2015 has been a pretty big year for Apple as a company. Product launches this year included the Apple Watch, the iPhone 6s and 6s Plus, the iPad Mini 4, the iPad Pro, and the new Apple TV. This month is a big month for their software launches, with today marking the release of iOS 9 as well as watchOS 2, and OS X El Capitan launching at the very end of the month. In time I hope to do some sort of review of the new features in watchOS 2, but today's article focuses strictly on iOS 9 and everything new that Apple is bringing to their biggest operating system for both users and developers.

What's interesting about iOS 9 is how Apple has involved their community of users in the development process by creating a public beta program. OS X Yosemite famously was the first version of OS X to have a public beta (with the exception of the OS X 10.1 Kodiak beta 15 years ago), but Apple had never done anything like it for their mobile devices until now. However, many users found ways to install the developer betas of iOS on their devices by bypassing the activation or having a service register their UDID for beta installation. With more and more features being added to iOS, and more and more users adopting devices that run it, it appears that Apple felt that expanding their beta user base beyond developers would be a good way to collect information on bugs and stability, as well as general feedback about what does and doesn't work well.

Opening up iOS 9 with a public beta also plays into the focus of the new release. iOS 7 was an enormous release that redesigned the entire operating system, and iOS 8 added features like continuity and extensibility to improve how apps communicated on iOS, and how iOS devices and Macs communicate with each other. With all those changes there has been concern that there hasn't been enough attention to polish and eliminating bugs in iOS. While it's not something explicitly stated, it's clear that iOS 9 does go back to basics in some ways, and focuses on improving performance and stability. There are still new features, and some of them are very integral to keeping iOS competitive as a mobile platform, but the key focus is on solidifying the existing foundations.

The polish and improvements that will be most obvious to the end user are those that involve visual or functional changes to the apps they use on a daily basis. With that in mind, it makes most sense to start off the review by taking a look at some of the general changes made to the UI and the system in iOS 9, so let's dive in.

Table Of Contents

General UI and System Changes
Comments Locked

227 Comments

View All Comments

  • darkich - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

    "massive" billion dollar business..get some clue.
    That "massive" business is only one fifth of the iPad revenues.
    Microsoft was actually close to terminating the surface line
  • robinthakur - Thursday, October 1, 2015 - link

    Agreed, before the SP3 started to take off, it sat in the market for a while with a load of "Almost but not quite" reviews and they were actually very close to canning the whole endeavour. I'm glad they didn't because I bought one, which I generally quite like as I'm a geek. Now, of course, things are admittedly looking slightly better for them, but everything is relative, a billion dollars is not that much considering how much they have historically put into the business and lost. They seem to be paving an exit from making the actual hardware by making it a Surface Program IMO to farm out to OEMs.
  • Sc0rp - Wednesday, September 30, 2015 - link

    The surface industry is very small next to what apple and samsung are doing. A billion dollars sounds like a lot of money until you look at how much money Apple is raking in on the iPad.
  • Bansaku - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Because this is a review of iOS 9 and not a head-to-head.
  • nerd1 - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    AFAIK samsung put split screen multitasking on ALL their devices, since galaxy s3 or something.
  • Devo2007 - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Oh wow! A Day 1 in-depth review of an Apple product.... Why am I not surprised?

    (not like we'll see that from Marshmallow. ;p
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    On the contrary, we'd love to do a day one review. However Google's rollout system isn't quite as accommodating, which makes it harder to get something out right away.
  • Brandon Chester - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Google needs to handle their beta process better. The final Android M preview still doesn't have Now on Tap. There's no point in trying to review an OS for day one when major features are missing.
  • A5 - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    What possible reason is there to restrict Content Blockers to the ARMv8 ISA? I can't imagine that the iPhone 5 and iPad 4 don't have the juice to run a frickin' ad blocker.
  • danbob999 - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    greed

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now