Comment by metmac
Comment by metmac 2 days ago
Liquid Glass is now mandatory if you care about security. Sigh.
I wanted to like it too, but some of the new UI modals of iOS 26 are just awful.
Comment by metmac 2 days ago
Liquid Glass is now mandatory if you care about security. Sigh.
I wanted to like it too, but some of the new UI modals of iOS 26 are just awful.
It is not available. The release is 2 days old and the download is not showing up on the phone.
My iPhone 12 mini was bugging me about it the other day. I declined it. I don't want liquid glass and whatever else it does to make that phone feel slower and less usable. I refuse to buy a newer iPhone. They are all too big.
13 mini here too and last iPhone/smartphone I will buy.
Settings > Accessibility > Motion > Reduce motion and Settings > Accessibility > Display and text size > Reduce transparency make it usable-ish. There is hundreds of ms lag at times inexplicably w/touch and upwards of a second plus when connected to CarPlay. But I can't blame iOS 26. I have to reboot this thing sometimes weekly, sometimes less frequent than that since iOS 18. I can no longer justify spending hundreds of dollars on things that don't meet my standard of "works" even if it's 2025.
Wrong. Enable 18 beta, refresh, install 18.7.3, disable beta. Problem solved.
Security updates are typically available for the most current 2 OS versions, and 18 is still officially supported, perhaps until 2026 or 2027. 18.7.3 exists with similar security updates as 26.2. It may not show up on iPhone as an update option without being on the beta 18 channel because they're trying to force people onto 26 using dark patterns, but it shows up on iPadOS without any additional magic.
Having to toggle the beta is not acceptable and the parent is right to class that as not available
Some parts have improved: It's nice that alarms are now slide to cancel. Safari's UI however is now 98% mystery meat.
The pre 26.2 less-glassy options were bearable because they were mostly like pre-Tahoe. The post 26.2 less-glassy options are now so shit that I’m using glassy mode, despite it being also ugly, distracting and harder to read than ever before. Apple have absolutely trashed their OS and their “Apple make good UIs” pedigree. It’s such a disappoibtment. I hope they come to their senses in the next major release round.
Given the news a few days ago about the changes in UI design leadership at Apple (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46142843), there is a light at the end of the tunnel.
Not sure why you are so downvoted, because indeed Apple only does full security updates for the very newest (now 26): https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/10/apple-clarifies-secu...
Thanks for that link. Before reading I was in the process of migrating all my stuff from a Windows7 machine, deduping archives and identifying software that I may still need to run in a VM somewhere or on a tablet. I had considered flipping to Apple devices since I have an iPhone but have never pulled the trigger on any of that. I was considering iMacs instead of a Linux box for a more seamless interface with the phone.
After reading that article where it is apparent that Apple has intentionally used terms that sound similar to obscure what the customer is actually gaining when they upgrade versus update and they intentionally omit the part about older devices not getting all the security updates that are pushed in the updates. I now have some clarity.
I can focus on moving to Linux and in time will be ditching the iPhone. Should've done this years ago.
Because it's factually incorrect.
Ars Technica, a clickbait aggregator whom should have been banned from this site long ago, is hardly a reliable source.
As far as I know, it is factually correct.
https://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/apples-poor-patchin...
https://support.apple.com/guide/deployment/about-software-up...
> Note: Because of dependency on architecture and system changes to any current version of Apple operating systems (for example, macOS 26, iOS 26, and so on), not all known security issues are addressed in previous versions (for example, macOS 15, iOS 18, and so on).
It's not, iOS 18.7.3 also released https://support.apple.com/en-us/125885