- Nov 20, 2005
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I can't wait to delete apps on my phone. That alone made WWDC for me, bye bye crappy Apple apps.
I see some nice improvements and nice catchup features as well. Should be a nice to experience this on an iPhone 6 and an iPad Air. This is also the first time one of my Apple devices gets EOL'd - poor iPod Touch 5G (granted it's so slow on iOS 8).
I can't wait to delete apps on my phone.
Will that now let a third party app do the job of the deleted first party app or will iOS shit the bed if you try to do that?
I can't wait to delete apps on my phone.
Following WWDC, many noticed that iOS stock apps had been made available in the App Store, prompting them to wonder if those apps would be able to be updated by themselves, without a full iOS update. Schiller and Federighi clarified today, however, that apps can not be updated without a new iOS update. Additionally, Schiller and Federighi noted that you arent actually deleting the app when you delete it from your device. Just the user data.
So in other words, the one and only benefit to users is that the icon gets removed from the homescreen?
So in other words, the one and only benefit to users is that the icon gets removed from the homescreen?
I can't wait to delete apps on my phone. That alone made WWDC for me, bye bye crappy Apple apps.
I see some nice improvements and nice catchup features as well. Should be a nice to experience this on an iPhone 6 and an iPad Air. This is also the first time one of my Apple devices gets EOL'd - poor iPod Touch 5G (granted it's so slow on iOS 8).
No, it's more than that. The apps don't save data, and their processes don't run in the background. That won't matter too much (it's not like Compass or Tips are resource hogs), but you are getting a little something besides one fewer icon on your home screen.
I dont understand why my mid-2009 MBP will not get the latest. Its still a very capable laptop.
I dont understand why my mid-2009 MBP will not get the latest. Its still a very capable laptop.