Whats Going on with Apple

5 points by darwin88 9 hours ago

Just installed ios18, its way worse than pervious one. Photos app is more complicated than it shoud be, control center looks terrible, you need to click 3 times to choose bluetooth device. Also a lot of bugs too. I miss times when usage of apple products was simple, intuitive and beautiful...

janandonly 9 hours ago

So long as we all (the “market”) keep buying iPhones the Apple management team will have no pressure to focus on fixing bugs instead of shipping new features.

You and I, by buying new toys, are part of the problem, not the solution.

al_borland 8 hours ago

The Photos app has changed. After spending some time with it, I don’t see it as more complicated. I find the new utility section pretty helpful.

You can fully customize the Control Center. If you want BT devices on the first page, put them there. Also, you can do a longer swipe to get several pages deep, instead of a swipe a tap.

I’ve noticed some bugs, but I assume those will be worked out in time, just like with any major release.

  • darwin88 8 hours ago

    Yes right, i can add bluetooth widget, wasnt aware of that. Would be useful if i could also add wifi or airdrop widget

    • delogos 7 hours ago

      You CAN add a Wi-fi widget. And while there's not a native airdrop widget, you can add a Shortcut widget that controls airdrop.

      (edit: spelling of Wi-fi)

      • delogos 7 hours ago

        Wait, my mistake; the wi-fi toggle got added in the 18.1 beta track.

k310 7 hours ago

1. New software comes out to support new models. People want new models. From what I've seen, this is driven largely by newer phone cameras. I avoid this by customarily carrying a pocket camera smaller than most phones, with 10X zoom, and often, a venerable 42X Coolpix "just in case". Cameras last. Phones are "model year".

2. Developers (and Apple) stop supporting older software and hardware due to the demands of testing and supporting so many combinations. And sometimes, they just write to the latest version (but the features!).

3. Speaking of features, Oh the features! Competition is driven largely by feature seeking, too often at the expense of basics in the mad rush. I read this post on a phone and switched to the mac because the mac has a GhostText browser extension that won't lose the text area, which the phone does from time to time when switching apps, most infuriatingly. But people want AI (Did anyone actually ask for it?) and yet, AirDrop often takes 10 seconds to recognize the mac which is two feet away from the phone.

Now, I'm not arguing that competition is entirely bad. If Apple hadn't created the mac, Microsoft might be offering "DOS 2024" today.