The latest major update for Apple's mobile devices, the 
iPad, 
iPhone and 
iPod touch, was mostly hit, but with a Maps-shaped miss. 
Lots of people were rightly angry about 
Apple ditching Google data, but beyond that mis-step there were things to like: a 
more useful Siri (App launching plus the recognition that a world exists outside 
of the USA), shared Photo Streams, handy Phone app controls such as 'send to 
voicemail', and major improvements to Mail, Safari, accessibility and the Camera 
app.
But regardless of what Apple achieves, it's never really enough. As soon as 
you've sat there playing with the latest iOS, ideas pop into your head regarding 
what you'd like to see next. This article explores a dozen of the features we're 
clamouring to see in iOS 7. (And by 'clamouring', we of course mean 'asking 
really nicely'. C'mon, Mr Cook - pretty please?)
Pretty much everyone we know with an Apple device has a folder entitled 
'Apple'. This isn't filled with must-have apps from the geniuses at Cupertino, 
but all the junk Apple installs that you can't get rid off. To be fair, what 
each individual considers junk is different, and these apps—Compass, Stocks, 
Voice Memos, Passbook, and so on—have their fans; but is it too much to ask for 
a switch in Settings that will hide those we don't use?
Change for change's sake is rarely a good thing. Recognition is key to 
satisfying experiences with technology. That's why we're not yelling at Apple to 
change how iOS home screens work. What we would like to see is improvements to 
app management: more screens; by default saving app data on delete; and an 
alphabetical list of installed apps, perhaps accessible from Spotlight.
We're pretty certain this request would be met with wide-eyes from Apple CEO 
Tim Cook, swiftly followed by a full twenty minutes of belly laughing, but we 
want the ability to use non-default apps for important things like email and 
calendaring. Apple's own apps would remain the defaults, but you should also be 
able to pick your own in Settings.
It's extremely unlikely that Apple's ever going to enable multiple user 
accounts on iOS devices—they are, after all, designed as extremely personal 
computers. What is perhaps more realistic is some kind of guest account you 
could switch to when handing your device over to someone for a short while; 
something similar already exists on the Mac in OS X.
OS X is blessed with dozens of high-quality voices that witter away to you in 
various dulcet tones. By contrast, Siri is Siri. In the US, you get a slightly 
robotic woman; in the UK, Siri's that bloke who did 
The Weakest Link 
for a decade. It'd be great if you could choose the voice your device uses to 
speak. (Possible exception: Yoda voice.)
Apps and games might be cheap, but that doesn't figure cheapskates into the 
equation. Too often, people are unwilling to risk 69p on the latest release, 
forcing devs into irritating freemium models or making them clutter up the App 
Store with 'lite' versions of their output. Apple should just allow demos: 24 
hours from first launch and then you buy or the app won't run. Boom.
Fed up of getting woken up in the middle of the night by the marketing 
efforts of [redacted, but quite possibly a well-known mobile network] or Game 
Center fanfares? Do Not Disturb is a great feature that enables you to time when 
your phone will quit bugging you. But you can define only a single schedule, and 
we want to see alternative options for weekends.
Locking is a great thing on iOS devices, making it at least a little harder 
for some scallywag to get at your data if they pinch your shiny Apple joy. But 
it could be more intelligent, locking on a location-aware basis, and not when 
you're, say, happily sitting at home on the sofa.
There's something to be said for Apple's minimalism regarding the iOS lock 
screen, and it's mostly that it's too minimal. We're not sure we want to see 
Android-style widgets sprayed everywhere, but a little more functionality 
wouldn't go amiss. For example, artwork from a currently playing song is 
displayed on the lock screen, but there are no controls for pausing or skipping 
to the next track, until you double-press Home, which isn't hugely discoverable. 
And beyond notifications, nothing else shows up there at all.
In recent years, Apple's made great leaps away from iTunes, and you can 
technically get away with never using the monstrous jukebox. However, there's 
still no way to easily get your existing music collection nor your photographs 
on to your device, and there should be. (Alas, with Apple wanting to push iTunes 
Match and the iTunes Store, there almost certainly never will be for the first 
of those.)
We're hesitant at arguing Apple's home screen icons should be more like 
Windows 8 tiles, but there's something to be said for dynamic updates when such 
things work well. With iOS, you get update badges and a live calendar. It'd be 
nice at the least if Apple made its own Clock and Weather icons dynamic.
On a device, you now often see iOS-style banners on websites that when tapped 
take you right to the equivalent App Store app. But if you're browsing 
elsewhere, you have to email yourself a reminder and then install later. How 
good would it be if you were surfing on your PC, saw a great app and could 
install it across your devices without going near them, nor even to 
iTunes?
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment