Apple today seeded the sixth betas of iOS 14 and iPadOS 14 to developers and public beta testers for testing purposes. The new betas come one week after Apple seeded the fifth betas.
Beta builds are available to developers over the air on the devices with the proper configuration installed.
Public beta builds of the new operating systems can be downloaded via the Apple Beta Software Program website by users signed up to take part in the testing program. If you’re interested in trying out the betas of the upcoming operating systems you can sign up for the program by clicking the same link.
There are a few tweaks in iOS 14 beta six, including:
The time picker interface, which can be seen in the Clock app when setting an alarm as well as other places in iOS, has received a slight design tweak that adds an orange box around the time to make it more obvious that it can be interacted with.
Spatial Audio, the feature that brings surround sound to the AirPods Pro, isn’t yet in place, but Apple is making preparations for the new feature. In today’s beta, a new Spatial Audio toggle has appeared in the Accessibility section of the Settings app. If you choose AirPods, at the bottom of the screen, will be a “Follow iPhone” toggle. This makes audio for supported movies and TV shows seem like it’s coming from the iPhone, not following your head movement. While this toggle is available, Spatial Audio is not yet operational.
A new splash screen for the Maps app informs you about new features that include cycling directions, curated guides, and support for speed cameras.
(All new features via MacRumors)
If we hear of any more additions, we’ll update you here in this space.
The new widgets offer improved information at a glance and can be pinned in different sizes on any Home Screen page. A Smart Stack feature for widgets uses on-device intelligence to surface the right widget based on time, location, and activity. Widgets can be customized for work, travel, sports, entertainment, and other areas of interest.
A new App Library feature automatically organizes all of a user’s apps into one simple, easy-to-navigate view, and intelligently surfaces apps that may be helpful at the moment. Users can choose how many Home Screen pages to display and easily hide pages for fast access to the App Library.
Incoming phone and FaceTime calls, as well as Siri interactions no longer take up the entire screen, as a new compact design enables users to stay in the app they are using. Picture-in-picture support allows iPhone users to watch a video or take a FaceTime call while using another app.
The App Clip experience loads a small portion of an app when it is needed. App Clips are associated with a specific product or business and can be loaded in seconds to complete a specific task, such as buying a cup of coffee or paying a parking meter. Appl Clips can be discovered and accessed by scanning a new Apple-designed App Clip code, or through NFC tags and QR codes, or shared in Messages or from Safari
Messages improvements include the ability to pin conversations to the top of your messages list, keep up with group threads through mentions and inline replies, and customize conversations by setting a group photo using an image or emoji.
New Memoji options include more inclusive and diverse Memoji with new hairstyles, headwear, face coverings, and more.
Maps offers new features to make it easier to navigate and explore with new cycling directions, electric vehicle routing, and curated Guides.
Cycling directions take into account route elevation, how busy a street is, and whether there are stairs along the route. Electric vehicle routing adds charging stops along a planned route based on current vehicle charge and charger types.
Guides provide a curated list of interesting places to visit in a city, created by a selection of trusted resources. Guides are a great way to discover hot new restaurants, find popular attractions, and explore new recommendations from respected brands, including AllTrails, Complex, The Infatuation, Time Out Group, and The Washington Post, among others.
All apps will now be required to obtain user permission before tracking. Later on, App Store product pages will feature summaries of developers’ self-reported privacy practices. Users will also be able to upgrade existing accounts to Sign in with Apple, choose to only share an approximate location with app developers and an indicator will tell users when an app is using their device’s mic and camera.
As usual, MacTrast and Apple both warn users to not install any betas on your daily driver iPhone or iPad, instead only install betas on a device set aside for testing purposes.