iOS 5 won’t be ready for the masses until this Fall, but lucky developers — and eager tech bloggers — are able to get in on the action right now. We just got done downloading the 730MB BETA, and have decided to turn our iPhone 4 and iPad 2 into guinea pigs for all the newness. Apple says that there are over 200 new features baked into the updated OS, and we’ve run through the biggies from Notification Center to Twitter to that oh-so-convenient split keyboard for you — all you need to do is click after the break.
Many of the new features in iOS 5 are things we’ve been sitting, waiting, and wishing for since the iPhone first launched. Complete with a more robust notification scheme and a brand new messaging protocol, Apple has filled in many of the gaps that have left it behind other OSs like Android and webOS.
When you first power up the device, you’re greeted with an option to select your WiFi network — a necessary step for all the cloud-related goodies and WiFi sync features that are now present in the OS. Once you’re online, you enter your Apple ID, or can sign up for one directly on the device you’re using — which is great for those of us living in a post PC era. After that you get prompted on whether or not you’d like to use iCloud — which you obviously do — followed by an option to use the free Find My iPhone service. Finally, after deciding whether or not you’d like to share your usage stats with Apple or not (take a guess at what we chose), you’re up and running to “start using the most advanced iOS ever” — Apple’s words, not ours. Now that the hard stuff is out of the way, let’s get on to what you’ve most been waiting for: the new stuff.
Notification Center
We’ve lamented about iOS’s seemingly archaic popup notification scheme since we received our first text message ever on an iPhone — and then scratched our heads even more when we got our first push notification on an iPad. Apple has taken the Android approach in iOS 5, and has made a home for all notifications in a drawer that is toggled by a swipe down from the top of the screen. When you get a notification, it pops in from the top with a different color so it’s not missed, and if not addressed it disappears with a rotating-cube transition. It’s quite nice, and looks remarkably like the MobileNotifier jailbreak app — which is probably not a coincidence given that developer’s most recent employer. We should also mention that weather and stock updates are now nested in the notifications tray for quick access, and it updates by location automatically.
Notifications also live on the homescreen, though it looks as if they only appear when a new notification has appeared after the device has been locked. Meaning, if you get an email and don’t read it while you’re doing something else, notifications don’t show up on the homescreen. However, if you get one while the device is locked, all notifications appear and you’re given the option to swipe directly to any one of your choosing. We hope this becomes an option before this OS goes gold, but for now, it’s simply so much better than what we had before, so we don’t want to get too picky (especially in a BETA).
iMessage
Apple has taken on the current king of mobile-to-mobile instant messaging, BBM, with its own take dubbed iMessage. iMessage is integrated right into the Messages app on the iPhone, which is now present on the iPad for the first time. Apple touted the service’s ability to recognize when you’re messaging someone else eligible for iMessages, but it appears to be limited to e-mail addresses at this point in the BETA. Delivery confirmation is turned on by default, but those of you who don’t like the thrill of the chase will be happy to learn that there’s an option to disable read receipts. This means that if you don’t want the person on the other end to know you’ve read it, they never will. By default, it works with your Apple ID e-mail address, but you can add as many as you’d like from the settings application after verifying that you do indeed own the account. We should also mention that messages are pushed to all devices you’re logged into, so you might want to get used to those push notifications if you carry around an iPad and an iPhone. We’re looking forward to putting iMessage to a rigorous test once it’s in the final software, but for now we can report that it does work, and seems quite fast — especially with iCloud integration and multiple devices.
Update: We’ve played with iMessage a little more and it looks like the differentiating factor between iMessages and SMSs is the color. When someone is eligible for an iMessage, the text in the box reads “iMessage” (as opposed to “Text Message”) and the bubbles all turn blue. We’re still not quite sure how a device tells email accounts apart from phone numbers, but there’s likely something magical and revolutionary taking place on Apple’s backend. Text bubble previews appear when the other person is typing, along with read confirmations which include the time.
Another minor thing we’ve noticed is that push notifications look identical for both iMessages and SMSs since they use the same icon. It’s a bit confusing to figure out the difference between them at first, but once you’ve started one type of conversation, the different color schemes serve as indicators.
Newsstand
The rise of newspaper and magazine apps for the iPad — not to mention Apple’s subscription offerings — has given birth to Newsstand, a one stop shop for keeping track of all those types of publications. When iOS 5 launches in the fall, there will be a new section of the App Store for newspapers and magazines with subscriptions, so you’ll be able to fill it up to your heart’s content — or ’till you’re out of storage space. But for now, all we’re given is a nice empty bookshelf that’s identical to the iBooks interface but uses a folder dropdown. It makes us think that Apple isn’t quite done with folders just yet.
Reminders
Update: Reader Mark F. has written in to let us know that apparently location features are present, but only when a task is associated with an iCloud list.
Camera
Safari Reader and updated tabs
Split keyboard, text macros, and other various tweaks and settings
Wrap-up
Believe it or not, we’ve barely scratched the surface of what’s in store for iOS 5, but hopefully this preview is enough to help you make sense of it all. None of this code is finalized, but performance seems to be fairly good for the first developer preview build. We’re super excited to see what else Apple has in store for this — and what developers will do with the various new APIs — so we’ll just have to wait until the fall for the t’s to be crossed and the i’s to get dotted. For now, though, we’ll just sit back, relax, and let Apple’s spftware engineers work their coding magic and flesh out all the issues to get this OS ready for the masses.
via Engadget
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