It's hard to express how I feel about iOS 8. On one hand, it's a massive release for developers and those new tools and APIs will eventually translate into better and more functional applications for users. From this point of view, iOS 8 could be considered even more exciting than iOS 7, but from the perspective of a user there's no real wow factor with iOS 8 right now.

There are some great new features like SMS Relay and Handoff, but they require being a user with multiple Apple devices, and the former isn't here yet. That isn't to say that users with only an iPad or an iPhone are left out. The improvements across iOS in apps like Messages and Photos are solid improvements, and features like Actionable Notifications finally address complaints that have existed for years. But a great deal of the additions are currently just a promise that great things are coming from the developer community, and many of the most exciting features that can be used right now are part of continuity.

As someone who does use multiple Apple products, I'm happy with what Apple has brought in iOS 8. I think many of the continuity related features are things that are very hard for another company to replicate without the control over hardware and software that Apple maintains. When I imagine myself as a user who can't take advantage of the new features given to users of multiple devices I believe I would still be pleased with what iOS 8 brings to the table, but not to the degree I was when iOS 7 was released.

Many of the improvements are in areas of the OS that have long needed to be improved or changed. There are also number of additions that take a great amount of inspiration from other mobile operating systems. While this may be seen as copying by some, for users the end result is that their experience is improved and they have features they did not have before, which is what really matters. Apple looking to other operating systems to see what deficiencies they need to fix in their own ultimately benefits users.

iOS 8 runs on all the devices shown above. It's great to see Apple supporting devices like the iPad 2 that launched in 2011, but I'm not without my concerns, primarily regarding Apple's A5 devices and all iPads in general. Even under iOS 7.1, the UI smoothness on devices like the iPhone 4s and the iPad 2 is far from exceptional. That performance doesn't get any better with iOS 8, and I believe that users of those devices may want to try out the iOS 8 experience on someone else's device before upgrading their own.

The iPad concerns in particular are ones I've had since iOS 7 initially launched. For about a year now I've felt that the iPad build of iOS has been neglected by Apple. The Springboard crash bug that took until iOS 7.1 to patch crippled my iPad Mini with Retina Display. If a similar bug had widely affected iPhones I believe it would have been patched much sooner. Other various bugs and performance issues that existed on the iPad but not my iPhone resulted in me eventually selling it. Many of these still remain today, and iOS 8 even introduces some issues of its own.

Given that the iPad 3 I have for testing falls into both the Apple A5(X) camp and the iPad camp, I won't be updating it to iOS 8. While the new features like SMS Relay will be nice, the missing features and issues like keyboard lag outweigh the benefits of updating.

Despite my concerns, iOS 8 makes me feel excited for the future more than anything else. Apple's steps to open up more options for customization by developers and users on iOS marks a significant departure from their previous releases. It's not Android but it isn't meant to be. It brings new features and capabilities that are implemented in a very Apple-like manner, for better or for worse. I don't think it's going to do much to sway Android fans toward iOS, but it gives a lot of reason for current iOS users to stay with Apple. This is especially true for users who can take advantage of continuity. iOS 8 feels like another step in the maturation that began with iOS 7. Most exciting of all is that it's still only the beginning.

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  • toluene - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Powerlevels here are very low. They're from "Puella Magi Madoka Magica" from glorious studio SHAFT.

    Homura did nothing wrong.
  • SeleniumGlow - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    True. Homura is innocent.

    But I'd kill to have those figurines... I want the kyuubi... They aren't available in my country at all.
  • jdrch - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    "I do wish that Apple would add the ability to link accounts from XMPP messaging services like you can with Messages on OS X. Having Messages become a central hub for Facebook, Hangouts, iMessage, and SMS would clear a number of applications off my phone."

    Yikes, AT ... Hangouts dropped support for XMPP when it succeeded GTalk. Pretty bad miss there.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Yes you're right. That should say Google Talk which is what can be added to Messages on OS X.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Also it would be better worded to not specify as XMPP. I'll revise it as soon as I can.
  • Murazlols - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    I was about to install the new ios8 to my 4s. And i erased all my apps because the i only had 8gig. Then i heard the bad feedbacks about it. Now the problem is i cant download and install any apps i had before and i dont what the problem is :( does anyone here know how to fix it? I need help :(
  • mikato - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Are they in your itunes still? You may have to connect your phone to whatever computer you have with itunes that you've synced to and check it out.
  • Wolfpup - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Regarding upgrading the OS, there's no real choice unless you're only going to use the device as an ebook reader and for netflix, stuff like that that's not connecting to the Internet generally. No way is it safe to be using a device with an unsupported OS for things like browsing the web and email and the like.

    iOS 7 destroys podcast support on iOS (even though I had an iPhone 5s, I bought an iPod classic to use with it for podcasts, iOS is so bad at them now). But anyway performance on my iPad 2 was fine. Not as smooth as my 5s, but mostly just due to being massively RAM starved (which the 5s is too frankly).

    Between 4 out of the 4 Lightning connector devices I've owned having the port go bad (even my 5s after 10 months of carefully babying it), and Windows tablets now being available at similar (even cheaper!) price points than dumbed down iOS tablets, I'm done with the OS for tablets until 1) Apple ditches Lightning for USB, and 2) Apple puts real OS X on a tablet...what they should have done to begin with. (Granted, that was far less practical in 2010 than it is today, but today? For crying out loud Toshiba just launched a $120 tablet running real Windows with as much RAM and storage as the best iOS devices, complete with a good CPU/GPU by tablet standards. Screen is junk sounds, but it's freaking $120)
  • JoyTech - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    When are you guys publishing your iPhone 6 review?
  • Comments - Saturday, September 20, 2014 - link

    "Even under iOS 7.1, the UI smoothness on devices like the iPhone 4s and the iPad 2 is far from exceptional."
    I think Bradon is talking about a iPhone 4 here, because iOS 7.1 has always been very smooth on my iPhone 4s (iOS 8.0 is ok, but not fluent, hoping for improvement soon).

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