might like. The best feature is that you can take pictures extremely fast by tapping on the shutter button. Instagram fans, there’s now a “Square” option and some built-in filters so you can make your pictures look old and washed out before you ever open Facebook’s photo app. Other features are less prominent. You can toggle HDR on and off (though Apple never explains to you what HDR is, which is un-Apple-like) and while you’re recording video, you can also take pictures of what you’re recording – a feature originally made popular by HTC. All good stuff…

Hate: The new Camera app

ios 7 camera app bad…But the new Camera app also has some downsides. Yes, it can take pictures insanely quickly, but it can’t focus them that fast. Without realizing it, you’re going to accidentally take a lot of very crappy, blurry photos, and if you don’t delete them, they’re going to fill your cloudy iCloud drive right up. There’s no way to turn down the quality of pics either, so you’re always taking 8-megapixel shots.

Love: Siri has improved

ios 7 siri wikipedia entryApple has enhanced Siri in a few new ways. First, you can tell when it’s listening because a sound wave appears at the bottom of the screen. Now, if you want to look up a celebrity, you can ask what they’re “saying” or about them and Siri will show tweets or Wikipedia pages. By asking Siri “What is Molly McHugh saying” I got an instant link to our star Social Media Editor. It’s also now powered by Bing. It can help you navigate, play your voicemail, return calls, control iTunes Radio, and do other things, too. If you want to give Siri a sex change, you can do that; a male voice is also available.

Hate: Siri still frustrates the hell out of us

ios 7 siri molly mchughSiri continues to get better, it’s still nowhere near being a feature that won’t frustrate you more than help you. Many times, it won’t be able to connect or won’t have an answer, and anytime it can’t help you quickly, it ends up sucking up much more of your time as you dig through the phone to find an app you realize you should have opened in the first place. For example, though it was easy to look up what “Molly McHugh is saying,” We tried to find out what DT’s resident anti-technologist “Andrew Couts is saying” and got nothing but a bunch of people I didn’t want to know about.

Though Siri now connects to a few new services, it uses Bing for search. We really wish Google and Apple would make up. We’d like our choice of search engine.

Using the Moto X has also made Siri feel antiquated. Moto X allows you to call Google Now (Android’s version of Siri) up by talking to the phone, even if the screen is off and it’s asleep. The iPhone should do this. By having to turn on the screen, hold the Home button, and wait for Siri to open before you can ask it something, you’re almost better off just doing that something yourself.

Love: The new visual design

ios 7 homescreenWe’ve been defending the design of iOS 7 for months. Seriously, we’ve defended it a lot, even as people nitpicked its icons to death. It’s a good looking OS and should be a welcome change for almost anyone who is considering an iPhone, or has been staring at the iPhone apps and homescreen for years. If you love glossy skeumorphic gradients, then yes, you will miss the way iOS has looked for the last six years. But times change, and this new design will grow on you. We promise. The new minimalist look to apps makes them easier to use much of the time, and as all apps begin to incorporate the new style, things will only improve.

Hate: Functionally, nothing’s really changed

If you were pinning your hopes on iOS 7 leapfrogging Android and being completely new and different, you may want to sit down. When you get past the new visual design and the half-dozen or so new features, a phone will iOS 7 will still work almost exactly like any iPhone before it. Functionally, it’s almost identical. The home screen layout is the same; the Settings are organized the same way; and most major qualms you had with any iPhone or iPad, you’ll probably still have with an iPhone or iPad running iOS 7. This isn’t a game changer; it’s a much-needed facelift, with a tummy tuck for good measure.

We like iOS 7 a lot and think you’ll be happy you upgraded to it. Keep your expectations for iOS 7 on the ground and your dreams for iOS 8 in the sky. The new OS is available now.

Forget Apple And Samsung, PhoneBloks Is The Future!

Forget Apple And Samsung, PhoneBloks Is The Future!

Phonebloks
          We are seeing a revolution in apps and games thanks to new development tools that have made it possible for people with basic programming skills to get into app development. As a result, smartphones get obsolete within a span of 2-3 years as they are unable to support the heavier processing requirements of newer apps. This results in people discarding their fully functional phones which causes a lot of electronic waste.To counter this problem, Dutch Designer Dave Hakkens has come up with an innovative new smartphone concept which he calls PhoneBloks. The phone consists of detachable blocks that are plugged in together on a common base just like you make something from Lego.According to Hakkens, this ‘LEGO-like’ phone will allow users to customize and assemble a phone for their individual needs, as well as reduce wastage from discarding old phones. Each of the components of the smartphone, i.e Battery, Camera, Processor, Memory, Bluetooth, WIFI etc are all made into separate removable blocks. So basically to make any configuration for your smartphone, you can buy the blocks of your choice and build your customized smartphone.Phonebloks phoneHowever, the biggest advantage of such a design is that the smartphone can always be upgraded over the years by buying heavier processors and memory blocks and replacing them on your phone. This would prevent the phone from getting out-dated or obsolete and reduce the overall electronic waste from the world.

Phonebloks 2

PhoneBloks concept also makes it easy for you to repair your smartphone if any of its component malfunctions or there is some sort of breakage. Hakkens also gave the concept of a “Block Store”, a hardware store where users will be able to purchase upgrades and spare blocks of their choice and keep their phones running. This is currently not possible in case of traditional smartphone designs where you might have to trash your phone if a critical component such as the screen breaks. Hence, the advantages and the possibilities with this new design are endless.

Phonebloks 3

The phone is still a concept though and the designer is looking for support through crowd-speaking. He is hopeful that if a lot of people show their interest in such a concept, companies will get interested to work on something like this and this phone might become a reality in near future.  So head up to their website and show your support!
Check out more pictures and video of this interesting concept below and tell us your views in the comments section.

Phonebloks 6 Phonebloks 5 Phonebloks 4

Apple’s M7 Coprocessor In iPhone 5s ‘Knows’ When You’re Sleeping, Walking, Running Or Driving

Not long after the official iPhone 5s announcement, an Apple spokesperson discussed the iPhone 5s Touch ID capabilities in a little more detail, focusing specifically on the type of data that the biometric scanner will be capturing when in use. A few days have passed and we are now seeing additional information emerging, regarding one of the other new components that will be making an appearance in the seventh-generation iPhone. Information regarding Apple’s A7 chipset and its’ associated M7 Motion Coprocessor has been unveiled, and it’s once again another feature that will split opinion.

Apple’s Phil Schiller described the M7 as a component that “continuously measures motion data”, which would ultimately spawn a revolution in the health and fitness app market. There’s no denying that the processor when used in conjunction with the new Core Motion APIs would definitely provide developers with additional power to build health based apps, but we can’t help but feel there is a bigger, more long-term picture here. When the iPhone 5s is launched on Friday, it will offer the ability to continuously measure motion data by integrating with additional hardware sensors like the device’s accelerometer, compass and gyroscope.

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The immediate speculation is that Apple is initially testing basic functionality of the M7 processor in preparation for launching some kind of always connected wearable device that would send and receive information from the iPhone. It also appears that in it’s current form the M7 Motion Coprocessor is intended to rise above being solely for fitness apps and will have a part to play in motion based computing. A statement released by Apple offers some interesting insight into the M7:

M7 knows when you’re walking, running or even driving. For example, Maps switches from driving to walking turn-by-turn navigation if, say, you park and continue on foot. Since M7 can tell when you’re in a moving vehicle, iPhone 5s won’t ask you join Wi-Fi networks you pass by.

M7 coprocessor

The release statement also continues on to say that things like Wi-Fi and cellular network access are limited on the device when the M7 detects that it hasn’t been moved for quite some time. This kind of awareness and intelligence will have obvious positive impacts on battery life. The technology might have come out of the blue with the new iPhone announcement, but it’s certainly something that enhances the device and opens the door for multiple different uses going forward.

Apple iPhone 5s Announced: Features, Release Date, Price [Everything You Need To Know]

Apple iPhone 5s Announced: Features, Release Date, Price [Everything You Need To Know]

Ah, finally.. finally, the iPhone 5s, Apple’s latest and greatest flagship smartphone has been revealed to the world. And we’ve got all the details under one roof!

Features

Processor:

The iPhone 5s packs Apple’s all-new A7 processor, which is of the 64-bit variety, the first for any smartphone in the world, which naturally delivers a stronger performance compared with that of its predecessor. This enables iOS 7′s animations to run smoothly and without any kind of lag. Of course, the A6 has been relatively strong for the iPhone 5 during the course of the last year, but with A7 pushing the boundaries just that little bit further, the iPhone 5s will surely be among the smoothest devices on the market.

iPhone5S

So yes, in case you’re wondering, the iPhone 5s is the first ever smartphone which has a 64-bit processor. Apple goes as far as saying that ‘the other guys aren’t even talking about this’ yet.

iPhone 5s also features M7 coprocessor which is designed to make the device more efficient. It helps in offloading work from the main A7 chip which results in faster performance and increased battery life. The new M7 chip also knows when you are walking, running or driving.

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Touch ID + Home button:

Every new iPhone needs a feature to talk about, and the iPhone 5s has precisely that with a fingerprint sensor, which Apple is officially calling ‘Touch ID’, apart from the apt description of Home button. Enabling a device to be unlocked without typing in a PIN or password – a cumbersome rigmarole at the best of times – it brings enhanced security while also being rather cool.

Touch ID

But wait, there’s more, Touch ID can read multiple fingers, which means it’s not limited to your thumb, for example. Touch ID is deeply integrated into iOS 7, according to Apple, which means that you can set it up to make iTunes purchases as well. In Layman’s terms; your fingers are now your password. Win.

The traditional Home button is still there, but serves its purpose as a fingerprint sensor as well. The traditional square logo on the Home button is now a thing of the past.

Naturally, Apple has made quite a bit of fuss about the new feature, but hey, regardless of whether you see much benefit from it or not, it’s a gimmick to get it selling.

Camera:

The iPhone 5s features dual-LED flash, which not only improves low-lighting shots, but also offers more natural lighting compared with the traditional, deer-in-the-headlights look.

iPhone5sdualled flash

The rear-facing snapper is an 8-megapixel, F2.2 wide aperture lens affair, and features 1080p video recording at 30 frames per second, and up to 120 frames per second at 720p, which is a massive leap on the iPhone 5. But that’s not just it, the image sensor is now 15 percent more larger, which allows more detail to be captured in low light.

Still wondering about the 120fps part? Apple is introducing Slo-Mo with the new iPhone 5s, which lets you slow down parts of your video for that oh-so dramatic video shot.

To top things off, the iPhone 5s’ camera now takes photos in burst mode, too. If you’re into taking action shots, then the new burst mode will assure you never miss a scene.

Camera also features Auto image stabilization.

The front-facing camera, meanwhile, is a 1.2 megapixel offering, but seeing as it’s only for FaceTime and such, its purpose doesn’t stretch beyond showing vaguely viewable image.

Design:

The iPhone 5s is very much in the same vein as the iPhone 4S in that it looks almost identical to the iPhone 5. Aside from the rather distinctive Touch ID sensor, the iPhone 5s looks very similar to its older brother.

iPhone 5s gold

Having said that, there is one key difference; the iPhone 5s comes in a gold color configuration as well, a decision which is likely to split the crowd as much as it already has. But while we perhaps all have opinions on whether a gold iPhone is a good idea or not, the fact remains that it’s another option, which can never be a bad thing.

Color Options:

Gold, Silver, and Space Gray

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Storage:

The iPhone 5s will offer 16GB, 32GB and 64GB storage configurations. In a world in which we’ve become heavily reliant upon apps, it’s good to see Apple preparing power users appropriately, and while some older models would have found 64GB of storage simply crippling, the A7 processor of the iPhone 5s should keep everything ticking over nicely.

Wireless:

The iPhone 5s offers all the usual wireless connectivity as you’d expect. Bluetooth 4.0, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n (and no ac, which is a big bummer), 4G LTE with support for even more bands around the globe.

Battery:

Apple has a bigger battery, which offers 10 hours of 3G talk time, 8 hours of 3G Web browsing, 10 hours of Web browsing on LTE, 10 hours of Web browsing on Wi-Fi. The iPhone 5s offers 250 hours of standby time, with 10 hours of continuous video playback, and 40 hours of music.

Software:

No surprises here, the iPhone 5s will run iOS 7 out of the box, but some features are exclusive to the iPhone 5s, such as burst mode and Slo-Mo.

Accessories:

Apple has also announced the official leather case for the iPhone 5s. So, if you’re in the market and looking for a decent leather case, then the official accessory is your best bet from this point onwards.

iPhone 5s cases (2)

Also announced is the official lightning dock for iPhone 5s, which is also compatible with iPhone 5.

Release Date

The iPhone 5s will be available to buy in stores on Friday, September 20th. And will be available in the following countries: US, UK, Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Japan and Singapore. This is the first time the iPhone will be available in China at launch, which is a big plus. Apple is not taking online pre-orders for iPhone 5s this year.

Price

Contract free price of iPhone 5s: 16GB for $649, 32GB for $749 and 64GB for $849.
On contract price of iPhone 5s: 16GB for $199, 32GB for $299