Settings

The changes in Settings.app are primarily visual at a high level. The application icon is perhaps the most curious change, since it looks like a sprocket for a bicycle or the gears inside a watch now, but I digress. This new UI pretty much just has visual style that matches the rest of iOS 7, and doesn’t really fundamentally change organizational structure very much. Settings are still grouped together in a couple of logical little bunches, with a bunch of third party application-specific settings options at the very bottom.

There’s obviously the addition of control center inside settings, and do not disturb comes outside of notifications. There are also the appropriate toggles for the today view under notification center. Under general and accessibility there are new options for the dynamic font size functionality, and a new toggle for disabling noise cancelation which proved somewhat controversial on the iPhone 5 (this setting also carries over to the 5s but not the 5c which I suspect lacks earpiece noise cancelation).

 

Safari

iOS 7 brings mobile safari version 7, which gets a huge set of functional changes and improvements to the JavaScript engine. Safari has been around for a while without many big changes to the interface, so this is big one.

 

There’s now a unibar at the top of the page for both URLs and search terms, this is a long overdue and welcome change that makes a ton of sense. Safari also now preloads the first result in the list while you’re typing, which has the side effect of making loading feel much faster regardless of what device you’re coming from.

The unibar also looks through bookmarks that are either synced through iCloud or exist on the iDevice and exposes those as options. It’s a bit confusing though since there are both the bookmarks under that appropriate menu, and bookmarks from the bookmarks bar that appear when you tap on the unibar on an empty tab before you start typing. I didn’t realize I even had some of those bookmarks still around until iOS 7 swung around and exposed them.

The new mobile safari gets the same transparent overlays and sense of depth that the rest of the OS conveys, the pages render below most of the UI and there’s a bit of hinting from elements that peek through. A big change is that the bottom menu now also slides away as you scroll down a page, expanding the viewport accordingly. The top bar gets smaller but retains the domain of the page being visited. Tweaks like these do help the iPhone feel bigger than it used to feel.

In addition you can now have more than 8 pages open at the same time, and safari seems a lot better at keeping tabs around and not reloading their contents every time you switch between them. The tab switching interface is also a lot better, with a card-like metaphor that allows for tabs to be quickly closed by just swiping them off the left of the display. The only slightly unnerving issue here is that the tabs aren’t antialiased during the animation and for a slight moment or two after it stops, then suddenly the edges no longer have jaggies. It’s a disconcerting subtle thing I can’t stop seeing every time I change tabs in the new mobile safari.

If the signal dots are my least favorite part of iOS, then the changes made in mobile safari and the addition of control center are my favorite.

Benchmarks

Apple usually makes improvements to its JavaScript engine (Nitro) whenever it can, and the iOS 7 mobile safari release is no exception. There’s a 15 percent difference in sunspider and browsermark, and a larger one closer to 50 percent in kraken and google octane, webxprt sees a 30 percent jump. This is comparing two iPhone 5 models running iOS 6.1.4 and the iOS 7.0 GM. HTML5 score increases as well with the addition of a few new features, and WebKit moves from 536.26 to 537.51.1.

  iOS 6.1.4 iOS 7 GM
Sunspider 1.0 (ms) 836.6 721.1
Browsermark 2.0 (score) 2587 2998
Kraken 1.1 (ms) 20388.0 14050.6
Google Octane (score) 1706 2856
WebXprt (score) 176 231
HTML5test.com (score) 386+9 399+9

 

Other First Party Apps Final Words
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  • LuisPeres - Saturday, September 21, 2013 - link

    It seems early to say how good is the new OS apart from design and a few features.
    Battery is an issue once more. Using some apps such as whatsapp, one sees the battery dropping at very high pace.
    Another issue: does anyone tried to delete one song on iPhone? I'm not able to discover how ..
  • LuisPeres - Saturday, September 21, 2013 - link

    Just another that occurred me now: we can't minimise the number os apps open. Why? Is this the reason why the phone now needs to be charged 2 or 3 times a day?
  • NerdMan - Monday, September 23, 2013 - link

    So, when Android releases a new major OS, it gets compared to iOS at every turn?

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/5310/samsung-galaxy-...

    And when iOS releases their major overhaul, Android gets nary a mention? WTF?
  • Origin64 - Wednesday, September 25, 2013 - link

    MIUI for Android had these colors, the transparancy, the buttons, the font, the entire look and feel of it, 2-3 years ago. I cant believe my eyes.

    Also, the iPhone 5S is still sub-HD, and scaling makes everything look horrible on LCD. Good luck watching video on that.
  • Wolfpup - Wednesday, September 25, 2013 - link

    Wow, seeing them side by side, iOS 7 is amaaaazingly ugly and difficult to read compared with 6. I'm getting used to it, but it's just not as good visually (though does have some useful tweaks of course).

    Worst issue I've hit is iTunes 11.1 and iOS7 both butcher podcasts in different ways. You're forced to use the horrible podcasts program under iOS 7 now, though it's not as horrible as it was-actually seems to sync now. Worse, iTunes 11.1 massively breaks podcast functionality. Threads on it on various sites. It's like whoever did it has no idea what a podcast is...it's pre 2005 Apple level, which is to say, almost as bad as everyone else is at it now.
  • benrk - Wednesday, September 25, 2013 - link

    Wow what a great review. Good OS, but I simply dismiss it because I cannot stand iOS.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, September 27, 2013 - link

    iOS7, a poem:

    Change for change's sake.
    Devolution.
    If it ain't broke don't "fix" it.

    Didn't you learn anything from Windows 8?
  • Bobohula - Saturday, September 28, 2013 - link

    I miss the numbers on the tumbler for the timer and alarm. And the yellow legal notes with lines. All there is now is a white page for all of these. It was so clever before. Boring.
  • Vespussi - Monday, September 30, 2013 - link

    I did notice a big improvement in battery life on my 4S. Battery life is king and all the android geeks can take the back seat with their plastic "phablet" phones. It works and it was much need Os upgrade.
  • Jajo - Tuesday, October 1, 2013 - link

    E5-2697v2 vs E5-2690 +30% performance @+50% amount of cores. Disappointed...

    Don't get me wrong, I am aware that it's 200 Mhz in difference and the performance per watt ratio is great, but still...
    I have the impression that single threaded performance has been decreased slightly or stands still with each generation, I had the same impression with the release of the last E5 generation compared to the X5690. I am well aware that there is a turbo available but it won't be so aggressive in an ESXi host and still, these days some VMs need single threaded performance.

    Just my 2 cents

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