Yes.
Does Apple make you puke? Take this iOS 7.0.3 update with your tablets
Apple has released an iOS 7 update that will be welcomed by iPhone and iPad owners who were sickened by the mobile operating system's user interface. We hasten to point out that we're referring to those users actually sickened – made nauseous, dizzy, or given headaches – by their gadgets' zoom-happy interface. For those of you …
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Saturday 26th October 2013 05:27 GMT Oh Homer
re: "Yes"
Seconded.
In fact Apple made me puke without ever having used an iThing even once in my entire life, much less having run its dysfunctional software.
I got as far as the early part of Messiah Jobs' life, where he stole from his "best friend" and abandoned his daughter to live on welfare, when the initial retching began.
By the time I got to the bit where he was making sinister threats to "go after" charities with thermonuclear patent bombs, whilst brainwashing iCultists with his bi-annual stage show, in which he demonstrated such stunning "innovations" as "rounded rectangles", the carrot-chunks were flowing freely from my gob at an alarming rate, and only continued accelerating at the sight of glazed-eyed cheerleaders doing body-waves to celebrate the opening of new iCult temples.
The revelation that Apple apparently now intends building its own spaceship, to transport iCultists to the Planet Apple, presumably complete with in-flight Kool-Aid, has accelerated my vomit flow to such a rate that it can now literally split atoms.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 05:50 GMT Steve Brooks
Re: re: "Yes"
"presumably complete with in-flight Kool-Aid, has accelerated my vomit flow to such a rate that it can now literally split atoms." Such witty responders as utilising your vomit stream as an interstellar drive to push you all the way out to uranus poured through my head but failed to materialise into anything meaningful so I just decided to leave the toilet humour to those better equiped....(hehehe, I said Ur-anus)
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Saturday 26th October 2013 11:52 GMT heyrick
Re: re: "Yes"
"much less having run its dysfunctional software" - having had three different Android phones and then using iOS, I can say that the iPad is the only bog-standard out-of-the-box email client that supports in line quoting instead of a binary choice of quoting the entire message at the end. So, it's not all dysfunctional.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 15:54 GMT Igamogam
You have the choice, don't buy Apple products. I don't like Android phones or Windows computers but I don't whinge about them even when I am forced to use them.
I have no grounds to complain about products I don't choose. If I thought they fitted my needs I'd change, it's obvious and as the rival products are cheaper anyway so it's a no-brainer. Sadly they don't perform as I want – ergo I buy something that does.
Why waste energy griping about other peoples decisions about devices I don't use?
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Saturday 26th October 2013 11:59 GMT TheOtherHobbes
Re: Another bug fix ....
>As it turns out, writing operating systems is actually hard.
It's not like developers with beta access didn't point out these features were stupid and annoying.
Just like we pointed out that Apple Maps was crap.
I suppose getting heard after six months is better than never getting heard. But still - it's all so *avoidable*, and shouldn't be hard at all.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 14:10 GMT WhoaWhoa
Re: Another bug fix ....
"Re: Another bug fix ....
As it turns out, writing operating systems is actually hard."
As Apple found out. After trying for several years to come up with its "own" (object oriented) operating system based on the Next stuff Jobs brought with him when returning from his years in exile they cut their losses and abandoned it. Instead they switched to FreeBSD, with which they have stuck ever since, restricting themselves to working on a shiny pointy-clicky layer, aimed at a shiny pointy-clicky fan base, thus playing to their chosen audience and strengths.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 19:55 GMT FrankAlphaXII
Re: Another bug fix ....
That a little bit of an oversimplification. They use FreeBSD components in Darwin, but they also acquired a license to use Mach (as part of the XNU kernel) as NeXTSTEP had, and I'm also pretty sure I/O Kit was developed by Apple with a significant amount of code from NeXTSTEP which provides for use of C++ drivers.
Apple didn't do it on its own, but as someone else said, writing an operating system is no small task. Why do you think Google acquired Android instead of writing their own? And why do you think it runs the Linux kernel?
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Saturday 26th October 2013 11:20 GMT andreas koch
@ eSeM - Re: Another bug fix ....
>
That isn't very good
. . . <
?
You're kidding, right?
I'm, have it known, not an Apple fan. Not at all. But that doesn't stop me from applauding a company for listening to customer complaints and doing something about it.
How can that be wrong?
They were a lot faster than Microsoft, who took quite a while to give people their start button back when the complaints about Modern/ Metro/ THD* started rolling in.
And Canonical doesn't listen to their customers at all, as it seems. Lucky for me, as I happen to like Unity, but a bother to a lot of other users who left and got all Minty and such. But then, they don't ask for your money, so let's cut some slack there and just get something else if you don't like it.
So, dissing Apple for fixes and changes that users want? No, no and no. You should praise them for it!
And that's from an almost fanatic non-fanboi.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 14:16 GMT WhoaWhoa
Re: @ eSeM - Another bug fix ....
"... that doesn't stop me from applauding a company for listening to customer complaints and doing something about it."
Haven't (the smarter) customers been complaining about iThing battery replacement strategy ("No you can't, but give us more money and we'll see what we can do") for some years now?
Or are you saying that increasingly gluey insides of Apple things is the sort of "doing something" you had in mind?
("Wanna replace broken bits, do ya? Well, we'll sure as hell do you, you money-losing mor... I mean Customer.)
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Saturday 26th October 2013 20:39 GMT emmanuel goldstein
Re: @ eSeM - Another bug fix ....
"You're kidding, right?
I'm, have it known, not an Apple fan. Not at all. But that doesn't stop me from applauding a company for listening to customer complaints and doing something about it.
How can that be wrong?
They were a lot faster than Microsoft, who took quite a while to give people their start button back when the complaints about Modern/ Metro/ THD* started rolling in.
And Canonical doesn't listen to their customers at all, as it seems. Lucky for me, as I happen to like Unity, but a bother to a lot of other users who left and got all Minty and such. But then, they don't ask for your money, so let's cut some slack there and just get something else if you don't like it.
So, dissing Apple for fixes and changes that users want? No, no and no. You should praise them for it!
And that's from an almost fanatic non-fanboi."
i think you should write a musical about it
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Saturday 26th October 2013 08:47 GMT SMabille
Can't wait for Sunday / Monday.. BST->GMT predict the effect contest!
Kiss goodbye to Summer time (or Daylight saving) on Sunday, so the bets are open how iOS 7 / 7.03 will react.
Since iOS 4, not a single major release has been able to cope with the change, usually affecting alarms that are either duplicate, skipped, delayed by 1 or 12 hrs, .... So what do you think will happen this time :-)
QA testing at Apple seems to go down (or marketing/finance pushing harder to release an unpolished product), we are at third minor revision, and we can start to see regression bugs appearing (like the font size control not working in some applications incl. Apple's own "Music" (stuck with giant font size)
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Saturday 26th October 2013 22:51 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: I don't like the animations but am hesitant to upgrade
I suspect you're a troll because while I'm sure that upgrades have failed, I really doubt that one person has it fail multiple times for every upgrade. If it were me I'd bring it to an Apple store to do my next upgrade in front of a 'genius' and let them solve it.
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Saturday 26th October 2013 15:36 GMT Slap
If Apple had done it right
If Apple had done it right the there would have been 2 options: the first to turn of the parallax effect, and the second to prevent the zooming.
I only objected to the parallax effect as it served absolutely no useful purpose whatsoever, and in the process probably consumed battery. The zooming on the other hand was only a brief bit of eye candy, and also usefully indicated which app you had just "backgrounded", but ultimately was also a waste of processor cycles, as quite frankly is the fade effect we have now.
Either way it's no biggie for me. My main problem is that since the update to 7.0.3 my iPhone won't actually finish syncing. Well, it does, but iTunes doesn't seem to think so. Mind you I did upgrade to Mavericks and update iTunes before I installed iOS 7.0.3, so maybe I'm just simply asking for problems. That's life at the bleeding edge though.