As we get to iOS 10, there are a number of new features that Apple has added to iOS. While not a total redesign on the order of iOS 7, iOS 10 now has a number of design refreshes to keep pushing forward in terms of functionality and usability of Apple’s mobile devices, which are increasingly the core of Apple’s revenue base.

To start, the lock screen, notification system, and 3D Touch on apps have been redesigned. With the lock screen, a number of people complained that TouchID was too fast on the iPhone 6s, which made the lock screen only visible for maybe a few hundred milliseconds before it was flashed off to something else. With iOS 10, the lock screen is automatically shown when motion sensors detect that you’ve raised the phone, similar to the Apple Watch.

Notifications are also noticeably changed to be more actionable. On the lock screen, they no longer darken the background and it’s possible to view videos, photos, and do things like reply to messages and keep a conversation going within the notification rather than entering another application, which avoids costly context switches from a UI perspective. These notifications can be accessed using 3D Touch although it wasn’t really made clear at the keynote how things would work for iOS devices without 3D Touch.

While initial launch of the iPhone 6s didn’t really integrate a huge amount of functionality into 3D Touch when using the gesture on app launch, with iOS 10 the same gesture now integrates widget-like functionality that allows you to quickly peek into apps to see relevant information about them without actually launching the app.

In addition to these redesigns, the keyboard has received new functionality to allow for bilingual and contextual predictions using neural networks to better predict what you want to say, but apparently all of this is done of the device so it’s fairly likely that the models won’t be as robust as the ones that Google will build. However, Apple emphasizes that this improves privacy.

The other changes here include Siri, Apple Maps, Home, and Messages, which now have third party app integration. Additionally, Apple Maps has the ability to see traffic, dynamic zoom, live traffic, and destination prediction. The Home app allows for easy control of all HomeKit enabled smart home devices, and Messages has a whole host of new features regarding emoji suggestions, effects, third party stickers and apps, deep linking, handwriting, and “invisible ink” for messages that have to be swiped to be revealed. For the most part these features are nothing life-changing, but should be good for quality of life improvements for those on the platform already. Apple Pay is also now enabled on the web to enable fast payment with iOS devices.

Overall, iOS 10 is a decent step up, but for the most part like the smartphone market itself it appears to be a mostly incremental release. Outside of design changes and improving 3D Touch usability, most of the changes are to add extensibility and enable third party apps to integrate into the OS better than before. The other changes here would be what I would call app-level changes, things like the addition of voicemail transcription, redesigned news, music, and maps apps. It’s not likely that users will find any particular reason to switch that they didn’t have before, but iOS continues to gain refinement and stays current with iOS 10.

iOS 10 will be available for public beta this summer, with release in the fall. According to Apple it will support all iPhones as old as the iPhone 5, the iPad 4/Mini 2 and later, and the iPod Touch 6G.

iOS 10 Supported Device List
iPhone iPad iPod
iPhone 6s iPad Pro iPod Touch 6G
iPhone 6 iPad Air 2  
iPhone SE iPad Air (1)  
iPhone 5s iPad 4  
iPhone 5c iPad Mini 4  
iPhone 5 iPad Mini 3  
  iPad Mini 2  
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  • osxandwindows - Monday, June 13, 2016 - link

    When are you doing a deep dive into the new apple file system, apes?
  • skavi - Monday, June 13, 2016 - link

    Holy shit, phrasing!
  • NEDM64 - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    It won't be ready for prod until 2017!

    Source: Apple's documentation
  • melgross - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    That's for production use. But all of the information, as well as full beta use, will be available later this year, not that far from now, in the summer.
  • michael2k - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Mobile Apple Pay is kind of a big deal as it uses one time tokens to prevent websites from stealing your CC; or from dumb websites that store your CC from being hacked and then used elsewhere.
  • NEDM64 - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    An updated focused on Services.

    I really wish my country had any cool online services from Apple and third parties.

    Everything we have is Uber in two cities and a sub-par Netflix.

    No things like Apple and Android Pay, or even half-decent TV apps.

    Having access to digital services is what makes "first world" and "third world" now.
  • Speedfriend - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Well you could live in the UK, where two of the large mobile networks have no signal in my house and you struggle to get 4G on the busiest shopping street in Europe and forget about a signal at all when you go into the shops. A total joke
  • azulon1 - Wednesday, June 22, 2016 - link

    Well someone has to pay for the crimes that the British committed against so many nations of the world. No offense.
  • iSeptimus - Thursday, June 23, 2016 - link

    WTF?
  • Michael Bay - Tuesday, June 14, 2016 - link

    Why would you want alien payment options, or especially dumb TV things in the first place?

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