Apple has rolled out many new mobile operating systems. Nine, in fact. Some have gone smoothly, others less so, but each brings new features or ways of doing things. With Apple's hyper focus on usability, that's typically a big win.
iOS 8 had plenty of great features. But iOS 9, despite roll-out hiccups, is currently the best and brightest, and comes pre-installed on new iPhones and iPads. The casual iPhone user probably won't even notice much difference between iOS 8 and 9 (or hell, even iOS 7). There are cosmetic things—iOS 9 uses a new system font (San Francisco) that carries over from Apple Watch, Siri's waveform animation is more colorful, and the keyboard now shows lowercase letters (more on that to follow). Is that enough for most people? As of March 7, 2016—seven months since iOS 9 shipped—more than 79 percent of iOS users had upgraded to iOS 9, according to Apple.
For anyone with the latest iOS devices, the jump to iOS 9—up to version 9.3 as of March—is worth it. While Apple will likely unveil the next version of iOS at WWDC in June, we probably won't get our hands on it until the fall, so here's how to make the most of iOS 9 before iOS 10 (X?) arrives.
This story was originally published on Sept. 23, 2015.
Sleep Better with the Night Shift
Make Calls on the Wi-Fi
If you have other Apple devices that pair to your phone, like Apple Watch, tap "Allow Calls on Other Devices" and you open those devices up for receiving calls over Wi-Fi as well.
AT&T users get an extra perk: International Wi-Fi calling. Stick with hotspots and hotel Wi-Fi during calls and you'll avoid roaming charges in other countries.
Use a Six-Digit Security Code
However, when you upgrade from iOS 8 to 9 and have a pre-existing Passcode, it remains at four digits. To make the change, go into Settings > Touch ID & Passcode > Change Passcode (you'll have to enter your existing Passcode to get this far, then again when you ask to make the change). Enter the new code twice. You can't simply re-enter the existing code—iOS will not allow it.
Search Your Settings
Make Photos More Video-esque
Keep in mind that Live Photos take up about double the space of the single picture you previously took, on the phone and on iCloud. And if you back them up to Google Photos or Dropbox they just go flat.
Manually Go Low Power
Drag to Select Photos
Shoot High-Speed Video
The default setting is 1080p video at 30fps; double it by going into Settings > Photos & Camera > Record Video. At 60fps it'll be ultra-smooth. (You can also drop the quality to 720p HD at 30fps to save space.)
While you're at it, also drop the frame rate used on slo-mo videos from 240fps down to 120fps to save space. It'll make the basic slo-mo look twice as fast, but is still plenty slow.
Hey Siri...How You Doin'?
In iOS 9 with an iPhone 6s or 6s Plus, you can set the "Hey Siri" feature to work full-time, even if you're not plugged in. Set it up via Settings > General > Siri (or search for Siri). Turn on the Allow "Hey Siri" option and Say "Hey Siri" a few times to train it—that way, other people screaming "Hey Siri" in a crowded room of Apple fanatics won't activate every iPhone 6s present.
Limit Siri in the Spotlight
That's all fine, but what's annoying is that Siri—now getting a lot of credit for being smarter—fills the page with suggestions. They may be contacts you prefer, apps you've used recently, maps/links to nearby necessities like parking, gas stations, food, or coffee. It'll also throw headlines from the new Apple News at the bottom. If you hate all those suggestions, hide them. Go into Settings > General > Spotlight Search and turn off Siri Suggestions. From then on, your Spotlight Search page is empty until you type in a search term.
You can also limit the apps that get searched in Spotlight. In the same place, toggle off any app you would never search. Which is probably most of them (c'mon, Apple, where's the Toggle All option?)
Shut Siri's Big Mouth
Kill the Lowercase Keyboard
Ask Apple Maps for Transit Help
iPad-Only Special Functions
- Two-Finger Text Select: Rather than select a word and drag the selector bar left or right, you can tap and hold with two fingers. The keyboard turns into a grayed-out trackpad. Drag anywhere on it to select the copy.
- Picture-in-picture video: When watching video like on YouTube, Hulu, Netflix, etc, click the picture-in-picture icon. The player gets small and you can work with other apps while still watching. Also works with FaceTime calls. Picture in Picture works on iPad Pro, iPad Air or later, and iPad mini 2 or later.
- Split View and Slide Over: Swipe in from the right to get the multi-tasking side bar, which provides quick access to things like email or even Slack. Supported apps, meanwhile, can take over one half of the screen with Split View; just pull further to the left and it will snap into place. Slide Over works on iPad Pro, iPad Air or later, and iPad mini 2 or later. Split View is available on iPad Pro, iPad Air 2, and iPad mini 4.
Access Apple Pay's Wallet, Fast
A Select Spot for Selfies
Undo the Shake to Undo
Get a Cellular Assist via Wi-Fi Assist
You can find it in Settings > Cellular (scroll all the way to the bottom). It's probably on by default. Wi-Fi Assist is especially great if you have unlimited data plan and some spotty Wi-Fi at home; if you've got terrible Wi-Fi and a very limited data plan, tread carefully. It could eat up your plan pretty fast.
Get Reproductive Help
Scroll Through Photos
Ad Block in the Safari Browser
Nevertheless, other apps, like Purify and Crystal, are still available. The ad blockers work in Safari and any app that uses the Safari engine to show Web pages.
Get the Desktop Website
Make a Website PDF
Note the Notes App Update
Existing notes stored with iOS 8 will get an upgrade the first time you open Notes in iOS 9. The tools are pretty rudimentary, and don't even let you mark up an image like you can in email—though the ruler tool for help drawing straight lines in ingenious and should be spread to other drawing apps ASAP! All in all, however, for hand-written notes get the Paper app from FiftyThree.com.
Mark Up or Sign Your Images in Email
Better yet, it now includes the ability to annotate or mark up images. With the image inserted, hold your finger on top of it until the pop-up menu appears, then select Markup. Draw on the image with a number of colors, turn the drawings into recognized shapes, zoom in, add some text, or even throw in your signature. It's a little rudimentary—it would be nice if you could change the background on the annotations so they'd pop out more—but a nice option.
Set Contextual Reminders with Siri
Share and Save a Voicemail
New Emojis
Be aware, if you send a message with these new emoji to operating systems that don't support them, they obviously won't show up. That includes to phones with iOS 9.0x or lower! The recipient will only see a blank box. Coming next year with the next batch of approved Emoji: BACON! (Image)
Hide Contact Images in Messages
Easily Move From Android
iOS 9 Tips