Rakehellion
Lifer
- Jan 15, 2013
- 12,181
- 35
- 91
Ug, ios8 totally made my ipad 2 useless.
What does it do? Ars said it isn't all that bad on the 4S. http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/09/ios-8-on-the-iphone-4s-performance-isnt-the-only-problem/
Ug, ios8 totally made my ipad 2 useless.
For a buck, just buy it and try it!
Did apps get sync'd from the computer to the iPad?
I thinking this well get partially "fixed" with an iOS 8 update. The betas were to get things working properly with of course some speed fixes, but now they can perhaps focus more on speed.What does it do? Ars said it isn't all that bad on the 4S. http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/09/ios-8-on-the-iphone-4s-performance-isnt-the-only-problem/
What does it do? Ars said it isn't all that bad on the 4S. http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/09/ios-8-on-the-iphone-4s-performance-isnt-the-only-problem/
My developer friend said that ios 8 beta 1 was basically unusable.
I thinking this well get partially "fixed" with an iOS 8 update. The betas were to get things working properly with of course some speed fixes, but now they can perhaps focus more on speed.
BTW, iOS 7.1 is noticeably faster on the iPhone 4 than iOS 7.0 was.
Everyone regrets upgrading until iOS X.1 comes out. Apple just releases half baked crap. I seem to remember I called out the developer releases of iOS8 as being beyond unuseable.
My developer friend said that ios 8 beta 1 was basically unusable.
Given that the iPad mini is STILL for sale, they need to do the same for iOS 8, sooner rather than later. Or else you'll have a lot of pissed off people.7.1 was specifically released to fix speed issues with iOS 7.
Well, all of those devices support iOS 8. However, I'm guessing most developers will support from iOS 7 onwards at least, in the near term.From what I've read, iOS 8 is basically like OS X Snow Leopard. They've overhauled the backed but haven't made a lot of changes that make a huge difference for the end user. Especially those still rocking the 4S and iPad 2. I think Apple is trying to make things easier for app devs to transition to 64-bit.
My only concern is you get some jerk app developers who decide to stop supporting iOS 7, meaning users of these older devices won't get any updates. The 4S is still a pretty decent phone IMO. Does everything I need it to do reasonably well. A lot of carriers were still selling them as a "budget" model up until recently.
The iPad 3 is a different story, because that was discontinued a long time ago. At least in this case, Apple has an excuse if iOS 8 performance is bad on it.Same applies with my iPad 3, aside from it's lack of RAM. I remember when the upgrade to 1GB was a big deal. Atomic still complained if I tried to open more than four tabs. Now Mercury (very good Chrome derivative BTW) complains if I open more than two.
I might pick up the Air 2, provided they shove some more memory in there. There really haven't been any higher end Android tabs that I've been impressed with.
Same applies with my iPad 3, aside from it's lack of RAM. I remember when the upgrade to 1GB was a big deal. Atomic still complained if I tried to open more than four tabs. Now Mercury (very good Chrome derivative BTW) complains if I open more than two.
Wow iOS8 has seriously murdered performance on my 5S. Laggy everywhere, even after a full reformat of the phone. Web browsing in particular is noticeably laggier, open new links in background delays longer than it needs to and scrolling can be chunky through heavy websites.
My phone feels bloated now and I'm almost regretting upgrading to iOS8. I appreciate the new keyboard and messaging improvements though, very nice.
Ah, someone i can ask this question -- in atomic (i'm assuming the browser), didn't we have option to 'open link in background tab' before when we did a long-press? now on ios 8, even without updating atomic, that option isn't there anymore?
Probably because they're developer releases.
I opted out until beta 5 because I was working on a project that needed iOS 7. Though I gave beta 3 to my girlfriend and it bricked her phone. :awe:
And they are betas. Under NDA because some people don't understand the meaning of pre-release software.
I'll just quote both...
Look, I've been on a number of dev previews - not just Apple ones either. I've also worked on developer releases; the project I'm currently on has a VERY high bar to just ship the first preview. If there's a chance it'll brick a machine, it gets held back. If there's a chance it'll have a security hole, it's held back. If there's a major bug I miss, I get flak for it. The bar isn't as high as going RTM, but it's pretty damned close; the main difference being RTM has months of stabilization.
I have not touched a developer preview as bad as iOS's final build since I was using the preview builds of Vista. The idea is that you should be tracking towards something usable. For comparison's sake, the preview builds of Windows 7 were actually pretty stable. By the Beta, the OS felt near ready for release. The release candidate was...well, I think they could have just RTMed the release candidate with no further bug fixes and been pretty OK.
For comparison, the final DP build of iOS8 was requiring multiple reboots in a day. Flashing to it was a mistake; I should have just stayed on the emulator built into XCode.