![]() ![]() ![]() Naturally, you can also share your photos through AirDrop and iCloud. That mode features tiny thumbnails that you can preview by sliding your finger. Organization has been improved, automatically grouping them by location and time, so you can scan out to the year level, with "interesting places" getting highlighted. There are some Instagram-like features, as well. You can do a quick swipe to switch between cameras: photo, to video, square, camera, to pan. The Photos app is getting an overhaul, as well. Parental controls have been added to the browser, and the company, not surprisingly, is promising further integration with your desktop version on Mavericks. Tabs are getting a new top down view - and company got a small round of applause by announcing that the app is no longer limited to eight. Safari got a bump, as well, with a new cleaner, full screen browsing. You can swipe directly through your running apps. The features does "intelligent scheduling," fetching updates according to your schedule - and paying close attention to network quality. ou can turn on the flash light and listen to music directly from there as well. Change brightness, switch to Airplane mode, all with a swipe. The company also talked up ten brand new features, including Control Center, which lets you access settings by swiping up from the bottom. Notifications has been simplified, while adding much more immediate information - you can also access it directly from the lock screen. Mail, meanwhile brings edge to edge photos and the ability to trash items with a slide. Folders, too, have been improved, letting you put apps on multiple pages. Apple's also talking up a much more natural user interaction. Messages carries over the flatter design - say goodbye to those 3D word bubbles. Calendar is completely clean now - almost entirely white. ![]() Weather sports new animations and much more dynamic user interaction. The company showed off a redesigned Messages and Game Center, carrying the new feel across its many proprietary apps. ![]() %Gallery-190886% %Gallery-190924%įollow all of our WWDC 2013 coverage at our event hub.īy subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy. The Desktop moves as you do, creating "a new experience of depth." The company only focused on design during the intro video, but that was certainly enough to get the crowd excited. The design goes edge to edge on the display, taking more advance of real estate. The company's also updated the typography and added new animation and transparency for images. The icons have been redesigned and are flatter as expected. The new designs start on the lock screen, featuring a much thinner lettering. Cook called it the biggest change to the operating system since the introduction of the iPhone, bold words supported by new features and a new design that managed to get a visible gasp from the room full of developers when shown off in a promo video. Live from the Moscone Center in San Francisco, Tim Cook has just taken the wraps off of the latest upgrade to Apple's mobile operating system (after pumping up the crowd with some shimmering stats for the current OS, naturally), and as expected, the company's maintained its familiar naming scheme, introducing the world to iOS 7. We've read the rumors, we've seen the banners, and now it's finally here. ![]()
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