Apple says iOS 6
contains more than 200 new features and enhancements, so here's a closer look
at less-publicized new iOS features coming this fall
On Monday, Apple offered
the first glimpse of iOS 6 during the Worldwide Developers Conference keynote.
Though the updated mobile operating system won’t arrive until sometime this
fall, it’s never too early to start drooling over the new features. We already
covered the flagship features of iOS 6—like seriously updated Siri, majorly overhauled
Maps, and systemwide Facebook integration—so here’s a look at some cool
features coming in iOS 6 that you may have missed.
A new Share screen
In iOS 5, when you tap to
share a photo, you get a long list of sharing actions to choose from—whether
it’s posting to Twitter, sending an email or iMessage, or some other option.
iOS 6 adds Facebook sharing as an option, along with sharing to various Chinese
social networks. (That’s a nod to how important the
Chinese market has become to Apple.) But Apple decided against
cramming more buttons into that panel.
Instead, iOS 6 presents you with a new,
icon-based sharing screen. It uses icons to represent the apps and services
that you can share your content with and looks quite a bit like the iPhone’s
home screen.
New Siri functionality
Flagship features added to Siri include the
voice-driven personal assistant’s arrival on the third-generation iPad. Siri
also gains the ability to answer questions about sports and movies in iOS 6,
and it will be integrated with turn-by-turn directions in Maps. But the virtual
assistant gains several other new features as well that might have escaped your
attention.
In iOS 6, you’ll be able to compose new
tweets and Facebook status updates with Siri—and both capabilities appear to be
implemented smartly: If you link your friends’ Twitter usernames to their
Contacts entries, Siri automatically translates their real names as you
dictate. That is, if I say, “Tweet ‘Excellent dinner last night with Jason
Snell, Dan Moren, and Serenity Caldwell,’” Siri will automatically compose a
tweet like “Excellent dinner last night with @jsnell, @dmoren, and @settern.”
On the new iPad, Siri can
answer questions about weather and stocks, even though Apple hasn’t (yet)
ported its Weather and Stocks apps to the iPad. Apple did show a glimpse of a
new default Clock app for the iPad, so we won’t be shocked if Stocks and Weather
finally make the leap to the big screen before iOS 6’s official release, too.
Spotlight tweak
If you have lots of apps, sometimes it’s
hard to figure out precisely which homescreen they’re located on. In iOS 6,
Spotlight makes that at least a smidgen easier, by
listing the name of the folder a particular app is nestled inside when it
appears in the search results.
Reminders improvements
Apple introduced the Reminders app in iOS 5, and it
looks to score some helpful updates in iOS 6. Apple says that you’ll be able to
set location-based reminders from the iPad. Even better, you’ll be able to tap
in addresses where you’d like to be reminded manually, a feature currently
missing from Reminders; at present, you can only set reminders for locations
linked to addresses for your existing contacts.
Also new in Reminders will be the ability to
reorder your tasks as desired. And Apple told developers that iOS 6 includes a new
Reminders API, which should make it possible for third-party apps to integrate
with the Reminders database. That means that you could use Siri to set
Reminders which would in turn be visible in your third-party task management
app of choice.
Call rejection
Sometimes, you can’t take a
call when your iPhone starts ringing. You can already quickly send a call to
voicemail by tapping the Ignore button, but iOS 6 adds more powerful options
for when you’re too busy to answer. When your phone rings, you’ll see a button
on the screen akin to the new camera shortcut on the lock screen in iOS 5.1—a
switch that you slide up to trigger.
When you do so, you’ll see options to send
the caller a message, or to remind yourself to call the person back later. If
you choose to send a message, iOS offers several default options; you can also
save custom responses. Your iPhone will then attempt to iMessage or SMS the
caller with your note, while also sending them straight to your voicemail.
Other features
Near the end of the iOS portion of the
keynote, Apple showed a slide listing a host of other features included in the
iOS 6 update. Among those were Game Center challenges, the ability to connect
Game Center friends from Facebook, VoiceOver improvements, personal dictionary in
iCloud (for adding your own terms to the dictionary, which can sync between
devices), and per-account signatures in Mail. Also on the list was improved
privacy, which—as a new option in Settings—will let you control which apps can
access which bits of personal data, like your Contacts, Calendar, or Photos.
Other features on the list included autocorrection for every keyboard, Bluetooth MAP support (which
is commonly used to help cars better offer hands-free communication with
Bluetooth devices), kernel ASLR (which aims to
make data even more impervious to snooping from malicious attackers), custom
vibrations for alerts, redesigned stores (for the App and iTunes stores), IPv6
support for Wi-Fi and LTE, word highlights for speak selection, improved
keyboard layouts, alarms with songs, and faster JavaScript in Safari. Apple
also says iOS 6 includes a global HTTP proxy option, which would supplant the
current approach, limited as it is to per-connection proxy settings.
Other features for developers include audio
and video sampling during playback, Pass Kit (for interacting with Passbook),
VoiceOver gestures, the ability to control camera focus and exposure, a Web
Audio API, Game Center in-app experience, game groups, video stabilization,
frame drop data, pull-to-refresh on Table views, a means of supporting in-app
purchases of iTunes Store-hosted content, in-app Bluetooth pairing, remote Web
Inspector, rich text on label fields and text views, CSS filters, crossfade
with CSS animations, and a face detection API.
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