iOS 5

No one really posted it yet but here is the feature run down.

Notifications: The new User Interface stacks all current notifications in a single logo. Notification Center lets you swipe down from within an app and see all of your current notifications in one place. No more cluttered springboard. This includes email, SMS, missed calls and voicemail. Notifications are now visible on the lockscreen, it actually looks a bit like the LockScreenInfo cydia tweak.

Newsstand: It’s now easier for publications to bring their magazines and news to iOS with Newsstand. The UI is very similar to iBooks. Apple showed images of Magazine covers from GQ, Esquire, and Elle. Newspapers mentioned included the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Times. Newsstand will be standalone app, but function much like a folder, revealing all of your downloaded publications.

Twitter Integration: As rumored, Twitter is deeply integrated into iOS 5. Applications can natively post directly to twitter. For more info check out the entire breakdown of Twitter in iOS 5 here.

Safari: Safari is more robust in iOS 5. The most notable feature is tabbed browsing, with windows that can be moved to-and-from with quickness and ease.

Reminders: iOS makes it easy for you to jot down small bits of information in an efficient and user friendly way with Reminders. You can assign contacts, dates, and locations to better serve that annoyingly forgetful noggin. Reminders can also be grouped into lists or categories. The reminders sync across all your iOS devices, and of course, with iCal.

Camera: A camera button has been added to the lockscreen to allow for quick access. The volume-up bottom now allows you to take pictures. And there’s no need to enter the passcode before flashing the shot, but your pictures stay protected. Photos can also be edited directly on the device, allowing users to crop, rotate, and even eliminate red-eye just moments after the shot is taken.

Mail: Apple has added Rich Text Formatting for mail in iOS. It also allows users to control indentation, and users can now drag address to other sections, i.e. dragging a contact from “To:” to “BCC:” Messages can be flagged for later reading. Apple also adds in a built-in dictionary, and advanced security features.

Split Keyboard: The keyboard can now be split in half on the iPad, allowing for easier thumb-messaging for those who are so inclined.

PC-Free Activation and OTA Updates: In a widely expected move, iOS devices will no longer have to be tethered to a computer to activate and update. Users will now be able update over the air. The updates will be ‘Delta Updates’ meaning only the changed info will be downloaded, not the entire operating system as it is currently.

Game Center: Game Center has been enhanced in iOS with new Friend discovery and Game discovery features. Users can find ‘friends of friends’ and find out the games they’re playing as well.

iMessage: Apple unveiled their own flavor of OS-wide messaging (like BBM), called iMessage. iOS 5 will allow iPads, iPhones, and iPod Touches to seamlessly communicate. Users can send text, photo, video, contacts, and can even message groups. Also included are delivery receipts, read receipts, and typing notification (that sounds a whole lot like BBM to me). Conversations work across all your devices, start it on your iPhone, and pick up where you left off on your iPad. It works on both Wi-Fi and 3G.

AirPlay Mirroring: Apple also mentioned towards the end of the iOS presentation that allows your iPad Screen to wirelessly mirror itself on your HDTV with an 2nd Gen Apple TV. If you ask me, it sounds like the HDMI out that Apple released just a few short months ago is obsolete.

On a side note, people are impatient and want the beta so I have quickly registered getios5.com LOL.

So in his latest near death experience King Jobs finally saw the light and admitted the volume button is a far better camera trigger than a touch screen button? The asshole had banned every camera app so far that did just that, citing the volume button cannot be remapped.

Interested to see the notifications since I use LockScreenInfo and love it.

i would like to be the first to welcome you guys to 2008 lol

Haha I didn’t mind the bubble popup but I was angry that when an app had a notification on it, it didn’t show up anywhere which is why the OpenNotifier application was great.

Showing sensitive data (like email subjects and data previews) in the lock screen is a BIG no-no.

Other than that, as tunerfreak said, welcome to 2008.

For Apple, some of these updates are huge. I’m really impressed with what they’re doing with iOS 5 in almost every aspect. I don’t see why Twitter integration is this late, and why it was highlighted at WWDC.

However, native OS support for the majority of stuff one might jailbreak for is fantastic. I’d imagine Apple’s integration of things like WiFi sync and notifications will be superior to free solutions by independent developers.

oh this is already jailbroken btw.

ya I feel that it may be able to force off by Exchange. What is the point of locking your device if you can see email summarys in the lock screen. Love jacking search traffic.

Also, http://getios5.com is rocking already. Lol.

Just installed iOS5 dev preview. Activation server is down. Heh, great.

Yea been telling everyone on my account don’t update yet.

ok, all good. It’ll want the iTunes 10.5 beta.

I hope this is supported by my antiquated 3GS

it is

When is the official release?

No date yet, but I’m guessing in the fall along with the next version of the iPhone.

Thanks Bryan Benway.

That’s pretty cool that they’re catching up with Android. Once its released will Apple sue Google for having the same thing?

Still no flash support huh?

The devs working on the beta should emphasize quick reply from the lock screen like biteSMS.

As far as the security concerns go, I would imagine you can disable or otherwise eliminate it from displaying emails and SMS’s on a locked lock screen. I have my iPhone set up to not show the SMS preview on the lock screen. Its a simple toggle and it will only show a new SMS exists, but not what it says. Don’t see why they wouldn’t put that type of thing in the new OS as well.

The problem really lies in that IT departments need to be able enforce that restriction on their users. If there is no way for Exchange to enforce it as a policy, users won’t set it that way.