The Updated Operating System Might Not Look Very Different, but Will Give an Older iPhone a New Lease on Life
Except what about those of us who can't justify an upgrade or aren't eligible for one right now? To those people, all of this sweet iPhone 6 talk sounds worse than a neighbor bragging about his new Tesla.
It turns out iPhone 4S, 5, 5S and 5C owners will end up with a basically new phone when they upgrade to iOS 8, a free download available on Wednesday. I've been testing the new software on older iPhones and the new handsets and I can say it isn't the size of the screen but what's on it that is pushing the iPhone ahead.
Apple says this is the biggest iOS feature release ever, but you wouldn't know it on the surface. Underneath the translucent menus and bright icons, new functions have been added to the apps you use the most, and some of my basic iPhone issues have been fixed. (Annoyingly, though, others have not.)
Beyond that, Apple has begun to loosen its grip on its platform, opening up the way you, your apps and phone interact with everything around you.
The New and the Improved
By and large, iOS 8 is focused on making Apple's core apps better and getting them to play well with others.
When it comes to operating-system fixes, one of the most welcome addresses a pet peeve I had with the Mail app. Instead of breaking into a sweat every time I have to copy and paste text between two email messages, I can now easily drag my new message to the bottom of the screen, glance at my inbox or another message and then jump back to the draft message.
There are other new email tricks, too, such as scanning messages for contact information to quickly add to the address book. Similar to the popular third-party Mailbox app, you can now triage your inbox by swiping on a message to delete, archive or flag it.
Apple's iMessage is now packed with features that take direct aim at popular messaging apps like WhatsApp and Google's Hangouts. You can share your location, easily leave and mute a group iMessage chain and send quick audio and video messages, which expire two minutes after they're played. It's added more spontaneity to my communication, though Apple should make it clearer that the messages go away. (For media you want to save, there is a "keep" button.)
Of all the iOS 8 fixes, I'm downright giddy about what's happening to the keyboard. For years, the iPhone keyboard was stuck in the past, while Android allowed for alternative layouts and speed-typing tricks.
The keyboards are just one example of how apps can now integrate and talk to Apple's hardware and software. Even the iPhone's Touch ID thumbprint reader now talks with other apps. I tested a beta version of my favorite password manager, Dashlane, that can use my thumbprint as a master password and fills in usernames and passwords in the mobile Web browser automatically.
Listen to the Body, Talk to the Mac
Apple finally gets into the exploding field of fitness tracking with iOS 8. Everyone who updates gets the Health app. It's meant to be a central dashboard of all your fitness and health data, so you no longer have to look in one app to see calories consumed and another to see calories burned.
Both the iPhone 6 and iPhone 5S did a good job of tracking my steps and distance throughout the day. The new motion co-processor in the iPhone 6 went a step further, tracking my climbing up stairs. Soon third-party fitness trackers like Jawbone Up24 and apps like MyFitnessPal will report data to the Health app.
Apple's Health app is nowhere near as compelling as Jawbone's or Fitbit's. It feels more like a medical report than a daily destination. It has the potential to be incredibly powerful, especially once it links up with the Apple Watch and third-party apps to analyze the collective data, but for now it's unfriendly and confusing.
While an iPhone running iOS 8 connects with more devices than ever, I'm most excited about how it connects to my computer. The next Mac operating system, called OS X Yosemite, enables you to accept iPhone calls right on your Mac and "hand off" emails, webpages and messages to your computer or phone.
I tested a few of the features with the beta version of the Mac software. When my iPhone was connected to the same Wi-Fi network as my MacBook, I was able to pick up an incoming cellular call from my mom right on my laptop, which sounded fine.
Even more useful was the email hand-off. I began an email to my colleague in Apple's iPhone Mail app, then finished it on my laptop by clicking a small icon on my MacBook's screen. It worked the other way, too: When I pulled up a restaurant website on my laptop, a Safari icon popped up on the lock screen of my iPhone. With a swipe, the website loaded on my phone.