Posted on 10/20/2014 10:27:20 PM PDT by Swordmaker
Apple today released iOS 8.1 which includes new features, improvements and bug fixes, including:
● Apple Pay support for iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus (U.S. only)
○ Photos includes new features, improvements and fixes
○ Adds iCloud Photo Library as a beta service
○ Adds Camera Roll album in Photos app and My Photo Stream album when iCloud Photo Library is not enabled
○ Provides alerts when running low on space before capturing Time Lapse videos
● Messages includes new features, improvements and fixes
○ Adds the ability for iPhone users to send and receive SMS and MMS text messages from their iPad and Mac
○ Resolves an issue where search would sometimes not display results
○ Fixes a bug that caused read messages to not be marked as read
○ Fixes issues with group messaging
● Resolves issues with Wi-Fi performance that could occur when connected to some base stations
● Fixes an issue that could prevent connections to Bluetooth hands-free devices
● Fixes bugs that could cause screen rotation to stop working
● Adds an option to select between 2G, 3G or LTE networks for cellular data
● Fixes an issue in Safari where videos would sometimes not play
● Adds AirDrop support for Passbook passes
● Adds an option to enable Dictation in Settings for Keyboards, separate from Siri
● Enables HealthKit apps to access data in the background
● Accessibility improvements and fixes
○ Fixes an issue that prevented Guided Access from working properly
○ Fixes a bug where VoiceOver would not work with 3rd party keyboards
○ Improves stability and audio quality when using MFi Hearing Aids with iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus
○ Fixes an issue with VoiceOver where tone dialing would get stuck on a tone until dialing another number
○ Improves reliability when using handwriting, Bluetooth keyboards and Braille displays with VoiceOver
● Fixes an issue that was preventing the use of OS X Caching Server for iOS updates
Some features may not be available for all countries or all areas.
For information on the security content of this update, please visit this website: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1222.
Available via iTunes or OTA.
As a stockholder I’m glad to see Apple finally pick up on the MS model of using the end-user as a beta tester.
You use Pay through the Passbook App. It can either use the credit/debit card filed with Apple or you can easily add additional credit/debit cards for it to use. In any case, none of the numbers will be kept on the iPhone.
If you want on or off the Mac Ping List, Freepmail me.
Didn't you know? Apple x.0 releases have always been a little flakey. ;^)
LOL!
Don't you fan boyz have some special Apple website you go hump for this stuff instead of spamming a political forum where no one cares?
Not unlike Scientology I suppose. You must proselytize, cannot help it.
The 600 conservative members of the FreeRepublic Apple Ping list out number you 600 to one. You are not forced to click on this thread. . . so don't.
I deeply appreciate Sword’s pings on all things Mac. I make my living from said computers and am very thankful for him and his posts.
You can, of course, sod off and leave us alone...if we bother you.
Ed
Bump.
The truth of the matter is, there is no possible way to test ALL programs and all possible program interactions. It is impossible.
I say this as someone who, as one part of my job, writes end user test scripts for medical software upgrades on focused systems used by a hospital system.
The real wild card is human beings.
I can wring my mind to think of every way a user might use the software, in what order tasks are performed, and how those tasks are performed, but no matter how much I try, I find that human beings have an infinite capacity for finding unusual and obscure ways to do things, and often, software simply doesn’t take that into account.
It is often funny and frustrating, teeth numbingly boring and professionally exhilarating, all at the same time.
I have spent weeks or months writing a plan and executing it, only to find out after approving workflow changes, usage instructions, and training regimens, that the application reacts in unexpected ways when installed and trained users begin using it. Often, you don’t see the problems (which are often extremely subtle) until weeks or even months after users begin using the software. (I had one time where a few months after installation, we began having certain problems, and it turned out that one woman had been out on medical leave and came back to work, and began doing a task in a way nobody else had thought of doing...which caused the application to behave in unexpected ways.
Then the sometimes excruciating process of figuring out the “why” takes place, and when you have the “eureka” moment, the process begins to have a vendor patch software, rewrite workflows for end users, retrain and write policy and procedure changes.
It boggles my mind to think about how vendors like Microsoft or Apple must have to test their products, which are far, FAR more complex, subjected to hundreds of thousands of times more users, workflows, and aberrant human innovation.
I suppose that is why they write EULAs that are as long as Tolstoy’s “War and Peace”, and force you to sign off on them.
About 37 minutes to post that, doorgunner69?
You must be slipping. Well, I guess you have to go to the bathroom, eat, and sleep sometime!
You must proselytize, cannot help it.
You must troll, cannot help it.
Back in the mid-80s, I designed and wrote a relational database for the Food Bank I founded to handle client intake and tracking, as well as financial donations, and reports. . . and I designed it so that someone unfamiliar with computers could handle the interview process, close out a day, generate daily, weekly reports, etc.. I thought I was quite thorough in figuring out the ways it could be screwed up by people. How wrong I was!
It took me TWO YEARS of actual contact with users to really idiot proof it. But, after those two years, it ran for over twenty years with minimal error correction required. The secret was to limit the ways the idiots could enter data. But it was absolutely amazing the ways they found to screw things up.
Anytime you fool proof something you end up building a better more ingenious fool.
/Can’tRememberWhoElseSaidThat
Idiots (and that includes me on occasion) far outnumber the people and methods to idiot-proof things!
Yep. I am continually amazed at the scope of human ingenuity!
We have our faults, but thinking of new and different ways to approach things is generally not one of the, although Darwinism plays a large role in determining whether or not some approaches are better than others!
Nope. You're right. I was a hardware tester for Microsoft during the Win95 beta. I had a blast.
I'll never forget a few days before release we had our last "bug" meeting. The Product Manager said we were shipping with over 40,000 open bugs.
But, that was part of the process. You hope to go out the door with a manageable number of bugs that nobody will hit. No software is ever released with ZERO bugs. Well, unless someone is lying - LOL!
I can attest to that. I have a guy who would make the greatest software tester ever! I keep telling him to quit his job and work in a lab. He’d be worth millions of regular users...
Hahahahahaha! I have often heard that engineering is the study of the art of compromise...the same is true of computer systems.
Thanks for the update. I am not so sure I like this Yosemite thing.
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