Keyboard

For a long time the keyboard experience on iOS remained the same as it was when the original iPhone launched all the way back in 2007. With iOS 7 the keyboard received a visual overhaul, but the layout and correction functions remained the same. This has been a prominent criticism of the stock iOS keyboard over the years, with the single suggestion implementation of iOS's autocorrect seeming archaic compared to other smartphone keyboards. Apple addresses this with two solutions in iOS 8. The first is QuickType, Apple's new suggestion and correction feature.

The above two images will be instantly recognizable to anyone who has used the Google keyboard for Android, or third party keyboards like SwiftKey. The way quicktype functions is nearly identical to the suggestion feature on Google's and other smartphone keyboards. A bar above the keyboard gives three suggestions as the user types, with the box turning white and the text turning blue to indicate that a typed word will be autocorrected.

QuickType is not Apple's only solution to complaints about the iOS keyboard. While it offers a better method of correcting typos, the keyboard itself is still functionally identical to its predecessor. Because Apple can't possibly hope to address every single user's desire for keyboard input on their own, they have finally included the long requested ability to use third party keyboards on iOS 8. How keyboards and other extensibility options are implemented is discussed in the next section, but there are a couple of things specific to third party keyboards that should be noted.

The first is that third party keyboards will be system wide; there's no need for developers to implement them in their applications on their own. The second, and possibly most important, is that third party keyboards run in an extremely restrictive sandbox by default. They don't have access to the information from other applications on the phone, or access to WiFi or cellular networks. However, third party keyboards can ask for access to typed words and networking to do prediction, but for privacy and security reasons that is never something that can be enabled by default. I recently took a look at the beta version of SwiftKey for iOS 8, and you can read my impressions about the actual third party keyboard experience on iOS there.

One last point about the stock keyboard. The shift key is the same as on iOS 7.1. Users (like myself) that are frustrated with its new design as of iOS 7.1 are out of luck. A return to the iOS 7 style of having the shift key arrow as an outline when it is turned off is my biggest recommendation for improving the iOS keyboard from its current state.

Extensibility

When the iPhone was first launched, iOS wasn't even designed to support third party applications. Apple's original stated intent was that users would use web apps through Safari. Obviously things turned out quite differently with the introduction of iOS 2.0 and the App Store. However, iOS itself was never conceived with a massive library of native applications in mind. Because of that, and because of security reasons, each app has traditionally been completely segregated from all others.

Applications on iOS have never really had a proper way of sharing data and integrating with each other, with the exception of the select few services that Apple has built into iOS over the years like Facebook and Twitter. This has always posed a problem with working on files across multiple apps. It also greatly limits the ability to share content through other applications, as the iOS Share Sheet is limited to the services built into iOS unless a developer adds support for other applications on their own.

Extensibility changes this. Extensibility in iOS 8 is really an umbrella term for new features like share extensions, action extensions, custom photo filters, and document provider extensions. Some of these have been covered at other points in this review, and the parts being focused on here are Action Extensions and Share Extensions. Much like the improvements to iCloud, these are additions that are hard to talk about now as they are yet to be implemented by developers. This is just a small overview of things to come once developers start using the new tools given to them.

Action Extensions do what their name implies, they perform actions that extend the functions of applications. An example would be an extension for the Bing Translate app shown at WWDC. Rather than Apple having to work with Microsoft to make translation with Bing a system wide feature, Microsoft can simply make an Action Extension and have it appear in the Share Sheet in any application.

Share Extensions also do what their name implies. They allow applications to put their own options for sharing in the system's Share Sheet. This is a massive improvement over the previous system that only included limited options and the small handful of services that Apple had integrated into the OS like Twitter and Facebook. Share Extensions are very similar in function to how Intents are able to share files and content between different apps on Android, and it addresses what has been a major iOS shortfall for years. The example Apple gave at WWDC was the ability to open the Pinterest app interface within Safari to share a photo.

iOS also has contextual awareness relating to extensions. Because the Share Sheet can only display four icons in each row, only the extensions that relate to what the user is doing will be shown. If the user is looking at the photos application the Share Sheet won't show an extension for text translation as it doesn't relate to the task at hand. Apple also allows the order extensions are displayed in to be customized so that frequently used extensions are always displayed in the Share Sheet without having to scroll.

One final part of extensibility that pertains to iPhone 5s users is that developers are now able to use Touch ID authentication in their applications to unlock passwords stored as keychain items. The fingerprint data itself is never shared with applications, only whether or not the fingerprint was successfully identified or not.

As I said above, the iOS security model has always used application sandboxing to prevent malicious access to information. With extensibility you may be wondering if Apple has had to compromise on security to enable these new features. Fortunately, the answer is no. With the way extensions work on iOS 8, the extension is part of its parent application's container. Extensions can only reach out to other applications by way of the operating system, which has various checks and balances to make sure things are being done in a safe and secure manner. I don't believe users should have any concerns about the security of their devices when upgrading to iOS 8.

iCloud and Continuity Health and Medical ID
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  • Samus - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    I upgraded my iPhone 4S to iOS8 this morning, and wish I could go back to iOS 7.1.2 this afternoon. After reading this review, I couldn't agree more. The performance penalty is harsh. It feels like running Gingerbread on a HTC Dream (G1) and disabling UI features like transparency in Accessibility (something I actually do on ALL iOS devices because the notification center is hard to read with transparency on) only helped a little.

    If you plan to update your device to iOS 8, make a LOCAL backup in iTunes before doing so. As soon as someone jailbreaks iOS 8, we'll have a downgrade path.
  • Brandon Chester - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    Did Apple seriously close the signing window that fast? If you shift + click the restore button in iTunes and manually select a downloaded 7.1.2 firmware you may have a chance of going back still.
  • Strulf - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    Wow that new Safari bookmark icon is ugly! Loved the old one. Generally I often have the feeling recently that Apple is making things worse in terms of design, see the new iPhone 6.
  • nvmarino - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    FYI, iCloud Photo Library (the only true iOS 8 feature I even really cared about!) did NOT make it in to the GM release. I spent a bunch of time trying to figure out why I didn't see the "iCloud Photo Library" switch under Settings --> Photos and camera, and even tried signing up for an iCloud plan thinking maybe it didn't show unless you subscribed to iCloud. A bit of searching finally turned up the Apple press release that states it will not be available until October, and that will be in beta:

    "In October, SMS Continuity will be available as a free update to iOS 8 and iCloud Photo Library will be available as a beta."

    https://www.apple.com/pr/library/2014/09/09Apple-A...
  • Brandon Chester - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    I have it on my device running the OTA update from 7.1.2. That sentence means that SMS Relay is coming in October and iCloud Photo Library is a beta currently, not that it will be a beta in October.
  • nvmarino - Wednesday, September 17, 2014 - link

    That is definitely not what that sentence means. You should read the entire press release. Also, from macrumors.com:

    Though iCloud Photo Library was available during the iOS 8 beta testing period, Apple appears to have demoted it to beta status and removed it from the iOS 8 golden master, the software that will be distributed to the public next week.

    http://www.macrumors.com/2014/09/12/apple-demotes-...

    No idea why you have it on your phone.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Turn on iCloud Drive.
  • nvmarino - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Wow. Did you take the two seconds and read the press release?

    I have iCloud drive turned on. Further, I have an iPhone 5s, iPod touch 5th gen, and iPad 2. The the option does not show up on any of them.

    Here are the screenshots form my iPhone:

    https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/17743186/iOS%2...

    https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/17743186/iOS%2...

    Can someone else who has never had a beta build and done the OTA update to iOS 8 please comment on if the "iCloud Photo Library" option shows up under Settings --> Photos and Camera?
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    I've had someone on Twitter tell me that their iPhone has the beta for it having just gone from 7.1.2 to iOS 8. I'm looking into this because I need to find out whether or not people who are having it show up without using the iOS 8 betas have ever used the Yosemite beta/preview.
  • nvmarino - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Signing in to the Yosemite beta is definitely the key. I updated my mac and, as soon as I signed in, the option became available on all my iOS devices.

    To double-confirm I went as far as signing out of iCloud on my iPod touch, creating a new Apple ID and signing in with it. I enabled iCloud Drive and iCloud Photo Library was not available. I then signed out of iCloud on my Yosemite beta box and signed in with the new Apple ID I just created and boom - it's now available on the iPod Touch. It also looks like the flag is permanently set as the option continued to be available after signing out of the new ID on the Yosemite box, and even after signing out and back in again on the iPod Touch.

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