Siri

Siri debuted with iOS 5 on the iPhone 4s, and at the time was really the first virtual assistant integrated into the core of a mobile OS. It has faced steady competition from Google Now and now from Microsoft's Cortana, and in my experience it seems that Google Now still holds an advantage as far as speed and accuracy goes. However, at WWDC 2015 Apple detailed a number of statistics relating to Siri, and showed how Siri is being improved in iOS 9. According to Apple, Siri serves over one billion requests every week, and has gotten 40% more accurate in the past year, with a word error rate of just 5%. Siri has also gotten 40% faster in the last year, and having tried using Siri again for the purposes of this review it does seem that it has improved in these respects.

iOS 9 focuses on making Siri more intelligent and proactive. Part of this just involves simple improvements, such as how conversions are now done natively instead of referencing Wolfram Alpha, which ends up being much faster. In other cases, the fact that Siri is more aware of context allows for new uses that weren't previously possible. You can see above how asking Siri to remind me to read an article created a reminder which would have an embedded link to the webpage I was reading when it reminds me after I arrive home. You can also use Siri to make specific searches, like looking for photos based on a time and location. However, the contextual awareness doesn't go near as far as Google Now on Tap which will be launching in Android M and will allow you to ask questions in natural language about the content you're viewing and get relevant answers.

Ultimately the local and front end improvements to Siri as a voice assistant are not enormous, and the real improvements are those that Apple continues to make on the back end to make Siri more accurate and responsive when you use it. Since these improvements have nothing to do with the timeline of iOS releases - a consequence of Siri being as much a service as it is an OS function - there's not much I can say about them beyond what Apple has said. However, Siri has been expanded in iOS 9, and has now taken over what was previously Spotlight Search. The new search screen and enhanced universal search on iOS are what I'll look at next.

Universal Search

iOS 3 brought Spotlight Search from OS X to the iPhone. It was a screen you could access by swiping to the left of your first home screen, and it allowed you to search for applications and a limited set of content on your device. With the iOS 7 redesign this screen was eliminated, and Spotlight was now something you accessed by swiping down on any home screen. iOS 9 changes things up, and in a case of what you might call indecision Apple has decided to put a search section both in the old Spotlight Search area, and the screen accessed by swiping down on a home screen. However, this new search section to the left of your home screens has a couple of new features which are worth mentioning.

In addition to having search, the new search screen displays suggestions from Siri for apps you may want to open or contacts you want to call or send a message to. My problem is that I don't understand the reasoning behind the suggestions that I'm being given. The contacts seem to be chosen well, but only because I only contact four or five people frequently. The apps just seem nonsensical. I am very sure that I have never opened the YouTube app at 12:30AM in my entire life. The news selections are also terribly irrelevant. That isn't to say that all the stories themselves are irrelevant, but considering the fact that the majority of my Apple News sources are technology related I would love to know why I have never ever seen a single technology article in this list.

As for the searching itself, that's where things improve. Search has been given the same upgrades as Siri, with support for making conversions. You can also do voice searches which is a long overdue addition. Searching for general terms is also greatly improved. For example, searching for Samsung gives me the Samsung website as a suggested site, news from Apple News, general results from Bing, apps from Samsung on the App Store, Samsung's Wikipedia page, contact suggestions from people at Samsung that I've sent emails to, and even more. This is honestly the level of depth that search should have had on iOS for a long time now, and it's great to finally have a reliable way to search for something on the device with only a simple search term.

With iOS 9 Apple is also providing a search API for developers, which will allow them to add their own applications to the sources that are searched through. This means that an app like Twitter could allow you to search for tweets that you favorited or retweeted using the built in iOS search bar, and Microsoft Office could show you a document based on your search for a phrase that is inside it.

Search is definitely an area where iOS has been lacking for a long time now, and the additions Apple is making in iOS 9 are welcomed but definitely overdue in many cases. I think being able to search through many applications is great, and the integration with Siri to provide results like contact suggestions can be very helpful. At the same time, I really think the screen to the left of the home screens is poorly thought out and not useful because you can access search itself from any home screen. I feel like there was an initiative at Apple to create some sort of competition for the Google Now card screen, but it really didn't turn out well.

iCloud Drive

This is more of a power user app, and it's put in the OS somewhat like an easter egg. Basically there's an application that lets you view, download, and open files stored in iCloud Drive. The UI is essentially just the iCloud Drive picker put into an app with some changes, and you can see it below.

There's really not much to say about the app. Everything is organized the same way iCloud Drive is in Finder on OS X and on the iCloud website. You can download files, move them to different folders, and open them or copy them to an application of your choosing. It's just something to make note of if you ever want to manage your drive from your iPhone or iPad.

Low Power Mode, Notes, A Better iPad Keyboard Multitasking On The iPad
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  • dmunsie - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    The iPhone 5 and iPad 4 could be fine, but the iPad 2 and iPhone 4S probably has more than enough problems that it was easier for them to draw the line with the new ISA rather than burden developers with having to build and test for two different ISAs just to support a couple of devices.
  • greyhulk - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    It's pretty sad that Apple beat Google to the multitasking (split screen) front. In the past, Android tablets were always condidered to be the "power user tablets" and more capable, despite the smaller selection of apps. And they were built with a more ideal aspect ratio for split screen viewing, but only Samsung bothered to utilize it. Google has no excuse for not having built it into stock Android by now.
  • cknobman - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Apple is trying to copy Windows and the Surface tablet IE "IPad Pro" LOL.

    A note taking app where you can put in anything for IOS, wow pioneers.
    NO OneNote has been doing this for years.

    A low power mode when your battery reaches 20%, mind blowing!!
    NO Windows phone has been doing this for years with tons of customization options.
  • dmunsie - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    "A note taking app where you can put in anything for IOS, wow pioneers.
    NO OneNote has been doing this for years."

    Yes, clearly Apple needed inspiration from Microsoft for this since the company that brought you the Newton over 20 years ago (which had even better note taking capabilities) couldn't have come up with this on their own.
  • jimmy$mitty - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    The Newton was a PDA, not even the first one really just a clone of the others.

    For tablets, Microsoft had a spec for a Windows tablet PC long before Apple. It was 2002 when the first Tablet PCs started hitting the shelves.

    Apple has never truly been original or innovative. Everyone claims Apple had the first GUI, no Xerox did and Xerox gave the idea to Microsoft and Apple.

    Apple is just really good at marketing and because their products are so idiot proof and appeal to the not so tech savvy, Look at how easily even toddlers can use an iPhone/iPad, they sell as the masses are not so tech savvy.

    Personally I laugh at people. People think the iPod was the first MP3 player, again there were other superior ones like the Creative Zen Blaster (which Creative also sued Apple for the MP3 player GUI and won) or the Sony Walkman.

    As said, Apple is just really good at marketing their product which has a big effect, even if they are not superior products. Most people buy products they know and have heard of.
  • cbmuir - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Check your facts, Newton was pretty much the first PDA. The British Psion was earlier, but never got much market outside of the UK. Palm, WinCE, etc. came after Newton.

    The Newton got beat up because of the HW recognition, but after a couple years of development it was pretty darn good.
  • Swordmaekr - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    The PSion was just a pocket organizer with a chiclet keyboard, no touchpad or any capability for graphical user interface. The Newton was first.
  • Chirpie - Friday, September 25, 2015 - link

    Someone seems to make the mistake assuming that making devices for the masses is an easy thing. And it's not nice to laugh at people. It makes a person sound arrogant and unlikeable. :-P
  • kmmatney - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Who really cares who came out with an idea first - what matters is how it's implemented.

    As an iPad4 owner and a Windows tablet owner, I am pretty disappointed with my Windows tablet (running Windows 10). The Windows store is still crappy, and I've had a lot of Apps crash on me. Even solitaire stopped working on my tablet, and the fix was to install VLC player (which re-installed a few things that a Microsoft update removed to kill solitaire!). I've given up an their Apps, too buggy and missing features. The desktop experience isn't bad, but it really does seem like I'm fighting with it all the time just to do simple things. If that was the only tablet I had, I could live with it, but the iPad just does things so much better and smoother. It's my goto device. If I want to do real work, then a laptop is much better,
  • lilmoe - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Just curious, which Windows tablet do you have? How much did you pay for it?

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