Apple has today made available for download iOS 9.1 beta 3 to those individuals registered with an official Apple developer account. Today's pre-release seed represents the next step in finalizing the iOS 9.1 software in preparation for a public unveiling, and comes three weeks after the Cupertino-based company seeded the initial iOS 9.1 beta to the developers community.
The final iOS 9 download and iOS 9.0.2 download links for iPhone 6 Plus, 6, 5s, 5c, 5, 4s, iPad 2 and over and iPod touch are now live. For a list of features on what's new in iOS 9, check out our post here.
Facebook Messenger app adds support for Quick Reply in iOS 9 for iPhone and iPad and in watchOS 2 for Apple Watch. Here are the details.
Here's a iOS 9 tip on how to stop or fix increase in mobile / cellular data usage on your iPhone after you have updated to iOS 9.
They may be hugely popular with developers and universally hated by users, but there is little doubt that the in-app purchase model is here to stay. With no sign of going away just yet, especially in the gaming arena on mobile devices, in-app purchases are often used to give developers a long running revenue stream by getting users to buy in-game currency and other consumables using real money. Unfortunately, a new report claims that the world of in-app purchase is far from secure.
After releasing iOS 9.1 beta 2 to developers and iOS 9.0.1 final for all older iPhone, iPad and iPod touch models yesterday, today Apple has rolled out iOS 9.1 beta 2 to those registered on Public Beta Program and iOS 9.0.1 for iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus.
Only a week after iOS 9.0, Apple today has released final iOS 9.0.1 IPSW download links for supported iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices.
There is undeniably a lot of positives to take from the Apple's introduction of iOS 9. The plethora of new features and stability improvements alone make the latest and great version of iOS worth downloading and installing on all devices. Then there's the fact that we still have the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus to come with iOS 9 pre-installed which will serve up additional functionality, such as 3D Touch and Live Photos. There are plenty of reasons to want iOS 9, but, as it turns out, there's also one fairly large reason to not want iOS 9 on your iPhone or iPad - a serious security flaw that lets individuals bypass the device passcode.
Excitement levels within the world of iOS are at an all-time hight thanks to the imminent availability of Apple's iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus hardware. There's also the addition of the recently released iOS 9 firmware that has caused a storm by managing to find its way onto approximately 50% of compatible devices already. As if interest in the Apple ecosystem wasn't already at high enough levels, ZERODIUM, the zero-day acquisition platform, has now intensified the spotlight being shone on Apple by putting a $1 million bounty on iOS 9's head.
Here are some tips to fix general lag in iOS 9 and slow performance issues that you may be having on your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch after updating to latest iOS version.