On the iPhone 6 and iOS 8

Some random thoughts about both the iPhone 6 and iOS 8, after several weeks of using both.

The iPhone 6 is too big

Not as big as the iPhone 6 Plus, obviously, but for those of who thought the 4″ iPhone 5/5S was already reaching the limits of manageability, the 4.8″ iPhone 6 initially feels far too big. This feeling is mitigated slightly by the newly-bevelled edges of the phone (where the previous generation’s edges were squared off to point of being able to do damage to particularly soft skin) which make the phone much more comfortable to handle. It encourages absently playing with the phone whilst doing something else; the iPhone 3G/3GS had a similar appeal that the intervening phones never did.

The iPhone 6 is just the right size.

Yup, it took less than a month (as it did with the transition from the 3.5″ iPhones to the 4″ iPhones) to realise that this size iPhone is the One True iPhone Size™, and all the previous iPhone sizes are noddy little toys for children. After a few weeks of using the iPhone 6, I picked up my wife’s iPhone 5S and couldn’t get over how small it felt. Strange. The most jarring comparison, though, was picking up her old iPhone 4S to reinstall it before selling it on – comically small. In the same way as we all chortle at ’80s flicks where the protagonist is chatting away on his ridiculously-sized car phone, in a few years we’ll all laugh riotously at mid ’00s flicks where phones had 3.5″ screens. Hilarious.

iOS 8 has broken my Wi-Fi.

And I’m not the only one to think so. The problem only manifests itself on my iPad Air and my wife’s iPad Mini with retina display (and not on our iPhones 6 and 5S), and only since upgrading to iOS 8. The symptoms are the same every time: I’ll be using an app that requires some kind of network connectivity and, after a while, whatever network activity is happening will suddenly grind to a halt – progress bars will stop, spinners spin incessantly – until suddenly the iPad loses its Wi-Fi connection (from a previous two or three bars). Sometimes it eventually reconnects to the access point, and at others times I have to perform the airplane-mode-on/airplane-mode-off dance to kickstart it back into life.

I’ve tried all manner of things to fix it. Some have said that resetting network settings on the device helps. Not for me. Others say that turning off Wi-Fi networking in the Location Services settings pane helps. Nope, no dice. The only glimmer of hope I have is that it might just be a 2.4 GHz vs 5 GHz problem – my Airport Express and Airport Extreme base stations have wireless networks of both frequencies, and I predominantly use the 5 GHz one (better throughput, less interference). If I connect to the 2.4 GHz network instead, however, the Wi-Fi problem frequency certainly seems to reduce, if not disappear. Which is nice.

Irrespective of whether this works around the problem or not, this is a nasty bug. I hope a future iOS 8.x update knocks this one squarely on the head.

So that’s why Apple introduced system-wide swipe gestures in iOS 7.

Really, it’s obvious now. The iOS 7 redesign introduced the concept of swiping from the left and right of the phone screen to transition backwards and forwards in the view hierarchy, in place of a dedicated back button at the top of the screen (people decried iOS 7’s ‘flatness’ as boring and unimaginative after the rich, skeuomorphic look of previous releases. Those people are idiots. iOS 7 adds far more depth than any previous release ever had by treating applications as vertical stack of views, layered upon each other on the z-axis. The system-wide swipe gesture allows movement up and down this stack (or right and left, when dealing with the actual transitions), with as many layers or levels as logically makes sense in the application in question. Smart. And certainly not flat.)

It’s quite clear now, as hindsight often is, that this shift away from a dedicated back button at the top of the view was done with one eye towards larger phones the next year, where the top of the screen isn’t necessarily the easiest place to reach (Apple even concedes this point with the new Reachability feature of the iPhones 6 and 6 Plus.) Simples.

I don’t think I’ll ever get used to the power button being on the right.

Ugh, six years of muscle memory is a whole lot of muscle memory to overcome. And I’ll guarantee that there’s never, NEVER, a day where, once I’ve remembered where the power button is, I don’t also hit the volume up button at the same time. It can’t be done.

iOS 8 extensions and 1Password is the greatest thing ever.

Finally (finally) Apple provide a mechanism that allows applications to hook into other applications. They’ve only waited 7 years, but they appear to have nailed it. 1Password is my password manager of choice, and having it easily accessible from Safari (as on OS X) is unbelievably useful. No more having to use the 1Browser app built in to 1Password, and no more having to quick-switch between applications to copy and paste a damn password. Add to this 1Password’s Touch ID integration, and we’re in password manager integration heaven.

Yup, it bends.

My launch-day iPhone 6 has a slight bend to it, most obvious if it’s placed screen down on a flat surface, where it rocks corner-to-corner. Needless to say, having only just noticed it, it’s going to be presented to the Apple Genius Bar this week for judgement1. My phone is always kept in a case, and always in the front left pocket of my trousers (or on my desk, if at work), so it’s not like I’ve manhandled the thing, or sat on it repeatedly. Annoying, yes, but if the reports of Apple replacing the not-obviously-dropped ones are true, then I can’t really complain, I guess.

It’s back to an every-other-day charge.

For me, at least, with how I use the phone, I’m back to being able to charge it every other day (I was back to daily with my old iPhone 5S and iOS 7). I don’t know whether this is due to a bigger battery, a more efficient A8 processor, or that iOS 8 has been tweaked and honed to be less power-hungry, but this is a pleasing advancement.

This is the best phone/OS combo I’ve ever used.

The iPhone 5S was awesome, but iOS 7 wasn’t totally there. The iPhone 6 is awesomer than the previous phone, and iOS 8 is appears to be very close to the goal that iOS 7 aspired to. Ultimately, It feels far more complete than iOS 7 was, and checks so many of the boxes that people had on their ‘If Only iOS Did This’ lists. It was such a comprehensive release that I’m not entirely sure what remains on those lists.

The iPhone 6 is the bigger phone that everyone wanted, in a form factor that blows the boxier 4/4S & 5/5S models out of the water2. And this is from someone who loved that boxy form factor. The way the edges of the screen curve round is aesthetic bliss; without doubt, the phone feels bigger in the hand than the previous generation but, paradoxically, also feels far more manageable and comfortable. I love it. Bending notwithstanding, there’s a fair chance that, if I was the sort of person to compile such lists, it would probably head my top-ten gadgets of all time list.


  1. I’m also taking it to the Genius Bar so they can take a look at a weird front camera misalignment problem: it looks like the camera has shifted a couple of millimetres to the left in the front case, so there’s a crescent of a couple of millimetres of housing or adhesive or similar on the right side of the camera opening. Doesn’t affect the camera at all, but it’s not right. 
  2. For the record, we don’t talk about the rear camera bulge. We just don’t. 

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