iOS 18 beta 3 is now available for developers. The update comes two weeks after iOS 18 beta 2 was released and a month after WWDC.
The build number for iOS 18 beta 3 is 22A5307f . There’s no word on what’s new, but we’ll dive in to the update and have more details soon.
Each new iOS 18 beta is expected to introduce numerous changes, bug fixes, and additional features. Apple closely monitors feedback from iOS 18 beta testers, with each successive beta addressing complaints, bug reports, and performance issues.
iOS 18 beta 2 brought a number of changes and new features, including the addition of iPhone Mirroring and SharePlay screen sharing upgrades. The update also started the process of rolling out RCS support to iPhone users.
The iOS 18 beta is currently only available to registered developer beta testers. The update will launch to public beta testers sometime this month, followed by a release to the general public in September. For the time being, testers should still expect performance and stability issues when running the iOS 18 beta on primary devices.
Spot any changes in today’s release of iOS 18 beta 3 or iPadOS 18 beta 3? Let us know in the comments below.
This fall’s Apple Watch Series 10 is reportedly going plus size. While the Ultra model stays the same, the two standard Apple Watch sizes are expected to grow significantly: moving from 41mm and 45mm cases to 45mm and 49mm.
Why the change? Perhaps Apple has seen strong customer satisfaction around the Ultra model’s larger display, and assumes that bigger will prove better.
In thinking about the Apple Watch’s future, though, I’ve started to wonder if Apple Intelligence may be part of the answer.
The most popular product being bypassed by Apple Intelligence
Out of all of Apple’s devices, the most popular product line missing out on Apple Intelligence is the Apple Watch. The full list of AI-compatible devices features iPhones, Macs, and iPads, but notably no Watch, Vision Pro, or HomePod.
The Watch is by far the most successful of the three products being left out of the Apple Intelligence story. And so the curious reports about the new Series 10 Watch getting bigger has me wondering what’s prompted the change.
Assessing the rumors about Apple’s new Watch
There are a handful of features and changes that have been rumored for the new Series 10 Watch. Besides the aforementioned size upgrades, the new Watch is expected to include:
a blood pressure sensor for detecting hypertension
a sleep apnea sensor is also possible
new display technology that should improve battery efficiency
There’s no guarantee that all of these changes happen with the Series 10 Watch. However, if they do, can these features alone explain the size upgrades?
I’m not sure they can. New health sensors will require space inside the Watch’s small enclosure, of course. But the new display tech could mean that the Watch’s battery can get even smaller for the same performance, or at least stay the same size despite needing to power a larger display.
The health sensors and battery optimizations could theoretically offset each other when it comes to additional space needs. They don’t appear to, on their own at least, merit the larger Watch sizes.
Apple Intelligence on the Watch
Perhaps, in addition to new sensors and other internal changes, Apple is prepping for a future where Apple Intelligence comes to the Series 10 Watch.
Right now, the major limiting factor keeping current Watch models from supporting Apple Intelligence is its chip. The S-class Watch chip is massively underpowered for Apple Intelligence’s current spec requirements. However, a larger Watch could in theory house a more powerful chip.
If Apple needs additional processing power and a beefed up Neural Engine to power, say, a more capable Siri experience on the Watch, it could benefit from more room inside the Watch’s enclosure.
Not only would a physically larger chip need more space, but the thermal management that accompanies a more powerful chip could also be a factor.
The Apple Watch’s absence from this year’s Apple Intelligence story is likely to be remedied by Apple as soon as possible. It’s a safe bet that WWDC 2025 will bring word of the expansion of Apple Intelligence to new devices.
A next-gen Apple Watch chip being added to this year’s Series 10 models means that, when WWDC rolls around and Apple unveils watchOS 12, it can talk about supported Apple Intelligence features, because there will be a Watch on the market with powerful enough hardware to run the update.
Wrap-up
Our thoughts are entirely speculation, of course, and in September we’ll know one way or another what Apple’s plans for the Series 10 Watch are.
However, if there isn’t a notable chip upgrade in the Series 10, it could indicate a long wait ahead before the Watch gets any Apple Intelligence features. And we hope, for the Watch’s sake, that doesn’t happen.
Google’s Pixel phones have never really held up to the competition in regards to using the latest and greatest specs, but the company has been stepping it up in certain areas. After the debut of “Actua” displays on the Pixel 8 series, Google is reportedly looking to use the same Samsung OLED display in the Pixel 9 series as Apple will use in the iPhone 16 Pro.
The Pixel 8 series saw Google jump from lagging well behind in display quality to putting out what was briefly the best smartphone display in the US market. That was thanks to an OLED panel from Samsung, which offered excellent brightness and colors.
According to a new report, Google will again be turning to Samsung for its display.
ETNews reports that Google will utilize an updated “M14” OLED panel from Samsung. The new panel is said to be brighter and have an improved lifespan. According to the report, Google will be utilizing this new generation of OLED panel in the Pixel 9, Pixel 9 Pro, Pixel 9 Pro XL, and Pixel 9 Pro Fold.
Something worth noting, though, is that Google won’t be alone here. The iPhone 16 Pro lineup is also expected to use this same new panel. Apple has, for the past couple of years, been using Samsung’s top-of-the-line displays in its “Pro” iPhones, with the “M12” being used in previous releases. That same generation will still be used in the base iPhone 16 models, but iPhone 16 Pro and Pro Max will both use “M14” like the Pixel.
Google is set to launch the Pixel 9 series on August 13, way ahead of the company’s usual schedule. Apple, meanwhile, is still expected to launch new iPhones in September.
Google announces early August 13 event for Pixel 9 and Pixel Watch 3
Last June 25, 2024 announced that its annual Pixel hardware event will be taking place on August 13. This is incredibly early for 2024 with Made by Google usually taking place in October.
Instead of New York City, Made by Google 2024 is taking place at the company’s headquarters in Mountain View, California. The first two Made by Google events were held in San Francisco before the East Coast shift.
This year’s keynote starts at 10 a.m. PT, with the invite announcement coming 1.5 months before the actual event. Last year, Google announced the event a month before it took place.
The invite is very telling for highlighting Google AI, Android, and Pixel:
You’re invited to an in-person Made by Google event where we’ll showcase the best of Google AI, Android software and the Pixel portfolio of devices.
Meanwhile, we previously reported on a 41mm and 45mm Pixel Watch 3, with renders confirming how it looks like the first two generations. We also reported on Pixel Buds Pro 2.
iOS 18 offers more customization than ever and one of the new options is the ability to change Lock Screen controls on iPhone. There are over 50 options to replace the Flashlight and Camera buttons. But one trick gives you access to almost unlimited possibilities. Here’s how to change Lock Screen buttons plus some related tips and tricks.
The new iOS 18 option to change Lock Screen controls lets you change the bottom buttons to everything from launching apps, accessibility features, changing settings, and more.
However, the most powerful and flexible way to use the new Lock Screen customization is by placing a Shortcuts button for one or both controls.
That means you can effectively create a button to do anything you can think of with the Shortcuts app.
The new Lock Screen control flexibility is a great addition to Lock Screen widgets and the Action button on iPhone 15 Pro/Max.
How to change Lock Screen controls on iPhone in iOS 18
Make sure you’re running the iOS 18 beta on your iPhone.
Long-press on your iPhone Lock Screen
Tap Customize under the Lock Screen you’d like to change
Now tap Lock Screen
Tap the Flashlight or Camera icon to remove them
Now tap the + icon to add a new Lock Screen control
Tap Done in the top right corner to set your new controls
For those with an iPhone 15 Pro/Max with an Action button, you can find a new Controls option in Settings > Action Buton that includes many of the new Lock Screen button options
If you still want quick camera access but want to change the Camera Lock Screen button, you can still swipe from right to left to instantly launch it (or program your Action button for Camera on iPhone 15 Pro/Max)
Here’s how it looks to change Lock Screen controls on iPhone:
After you tap the Flashlight and Camera with the minus icon, you can tap the + icon to add your new controls.
You can swipe through the 61 options or use the handy search bar at the top.
After you make your choices, tap Done in the top right corner, then tap your Lock Screen one last time, you’re all set!
iOS 18 beta 2 has officially been released for developers. The update, which comes two weeks after the first beta, includes some big new features. Head below as we round up everything new in iOS 18 beta 2.
iOS 18 is currently available for developer beta testers, with a public beta expected in July and a general release scheduled for September. It’s important to note that in the early beta stages, changes and improvements can be unpredictable. This means something functional in iOS 18 beta 1 might be broken in iOS 18 beta 2. As always, proceed with caution.
Additionally, the second beta of a major iOS update tends to be the least exciting because Apple hasn’t had much time to address major concerns and feedback yet. In fact, iOS 18 beta 2 was likely compiled less than a week after WWDC. iOS 18 beta 3 is likely to be a more interesting update with significant changes and features.
iOS beta 2: New features and changes
The big change in iOS 18 beta 2 is that iPhone Mirroring is now available. You’ll need a Mac running macOS Sequoia beta 2, then you can mirror your iPhone’s screen right on your Mac. This includes notifications, gestures for navigation, and more.
iOS 18 beta 2 also adds support for new SharePlay screen sharing features, including the ability to take over and control the other person’s screen.
With iPadOS 18 beta 2, Apple has expanded the changes it made in the European Union in response to the DMA to the iPad. These include alternative browser engine support, app marketplaces, and more.
In the Settings app, under “Messages,” there’s a new toggle for “RCS Messaging.” This seems to be enabled by default, but RCS doesn’t appear to actually be live yet.
In the Passwords app, there’s a new “+” icon in the bottom-right corner for easily adding new login information to the app. Previously, this button was only in the “All” menu of the app.
Apple released the first developer beta of iOS 18 on June 10, the same day it kicked off WWDC and unveiled all the new OS features coming later this year.
It’s been nearly two weeks since that last beta, so when will iOS 18 beta 2 be released? Here’s what we know.
When to expect iOS 18 beta 2 to release
Apple hasn’t announced a date yet for iOS 18 beta 2. However, the company tends to follow fairly predictable patterns for its software releases. As a result, we can learn a lot by looking at previous years’ release dates.
2023: iOS 17 beta 2 arrived on Wednesday, June 21
2022: iOS 16 beta 2 arrived on Wednesday, June 22
2021: iOS 15 beta 2 arrived on Thursday, June 24
Looking at dates alone, we might expect iOS 18 beta 2 to arrive any moment now.
But there’s another key piece of data that can inform our expected date: the day WWDC started each year, which was also when the first beta debuted.
WWDC started on June 5 in 2023. It was June 6 in 2022, and also in 2021.
This year, WWDC kicked off a bit later than usual, on June 10.
For the last two years, beta 2 arrived exactly 16 days after beta 1. In 2021 it was 18 days.
Taking all of this into account, we should expect iOS 18 beta 2 to drop on Wednesday, June 26 or possibly Thursday, June 27—16 or 17 days after beta 1’s release.
What changes will come in beta 2?
iOS 18 beta 1 introduced so many new features for iPhone users. There are powerful customization features, a new Passwords app, big updates to Messages, Photos, Notes, Journal, a revamped Control Center, and a lot of other goodies.
So what kind of changes should we expect to see in beta 2?
Usually the earlier in the summer, the more changes will come with each beta. Betas 2, 3, and 4 will generally provide more changes than 5, 6, and 7, as Apple seeks to lock the release in preparation for its public launch in the fall.
So while beta 2 probably won’t have any huge surprises, it should nonetheless offer a number of enhancements and tweaks to what’s found in the current beta.
Along with letting users customize app colors, organize them anywhere, and more natively, iOS 18 brings a subtle new feature that cleans up the Home Screen. Here’s how to hide app names on iPhone in iOS 18.
iOS 18 takes iPhone customization further with new options to natively create a theme, a more robust and versatile Control Center, and more.
And joining the ability to place apps and widgets anywhere on your screen, you can create a more minimal aesthetic by choosing to hide app names on your Home Screen which also apply to widgets and folders.
Apple first hid names for apps in the Dock starting with iOS 11. But now you can have all apps, widgets, and folders with the same minimal look no matter where they’re placed.
How to hide app names on iPhone with iOS 18
Make sure you’re running the iOS 18 beta on your iPhone.
Long-press on a blank space on your Home Screen
Tap Edit in the top left corner
Choose Customize
Now tap Large
Tap on the screen to leave the Customize menu
That’s it!
There doesn’t appear to be a way to hide app names while keeping the default small icon size for now. But we’ll be keeping our eye out.
Here’s how it looks to hide app names on iPhone:
After you tap Edit and Customize, look at the bottom of your iPhone.
Tap the Large button (just above the app color buttons):
Do you think you’ll hide app names in iOS 18 or are you already? Or do you prefer to keep them?
An interesting piece suggests that Apple’s AI logo* – along with the new Siri icon – is intended to look friendly, unthreatening, and is deliberately non-anthropomorphic.
*Yeah, that could be Apple Artificial Intelligence, or Apple Apple Intelligence. Thanks, Tim.
Other companies appear to have set themselves the same goals with their AI offerings, hence all the simple, colorful graphics …
Apple unveiled two logos as part of its WWDC presentation: One for Apple Intelligence, the other for the new AI-powered Siri.
I was somewhat surprised by the decision. Since Siri is how we’ll access most AI features, I’m not entirely sure why Apple felt it needed two different logos – though they are very clearly part of the same family.
TechCrunch’s Devin Coldeway points to other AI logos, and notes that most have the same characteristics.
Although approaches differ to branding this purportedly all-seeing, all-knowing, all-doing intelligence, they have coalesced around the idea that the avatar of AI should be non-threatening, abstract, but relatively simple and non-anthropomorphic […]
Notice how four of the six (five of seven if you count Apple twice, and why shouldn’t we) use pleasant candy colors: colors that mean nothing but are cheery and approachable, leaning toward the feminine (as such things are considered in design language) or even the childlike. Soft gradients into pink, purple and turquoise; pastels, not hard colors; four are soft, never-ending shapes; Perplexity and Google have sharp edges, but the former suggests an endless book while the latter is a happy, symmetrical star with welcoming concavities.
Coldeway rejects potential accusations of over-thinking.
Think I’m overanalyzing? How many pages do you think the design treatment documents ran for each of these logos — over or under 20 pages? My money would be on the former. Companies obsess over these things.
His argument makes sense to me, especially the careful avoidance of anything suggestive of a person or a robot. OpenAI may have thought it was a good idea to reference Her during its recent presentation, but companies have mostly carefully avoided going down this route.
Absolutely adore the upcoming ‘colorful frame’ Siri animation!
WWDC this year was packed with new features for Apple’s suite of software platforms. The company introduced a lot of enhancements coming this fall in iOS 18, visionOS 2, macOS Sequoia, and more.
Apple also showcased features that are not coming this fall. But it wasn’t always clear what will arrive in 18.0, and what’s being saved for later this year or even some time in 2025.
Here’s the full list of features we know won’t arrive until iOS 18.1 or later.
New Siri’s on-screen awareness and in-app actions
Apple Intelligence’s fall arrival will bring with it a new Siri interface and select new capabilities, but some of the most powerful Siri upgrades will be added some time over the coming year.
Siri abilities coming later include having on-screen awareness of what you’re doing at any given time so that you can say, for example, “Use this as their contact photo” and it will understand the context and perform the action accordingly.
Similarly, Siri’s deeper knowledge of in-app functions and ability to, say, play the podcast that your significant other sent you, won’t arrive until some time in the year ahead.
Apple Mail upgrades
Apple has big updates coming for popular apps like Notes and Messages this fall. Another core app getting some nice upgrades is Mail, with new features like the auto-categorization of messages in your inbox. Unlike those other apps though, Mail’s improvements won’t arrive until later in the year.
Vision Pro enhancements including Mac Virtual Display
This one shouldn’t be too surprising, since the Vision Pro first launched just a few months ago, but some of the best visionOS 2 features won’t arrive until later this year.
Here are the features coming in visionOS 2.1 or 2.2:
Upgraded Mac Virtual Display: A fan favorite feature, Mac Virtual Display is getting better with the ability to have an Ultrawide view that provides the equivalent of having two 4K displays side by side.
Multiview: Sports fans will be able to watch up to five different games at the same time using the Apple TV app, each with their own dedicated view.
Spatial video editing: This is partially a macOS feature, but the ability to import your spatial video to the Mac, edit it there in Final Cut Pro, and export it back to your Vision Pro won’t arrive until late 2024.
New emoji, including the best exhausted face
Compatible devices will be able to create custom emoji (Apple calls them Genmoji) when iOS 18 debuts in the fall. But every year there is a set of new built-in emoji added to iOS, and this year’s additions were recently previewed but they won’t arrive on your devices until later in 2024 or early in 2025.
Non-beta versions of Apple Intelligence
The biggest news for Apple’s software this year is Apple Intelligence. While the core Apple Intelligence features are set to arrive this fall as part of iOS 18 and more, it’s important to know that Apple is labeling this initial AI release as a beta feature. So expect issues and inconsistencies to get worked out in the weeks and months following the fall release.
Drag and drop from your iPhone to Mac, and vice versa
A tentpole feature of macOS Sequoia is the ability to mirror your iPhone on your Mac and interact with it there. But one feature of this new ability won’t arrive until later: the ability to seamlessly drag and drop files and photos between your two devices. Once it debuts, this feature is set to be an even quicker way to transfer files than AirDrop is, but we’ll have to wait just a bit longer.
Home app improvements
The Home app in iOS 18 is getting some nice upgrades, but most of them won’t arrive until later. The two main features coming later this year are support for adding robot vacuum cleaners as compatible devices, and the ability to view your home electricity use inside the app.
The open source app was submitted to the store, given the recent rule change that allows retro game console emulators, like Delta or Folium. App Review rejected UTM, deciding that a “PC is not a console”. What is more surprising, is the fact that UTM says that Apple is also blocking the app from being listed in third-party app stores in the EU.
As written in the App Review Guidelines, Rule 4.7 covers “mini apps, mini games, streaming games, chatbots, plug-ins and game emulators”.
UTM says Apple refused to notarize the app because of the violation of rule 4.7, as that is included in Notarization Review Guidelines. However, the App Review Guidelines page disagrees. It does not annotate rule 4.7 as being part of the Notarization Review Guidelines. Indeed, if you select the “Show Notarization Review Guidelines Only” toggle, rule 4.7 is greyed out as not being applicable.
It’s therefore unclear if the Apple reviewers for UTM were incorrect in asserting the application was not suitable for distribution by third-party app stores in the EU.
However, as it stands, UTM is not proceeding to contest the ruling. As apps distributed on iOS cannot use a JIT compiler (other than specially entitled alternative browser engines), the functionality and performance of the emulators running through UTM SE, the version submitted for review that had JIT disabled, was significantly impaired. UTM says getting UTM SE approved “isn’t worth fighting for”.
UTM for iOS will continue to be available using older ‘grey market’ sideloading methods for open source software, such as compiling and installing the app manually via Xcode. UTM for Mac is available in the Mac App Store.