iPad&iPhone user

Guide to iOS 14.5

The update adds AirTags support, App Tracking Transparen­cy, unlock iPhone with Apple Watch, and more. Jason Cross reports

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Apple has finally released iOS 14.5 after a protracted beta testing period. This is one of the bigger pointrelea­se updates we’ve seen, adding the ability to unlock your iPhone with your Apple Watch, AirTags support, AirPlay support for Fitness+, and the long-awaited App Tracking Transparen­cy feature. Apple released the first developer beta on 1 February, but the public beta did not follow immediatel­y after, instead landing on 4 February after a second build for developers. The final release to the general public didn’t follow until 26 April. Here are all the major new features of the update.

WHAT’S NEW IN IOS 14.5 1. Unlock iPhone with Apple Watch

Face ID is great, but the constant mask-wearing of the pandemic has exposed an obvious flaw – it doesn’t work when half your face is covered up. With iOS 14.5 (and watchOS 7.4), you have the option to make your iPhone work like your Mac does, and automatica­lly unlock when you’re wearing an unlocked Apple Watch.

To use this feature, go to Settings > Face ID & Passcode and enable the Unlock with Apple Watch toggle. You’ll have to be wearing your Apple Watch which must be unlocked and protected with a passcode. Then, when Face ID sees you’re wearing a mask, it will unlock with your Apple Watch. You’ll feel a quick doubletap on the watch haptics and see a message on your iPhone screen that says ‘Unlocking with Apple Watch’. It all happens quickly and seamlessly. Where was this feature in the summer of 2020?

2. Support for AirTag

If you want to use Apple’s new £29 AirTag tracking devices, you need to update your iPhone or iPod touch to iOS 14.5. (Or use an iPad updated to iPadOS 14.5.)

3. New Siri voices

As part of its ongoing commitment to diversity, Apple will no longer default Siri to the usual female voice. Instead, users will be prompted to select one of Siri’s voices during set-up. Apple has created two new American English voices as well, for a total of four. You can change your Siri voice at any time

by going to Settings > Siri & Search > Siri Voice. Prior to iOS 14.5 beta 6, the options for American English were Male and Female. You now have Voice 1, Voice 2, Voice 3, and Voice 4.

4. App Tracking Transparen­cy

This version of iOS will lay the groundwork for Apple’s long-advertised App Tracking Transparen­cy feature. Simply put, your iPhone will now require applicatio­ns to ask for permission (through a standard iOS prompt) whenever they want to track your activities outside the app, such as across other apps or websites. Most users are unaware that many apps even do this. Apple is not blocking the practice, merely requiring informed consent just as it does for, say, location access.

5. Music app changes

The Music app gets a lot of small design changes, including the ability to swipe left or right on tracks to add tracks to them to the current song list, download, or add to your library. There are new popover menus all over the place, and you have the ability to long-press on the real-time lyrics to share them over social media (like Instagram stories) or via iMessage.

A new City Charts feature showcases what’s hot in over 100 cities from throughout the world.

6. New Shortcut actions

The Shortcuts app gains the ability to enable or disable orientatio­n lock, change cellular modes, and take screenshot­s.

7. New Emojis

Apple added a bunch of new Emojis back in iOS 14.2, but there are over 200 introduced in iOS 14.5. They come from the Emoji version 13.1 list approved by the Unicode consortium last year. Most of the 200 emojis are various combinatio­ns of skin tones and gender for ‘couple with heart’

and ‘kiss’ emojis, just a little late for Valentine’s Day. There are some new ones, too, like ‘face exhaling’ and ‘heart on fire’. Some existing emojis are redesigned, like the syringe (with less frightenin­g blood) and headphones (which now resemble AirPods Max).

8. Crash reporting and speed traps in Apple Maps

Long a feature of Google Maps and Waze, Apple Maps users in iOS 14.5 will be able to share crash reports, road hazards, and speed traps in real-time to help navigate around traffic. It’s unclear how the system will work, but presumably, Apple will collect all of the data and offer alternativ­e routes when things get backed up.

9. AirPlay 2 support for Fitness+

One of the biggest setbacks of Apple’s new fitness subscripti­on service is that you can only use it on an iPhone, iPad or Apple TV. You can’t use it on a Mac or any other smart TV. With iOS 14.5, you can stream workouts from your iPhone or iPad to an AirPlay 2 supported device, which is a huge improvemen­t. There are lots of TVs that support AirPlay 2 these days, so this makes the service a lot less restrictiv­e. You won’t see your realtime metrics on screen, but that’s a relatively small price to pay.

10. 5G Global dual-SIM support

If you have an iPhone 12 and make use of dual-SIM mode, both connection­s will be limited to 4G LTE (except in mainland China, where the SIM used for data will support 5G). In iOS 14.5, 5G is now supported on the data connection when you use dual-SIM mode.

11. Podcast and News app design tweaks

The Podcast and Apple News apps have had a few small but welcome tweaks to their design.

12. ”Hey Siri, Call Emergency”

A new Siri capability allows you to request Siri call emergency services. You’ll get a big three-second countdown on the screen to cancel the request, after which Siri will call your local emergency services number on speakerpho­ne.

13. Updated game controller support

You can finally sync your Xbox Series X/S or PlayStatio­n 5 game controller to your iPhone or iPad.

14. Sorting and printing Reminders

Reminders lists can finally be sorted with a variety of criteria: Manual (the default), Due Date, Creation Date, Priority, or Title. You can print Reminders lists now, too.

These features seem like they should have been there years ago.

15. iPad: Horizontal boot and emoji search

The iPad has a couple features exclusive to it. There’s now a horizontal Apple logo when you reboot your iPad in horizontal orientatio­n. More importantl­y, emoji search (which came to the iPhone in the initial iOS 14 release) is now available on iPad as well.

16. Battery Health recalibrat­ion for iPhone 11 models

Users with an iPhone 11, 11 Pro or 11 Pro Max may find that their battery health reporting system will go through a recalibrat­ion once updated to iOS 14.5. Apple has a support page detailing the feature. In short, users with those phones may have had a wrong estimate of their battery health, which could potentiall­y cause unexpected battery drain or reduced peak performanc­e. With iOS 14.5, Apple includes code that will recalibrat­e the battery health for those iPhones and give a more accurate picture of battery health.

The recalibrat­ion is automatic for users with those phones, and while it is taking place you’ll see a message in Settings > Battery > Battery Health.

Your battery health reporting system is recalibrat­ing Maximum Capacity and Peak Performanc­e Capability. This process may take a few weeks.

HOW TO GET iOS 14.5

Updating your iPhone to iOS 14.5 (or iPad to iPadOS 14.5) is simple. Just open the Settings app and tap on General and then Software Updates to download the latest release.

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