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Ipados New Update

iPadOS 17 brings a redesigned Lock Screen with new ways to customize, showcase your photos, and add widgets for information at a glance.

About iPadOS 16 Updates

Stage Manager introduces an entirely new way to multitask on iPad allowing you to work with multiple overlapping windows and easily switch between them.

iPadOS 17: Everything We Know

The updated Lock Screen supports customization, with users able to choose new wallpapers and colors and fonts for the time. All of the widgets available on the iPhone can be found on the iPad, such as Home, Clock, Health, Calendar, Batteries, Notes, News, Sleep, Wallet, Weather, and more. The iPad supports Live Activities with iPadOS 17, so sports scores, food deliveries, and more show up on the Lock Screen and can be tracked in real time.

Editing PDFs is quicker on the iPad, with iPadOS 17 using machine learning to identify fields in a PDF for autofilling names, addresses, and emails from the Contacts app. With iPadOS 17, the Health app is now available on the iPad in addition to the iPhone, offering users a chance to see their data on a larger display. There are a number of other features that are available in iPadOS 17, including changes to Siri, Safari, Spotlight, AirPlay, and Privacy and Security, with those changes outlined in our iOS 17 roundup.

About iPadOS 16 Updates

Stage Manager introduces an entirely new way to multitask on iPad, allowing you to work with multiple overlapping windows and easily switch between them.

About iPadOS 16 Updates

Stage Manager introduces an entirely new way to multitask on iPad allowing you to work with multiple overlapping windows and easily switch between them.

iPadOS 17

The successor to iPadOS 16, it was announced at the company’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 5, 2023 and was released on September 18, 2023 along with iOS 17. iPadOS can now identify PDF forms fields for quicker text input. The Notes app now supports real time collaboration between users in PDF documents. Adds support for one-time verification codes in the Mail app. Adds feature to automatically delete verification codes. iPadOS 17 requires an A10 chip or newer, which means it drops support for iPad models with A9[3] and A9X[4] chips, officially marking the end of support for non-Apple Pencil compatible iPads.

Those using A12,[8] A12X,[9] A12Z,[10] or A13[11] SoC get additional features that are unavailable on older models.

iPadOS 17: Everything We Know

The updated Lock Screen supports customization, with users able to choose new wallpapers and colors and fonts for the time. All of the widgets available on the iPhone can be found on the iPad, such as Home, Clock, Health, Calendar, Batteries, Notes, News, Sleep, Wallet, Weather, and more.

The iPad supports Live Activities with iPadOS 17, so sports scores, food deliveries, and more show up on the Lock Screen and can be tracked in real time.

Editing PDFs is quicker on the iPad, with iPadOS 17 using machine learning to identify fields in a PDF for autofilling names, addresses, and emails from the Contacts app.

With iPadOS 17, the Health app is now available on the iPad in addition to the iPhone, offering users a chance to see their data on a larger display. There are a number of other features that are available in iPadOS 17, including changes to Siri, Safari, Spotlight, AirPlay, and Privacy and Security, with those changes outlined in our iOS 17 roundup.

iPadOS 17: Everything you need to know about the new iPad software

At the iPhone launch event on September 12, Apple revealed that on September 18, 2023, iPad users will be able to install iPasOS 17 on their iPads and enjoy the redesigned Lock Screen, interactive widgets, enhanced ways to work with PDFs and a redesigned Health app. Read on for the lowdown on all the new features that iPad users will gain on their devices when the final version of the software becomes available in the fall of 2023. Apple has made the final version of iPadOS 17 will be available to install on compatible iPads. This is a similar timing to previous years, with the exception of 2023, when iPadOS was delayed and launched alongside macOS Ventura.

To see the history of every release so far, you can read our guide to all the iOS and iPadOS versions. Apple will continue to test new features and, inevitably, fix bugs and address security issues.

June 5, 2023: iPadOS 17 is announced at WWDC, and the first developer beta is released. June to September 2023: A series of additional developer and public betas appear.

To install iPadOS 17 open the Settings app on your iPad and choose General > Software Update.

It is no longer necessary to pay to get priority access to all of Apple’s developer betas, including iOS, macOS, watchOS, and tvOS. Open the Settings app on your iPad and choose General > Software Update. So be prepared for things to go wrong, maybe catastrophically, and we don’t recommend that you install a beta on your primary device.

If that doesn’t put you off, follow our iPadOS beta installation guide. Apple usually does an excellent job of keeping older iPads up to date in terms of the software versions they run. When iOS 16 dropped, it came with a revamped Lock Screen on which you could use widgets, dynamic images, and new fonts and colors to make the device feel far more customizable than ever. Apple is bringing improvements to Stage Manager, so that the size of windows can be more easily adjusted and users get more control over workspace.

You will be able to see things like sports scores, travel details, or a food delivery order, in real-time on the Lock Screen. Autocorrect improvements include temporarily underlining words that have been corrected and an easy way to revert back when they are wrong!

Users will be able to do things like turn on the lights or play a song just by tapping a widget. The iPad will use machine learning to intelligently identify and fill in the fields in forms.

The new stickers experience that Apple showed off for iOS is also coming to iPadOS, as you’d expect.

Users can lift subjects out of photos to create their own Live Stickers and add fun effects.

You will also be able to instantly jump to the last message you missed in a group chat via a catch-up arrow. Search in Safari will be more responsive, according to Apple, with “easier to read and more relevant suggestions”.

New Mental health support features are also coming to the iPad as is a new feature designed to encourage children to spend more time outdoors in daylight in order to reduce the risk of myopia. Read about the iOS 17 features which include the new Journal app, improvements to AirDrop, simplifications for Siri, and more.

Apple iPad – iPadOS Software Updates

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iPadOS 16: Everything We Know

The Weather app comes to the iPad for the first time in iPadOS 16, offering a new system of forecast modules for more detailed information such as hourly temperature and precipitation over a 10 day period. There are also iPad-exclusive improvements to the Podcasts app, new accessibility features, and DriverKit to provide developers with a way to build support for audio, USB, and PCI hardware devices connected to the iPad.

iPadOS 17 Released: Everything you need to know about the big iPad update

iPadOS 17 had its grand reveal at WWDC 2023 in early June, and following a swathe of developer and public betas released throughout the summer, the big iPad update is now available to download worldwide. “Coming later this year, users with cognitive disabilities can use iPhone and iPad with greater ease and independence with Assistive Access; nonspeaking individuals can type to speak during calls and conversations with Live Speech; and those at risk of losing their ability to speak can use Personal Voice to create a synthesised voice that sounds like them for connecting with family and friends.”

This means that users can now create and personalise multiple lock screens with different wallpapers, font styles and widgets, adding a new layer of customisation to the tablet that was previously exclusive to iPhones. Another iPhone-esque update coming to iPadOS 17 this year is Live Activities, a feature that allows users to see important information (such as the status of an UberEats order) at a quick glance. The Messages app is also getting some key updates, including Live Stickers (think GIFs based on your images and videos )and improved predictive text that should stop those ducking annoying autocorrections. AirDrop will now allow you to share contact information with a friend by holding two iPads together via a new feature called NameDrop.

It also introduces new features that should smooth out the experience of Safari on an iPad including the autofill of codes emailed to you via the Mail app, a new way to share passwords with loved ones, improved private browsing and much smarter search capabilities too.

Apple’s New iPadOS 17 Makes Multitasking a Bit Better

Now that iPadOS 17 is out of beta and available in a final version (with updates, of course, expected over time), it’s worth downloading. I’ve been living with the new OS on an M1 iPad Air for months in public beta, and so far it’s been a pleasant experience, with a few clear benefits out of the gate.

Stage Manager, Apple’s multitasking system for the iPad that parallels what’s on the Mac, comes closer to feeling like the MacOS version.

On iPadOS 16, I found Stage Manager to be weirdly restrictive of how you arrange your four app windows on the iPad.

I can drag and stagger apps more easily one by one, from narrow panes to flat panels to larger, nearly full-screen options. I played Settlers of Catan while checking Slack and writing a story and browsing Twitter and Outlook, and everything worked fine. Widgets on the Home screen are also more useful, adding more interactive controls for a number of apps on a larger canvas than the iPhones can offer. An iPhone paired with your watch can relay the data and the Health app should show relevant details like heart rate, blood oxygen, fertility tracking and sleep, but the Apple Watch’s activity ring information and achievements aren’t here.

I use PDFs all the time, and dump a lot of my documents in Apple’s Files app via iCloud. On a less essential note, Apple’s Stickers, a part of the Messages app before, are popping up across the OS. It requires setting up by recording your own voice samples into a profile that eventually can generate an AI synthesis of what you sound like for anything you type out. By the time Apple finishes iterating iPadOS in years to come, the differences may start to become so small that you’ll forget what device you’re even working on.

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