iPad&iPhone user

IOS 8 review

IOS 8 introduces a range of exciting new features

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Unlike iOS 7 which brought some major visual changes to Apple’s mobile operating system, iOS 8 is really just a series of tweaks and additions that make it even better than before. Let’s start with some of iOS 8’s best new features, including notificati­ons, the improved camera app and the QuickType keyboard.

Notificati­ons

Notificati­ons are now interactiv­e, so you don’t have to switch apps to reply to a text message, for example. When a notificati­on pops up, it will look the same as before, but you can drag it down to reveal

options such as accepting a meeting invite, or a text box to type a reply.

Camera app

This has gained a couple of extra features including a self-timer option at the top, offering a three- or 10-second delay. There’s also a time-lapse mode, which automatica­lly chooses a suitable interval time between frames based on what you’re shooting.

A more useful everyday tool is the capability to adjust exposure manually. This is tied to the tapto-focus feature: you tap and then drag a sun icon up or down to change the exposure. The app also supports extensions, so developers can add new filters and potentiall­y other functions, so we’ll have to wait and see what they come up with.

QuickType keyboard

When typing, the new QuickType feature suggests words, which you can tap on to add them to your sentence. This isn’t only based on the current word you’re typing: it also predicts what you might type next. It’s surprising­ly effective and on occasions correctly predicts a string of words, allowing you to simply tap on each to quickly build up a sentence. You can swipe downwards on the suggestion­s to hide them, and swipe up to reveal them again.

Prediction­s are context aware, so you’ll see different words depending on the app. In

Mail, you’ll get more formal suggestion­s while in Messages, the words tend towards more casual speech. Apple has also opened up the keyboard to developers, so you’ll soon be able to download different keyboards – as you can with Android – and get Swype-style capabiliti­es for typing by swiping. SwiftKey is available to download now.

Little tweaks

Throughout the operating system you’ll notice small difference­s that make your life that bit easier. For example, when in the Mail app, you can now swipe across the screen to quickly delete or archive a message instead of having to tap the delete or archive button. Swiping right instead of left marks a message as read (or unread if you’ve already opened it). Plus, a new Flag option means you can quickly mark an email without opening it.

The action button is more useful than before, allowing you to share things via even more apps thanks to the fact this is another area where Apple has allowed developers in.

In fact it isn’t fair to include these ‘extensions’ in the little tweaks section, but this new feature means apps can share informatio­n with each other in iOS 8 rather than having to run in its own little isolated world. It’s more than simply sharing a photo to Facebook or Twitter: it means you can have widgets in Notificati­on Centre and you’ll see extra extensions appear in the sharing menu in lots of apps.

They’re customisab­le, too. When you scroll to the end of the ‘activities’ list, a More… option lets you change the order so you can get to your mostused actions without scrolling. The same is true of the list of apps, and you can also turn off certain options so they don’t appear in the list at all. So if you don’t use Flickr, there’s no need to have it cluttering up the list.

Double-tapping the Home button in iOS 8 still brings up the multitaski­ng screen, but you’ll see recent contacts as well as apps. Tap on a face and you’ll get various options such as calling them, sending a message or using FaceTime. It makes it a bit faster to keep in touch with people you speak to often.

Siri is much the same as before, but can now identify music that’s playing thanks to a tie-in with

Shazam. Usually, you’ll also see a Buy button so you can purchase it from iTunes. (You can see what Apple did there. Clever.)

Settings have grown, and there’s a new battery usage menu that shows which apps are eating up your power. This is great for working out why your battery is draining, rather than killing all the apps and using a process of deduction.

It’s a shame, though, that there’s still no way to search for a specific setting, even using the new Spotlight search. Instead of the ‘Search this iPhone’ box when you drag downwards on a home screen, you now see Spotlight Search which also searches the web and Wikipedia, depending on your query: it’s context aware. Given the sheer number of settings in iOS 8, it’s a pain that Spotlight doesn’t cover them as well.

Continuity

If you also own a Mac, you’ll benefit even more from iOS 8. Handoff is a feature that lets you start a task and continue on your Mac, running Yosemite or later. This could be an email or a document or something else. Developers can also use Handoff, so it won’t only be Apple apps which have this. You’ll also get text messages appear as notificati­ons on your Mac, and even answer phone calls – or make them, as long as your iPhone is within Wi-Fi range, of course. If you’re somewhere without a router, the two devices can use Wi-Fi direct to communicat­e.

Family sharing

Until now, you’ve been allowed to install purchased apps on the whole family’s devices. With iOS 8, you get Family Sharing. Someone – typically a parent – can invite up to four other people to share an

account so any purchases from iTunes or the App Store are paid from one card.

This is almost the opposite way that Google does user accounts. With Family Sharing, each person has their own iPhone, iPad or iPod touch, and restrictio­ns can be put in place for allowed content for children under 13. You can set it up so that they must get the owner’s approval before they’re allowed to purchase anything. This works for in-app purchases, too, helping you to control costs.

Family sharing also means that everything purchased by anyone is immediatel­y available to download to everyone’s device, subject to content restrictio­ns of course. As before, you can set apps and other media to automatica­lly download or prevent that. The final element is a shared family calendar, to which anyone can add an event and view everything.

Messages

Messages has been given some new features – some of which you may have seen in rival messaging apps, notably Whatsapp. One is the ability to hold the new microphone icon to record a quick voice message, then swipe upwards to send it. You can also record a video and swipe upwards to send that to a friend.

Apple has also integrated Find My Friends. There’s a new Details button at the top, which brings up new options. You can send your current location, which inserts a map, as well as choosing how

long to share your current location. The Details screen also shows a list of recent attachment­s from the contact including photos and videos.

It’s also easier to manage group messages, as you can name them and add or remove contacts from the thread. You can also mute individual­s so you don’t get notificati­ons when they reply.

Photos app

There are some big tweaks to the Photos app including a new editing option which has a dial icon. Tap it and you get three new options: Light, Colour and B&W. You can tap each to get a slider and adjust the image. Tapping the list icon gives you even more options, such as the Saturation, Contrast and Cast options within Colour.

In iOS 8, you have much finer control over rotating images and an Auto option will try and straighten

your image with just one tap. All edits are nondestruc­tive, which is why there’s now a yellow Done button instead of Save. You can return to your edited photo at any time and there will be a red Revert button, which allows you to go back to the original. You’ll also notice two new albums: Recently Added and Recently Deleted. The latter is like a Recycle Bin which keeps deleted photos for 30 days, just in case you didn’t mean to delete them. You have the option to recover individual shots or recover them all. If your goal was to free up storage space, you can hit the Delete all button – an action which can’t be undone.

Better still, you can search your photos by date, place or album name, which is much faster than scrolling through hundreds of them.

iCloud Drive

The new iCloud Drive works like traditiona­l cloud storage where you choose which files to put in iCloud Drive. Before, iCloud automatica­lly synchronis­ed only certain data and you couldn’t get

at specific files, photos or videos as you can with Dropbox, for example.

There’s no iCloud app, but when you’re in an app that supports iCloud Drive, you’ll be able to see the contents of your drive with a familiar folders and files view. Plus, there’s the new iCloud Photo Library. This goes beyond My Photo Stream (which still exists) and lets you store and access your entire photo – and video – library in iCloud. Previously, there was no way to automatica­lly send videos to iCloud so you could view them on other devices. Now there is, and that’s very good news. The not so good news is that you have to pay for it. Yes you get 5GB for free and yes the cost per GB is much lower than last year, but photos and videos now count against the 5GB, and 5GB isn’t going to be enough to back up even the smallest capacity iPhone.

Health app

A brand new app for iOS 8, Health integrates fitness and health informatio­n into one place. It’s early days, so we haven’t been able to test out the Health app yet. We do know it will be able to import data from certain activity trackers, such as the Nike FuelBand and heart rate monitors.

It will also work with health apps and help you track your health and fitness, monitor your cholestero­l, vitamin intake and much more. You can also create an emergency ‘card’ with vital informatio­n about allergies, blood

type, current medication­s and anything else that emergency services might need. You can choose what informatio­n to share (or not) and everything is encrypted when you phone is locked.

Security

To thieves, iPhones are the most valuable smartphone­s, and are therefore more likely to be stolen. The police know this, and Apple knows this. Therefore in iOS 8, security has been beefed up even more than in iOS 7, making a stolen iPhone pretty much unusable. That’s why it’s important to avoid skipping over steps during setup when you get a new phone.

When you restart an iPhone running iOS 8, Control Centre and Notificati­on Centre won’t work until you unlock it (and neither will Siri, if you’ve set it to be available on the lock screen), and this prevents anyone enabling flight mode if they steal your phone, turn it off and then back on again later.

Extensions are similar to Android’s intents where you’re asked which app you want to use to accomplish a task. However, Apple claims to have made this a lot more secure. Rather than the whole app running, a ‘stub’ is used to carry out the task – such as posting

to LinkedIn – and apps can’t share data. Privacy is critical, too, and iOS 8 now warns you when an app has been using your location in the background, and offers to take you to Settings where you can prevent that happening, or allow it to continue.

iPad & iPhone User’s buying advice

With all the new features, extra security and privacy, and the fact it’s free, getting the update is a no-brainer. The only exception is if you’re an iPhone 4s owner (and there are a lot of you). Performanc­e on the 4s is an unknown, but going by past iOS updates, the oldest supported devices tend to be slower as they struggle to cope with the extra demands. We’re not saying you shouldn’t update, but it’s well worth holding on as long as it takes for others to report back on whether iOS 8 runs smoothly or not.

We tested iOS 8 on an iPhone 5c over the past few months and even though we were using beta versions, there was never an issue with performanc­e – it runs at least as well as iOS 7. That means anyone with an iPhone 5, 5c or 5s should have no speed issues and is pretty safe to update immediatel­y.

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