Apple just announced the next version of its software to power your iPhone and iPad on Monday, as part of its annual WWDC conference for developers.
The biggest changes come to Siri, Apple’s voice assistant; interfaces like the lock screen, App Store and Control Center; and AR software that’s going to mesh the virtual world onto your own.
The iPhone is Apple’s most popular device. But phone sales have dropped. iOS 11 could help lure buyers by reinvigorating the software innards behind the next iPhone’s hardware shell.
What’s new in iOS 11
1. AR is coming to your iPhone and iPad
When you look at your iPhone or iPad screen, you’ll be able to interact with virtual items overlaid in your real world
E.g. You can place items like lamps in your living room, or see Pokemon monsters on the sidewalk at your feet
Apple is just now launching the developer platform (called ARKit), so this isn’t something you’ll be able to use right away. (My guess is September when we expect Apple to launch its next iPhones.)
2. Siri wants to suggest what you want next
Siri’s interface gets a refresh. Results look more like Google’s “cards”
Siri introduces a male voice and some new voice tones for its female voice
It’ll suggest follow-up questions you can ask by tapping on them
Multiple results for a search topic will help reduce error
Siri can now translate languages (English to Chinese, French, German, Italian, Spanish, for starters)
It’ll suggest topics you’ll want to know based on what you’re doing, like a news item, respond to a message with your location, or make a calendar appointment based on a reservation you booked using the Safari browser
Siri will learn words from articles you use and suggest them when you type
Private, for you and your devices only (it won’t be the web accessible)
Siri will be available for more third-party apps, which means you can ask for a ride, pay a bill and start a workout — with a voice command
3. Camera app changes mean more pics for you
Video will take up a lot less storage space thanks to new compression technology
Low-light portraits will take advantage of optical image stabilization and HDR
You can loop a live photo to make a movie (like, of a never-ending bubble blow)
Live photos can now be trimmed and edited
You can grab and save a still frame from a Live Photo
New long exposure effect can help you take really great nature shots of moving water and more
Movies captured in “Memories” will now play in Portrait mode, not just landscape
4. Control Center shrinks to a single panel
One panel instead of three in iOS 10
You get sliders and toggles you can tap right away
Or dive into more granular controls with 3D Touch (basically, hard press the screen)
5. Lock screen and notification center become one
The lock screen will be able to show all your notifications (if you want)
Scroll up to see notifications from the lock screen
You can still swipe left and right to get to widgets on the left and the camera on the right
6. iMessage will sync convos better
When you sync to another new device, say your iPhone or iPad, iCloud will automatically sync all your conversations (which also means if you delete it on the iPhone, it’ll delete on your laptop and iPad, etc.)
iMessages also has an app drawer, to make it easier to find stickers and the like
7. Use Apple Pay to throw money at friends
Peer-to-peer payments are right in iMessage
You can make purchases and bank transfers this way
Authenticate the payment with your fingerprint
Suggestions that you pay your friend pop up from within the keyboard… within the iMessage
It’ll work for all iOS devices and Apple Watch
8. Apple Maps dives indoors
Detailed airport and mall floor plans (you can browse by floor)
Watch your speed because speed limits are part of Maps
There’s also guidance to tell you which lane you’ll need to change into
9. Apple Car Play wants to help keep you from crashing
When you install iOS 11, you’ll get an option to turn on Do Not Disturb While Driving mode
It’ll chop out notifications and show you…nothing. Because you’re driving. Eyes on the road!
If you’re not actually the one driving, you can tap to turn the mode off and text your heart out
There’s an auto-response to let people know you’re driving
Some special people will be able to get your attention if notices are urgent
10. Apple Music makes a house party mo’ better
Want to play music in multiple rooms through different speakers? You can now (through an AirPlay 2 protocol)
Multiroom audio will also work with third-party apps
You can make playlists public to your friends
Third-party apps, like Shazam, can automatically add songs it identifies to your collection
11. Brand-new App Store
Apple totally redesigned it
Separate tabs for Apps, Games and Today’s featured apps
In-app purchases will also get a featured spot like to show off a brand-new level or character you can buy
12. iOS 11 takes iPad to the next level
The new app dock has space for more apps and can open them by pulling them up from the dock
A new app-switcher supports drag and drop (text, images, multi-select, you name it)
You can flick keys to access punctuation and numbers without having to switch views
A new app, Files, houses all files and folders to help you find everything on your iPad (supports Google Drive, Box, etc., too)
Apple Pencil has deep support for iPad
With Apple Pencil, you can markup pretty much anything
The Notes app supports in-line drawings, search and handwriting recognition with Apple Pencil
When do you get iOS 11?
Developers can start working with the iOS 11 beta today. The finished software will arrive for new and existing devices in the fall. There’s no official word on whether Apple will supply a public beta before the full launch. We expect Apple to reveal next iPhone with iOS 11 this September.
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