iOS 9.3 Works the Night Shift, Protects Notes, and More
Apple has released iOS 9.3 with some exciting new features, such as Night Shift (which adjusts color temperature based on the time of day), Touch ID and password protection for Notes, Wi-Fi calling for Verizon users, new education features for the iPad, and new 3D Touch actions for devices that support them.
iOS 9.3 is probably most easily installed directly on the device via Settings > General > Software Update, although it should also work fine if installed via iTunes. Regardless, always make sure a backup has completed before updating.
First, a word of warning: for two TidBITS staffers using the iPhone 6 and updating over the air, the update appeared to hang on the iCloud password screen of the setup assistant, but eventually recovered after being left alone for a few minutes. The problem isn’t universal, but other users have reported similar behavior.
Wi-Fi Calling for Verizon — If you’re a Verizon customer with poor cellular coverage at home, you’ll want to install iOS 9.3 right away, since it enables Wi-Fi calling, which routes your voice calls over your Wi-Fi router instead of your cellular connection (see “Turn on Wi-Fi Calling in iOS 9,” 28 October 2015). That can improve the sound quality of voice calls, particularly if you have dodgy cell service. To do so, go to Settings > Phone > Wi-Fi Calling, and enable Wi-Fi Calling on This Phone. You then have to enter your address for Verizon’s 911 records.
Night Shift — The marquee feature of iOS 9.3 for all users is Night Shift, which is essentially a clone of the venerable f.lux app for desktop computers. What Night Shift (and f.lux) does is adjust the color temperature of your screen throughout the day, reducing the amount of blue light emitted at night to help you sleep better. As Apple explains, “Many studies have shown that exposure to bright blue light in the evening can affect your circadian rhythms and make it harder to fall asleep.” This is a real problem.
To enable Night Shift, tap the new button in Control Center, or go to Settings > Display & Brightness > Night Shift. There, you can enable Night Shift manually by turning on Manually Enable Until Tomorrow. You can also schedule Night Shift to turn on and off at set times, even at sunset and sunrise. Although Night Shift can make the screen look a little strange, it’s worth trying if you use your device at night a lot. Happily, screenshots made with Night Shift enabled don’t reflect the warmer color temperature.
Notes — Another useful addition is the option to protect the Notes app with a password or Touch ID. To do so, go to Settings > Notes > Password. Enter and verify your password, enter a password hint if you like, and enable Touch ID if your device supports it (if it’s not already enabled).
To lock a note, tap the increasingly overloaded Share button, and then Lock Note. You then either have to enter your Notes password or scan your fingerprint with Touch ID. After a lock is added, you can still read the notes until a reboot or until you tap the Lock Now label at the bottom of the notes list. Locked notes display a closed lock icon. To view a locked note, tap it, tap View Note, and then either scan your fingerprint or enter your password, which unlocks all locked notes.
Notes also provides new sorting options, a gesture and a button for creating a new sketch, a checklist button at the bottom of each note
so you can more easily create lists, and the capability to display images and attachments in notes as thumbnails. There’s also a new setting in Settings > Notes, Save Media to Photos, which automatically saves photos and videos taken in the Notes app to the Photos app.
More Apps — Although the Notes app sees the most changes in iOS 9.3, plenty of other apps received some love too:
- News: Apple’s News app has an improved For You section, with better tailoring, as well as a new Top Stories feature. Additionally, you can play videos from your feed without opening the article. The Explore section has a new Editor’s Picks section. Happily, News on the iPhone now supports landscape orientation, you can adjust text size in articles, and your feed should update much faster. You can also now swipe on articles to share, save, and see other options.
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Health: It’s still one of Apple’s weakest interface efforts, but the Health app received a bit of work. Some items under Health Data, like Sleep, Weight, and Workouts, now suggest third-party apps that can help you track that data. Health also displays your Apple Watch Activity data, which can be shared with other apps. Finally, iOS 9.3 includes some 3D Touch actions for Health.
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iBooks: PDF users, rejoice! iBooks can now store your PDFs in iCloud for sharing across devices. To enable the feature in iOS, just tap Use iCloud when prompted on first launch; to sync with OS X, see the instructions in “OS X 10.11.4 Improves Notes, iBooks, and Live Photo Support” (21 March 2016). Additionally, it offers better support for reading manga, Apple Pencil support for highlighting, and the long-awaited capabilities to re-download purchased audiobooks from the iBooks Store and to share audiobooks via Family Sharing.
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Podcasts: If you watch video podcasts in the built-in Podcasts app, you’ll be happy to know that fullscreen video is finally back on the iPad! This, by the way, also applies to music videos in Music.
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Music: Other improvements in Music enable you to add songs from Apple’s music catalog to playlists without having to add them to your library, tap the name of the song in Now Playing to go to the album from which it belongs, and, for Beats 1 fans, see what’s playing from the Radio tab without having to tune in to the stream.
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Wallet: iOS 9.3’s update brings improvements to reward cards: you can now sign up for reward cards at the cash register with Wallet, and you can now view cards related to other cards in Wallet.
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Maps: Those who live in locations for which Maps offers public transit information can now see, with a tap, highlighted views of destinations and stops for a specific transit line, and the app displays whether there are multiple transit lines available when it suggests routes.
Other Improvements — Importantly, proper two-factor authentication is reportedly now available for all iCloud accounts, though we’re still figuring out if that’s true and how it works.
Live Photos become more usable and shareable in iOS 9.3: you can share these mini-moving pictures to OS X via AirDrop and Messages, and you can extract a still image from a Live Photo via the Duplicate command.
For the handful of people who can take advantage of CarPlay, iOS 9.3 offers a few new features: Apple Music’s For You pane in Music and a new Nearby feature in Maps to point out gas stations, parking lots, restaurants, and more. Audio sound levels in CarPlay are now equalized when you switch between audio sources, and Siri in CarPlay now reads back messages more concisely. For more on CarPlay, see “CarPlay Offers Limited, Glitchy iPhone/Auto Integration” (18 January 2016).
Finally, individual user profiles are available on the iPad — but only for educational institutions. Sadly, while most of us may never see these options, Apple has added some great features for educators, such as new administration tools, managed Apple IDs, and a Classroom app to help teachers manage their classes. Teachers can use Classroom to view students’ screens, launch and lock apps, use AirPlay to send student screens to an Apple TV, and reset passwords. These are all great features, and some would be nice to have outside the educational world as well, but we’re skeptical that they’re sufficient to woo budget-driven schools away from cheap Chromebooks.
iOS 9.3 also includes a number of security fixes, most notably for a vulnerability discovered by Johns Hopkins University researchers that could let attackers intercept photos and videos sent via iMessage.
It’s surprising that Apple is adding new features this late in iOS 9’s product cycle. Usually, Apple adds notable features to iOS only once per year, in a major release in September or October. Perhaps iOS 9.3 marks a change in how Apple is scheduling its software updates, with a longer time between significant updates. Or perhaps that’s just wishful thinking for those of us who sometimes feel that our industry hamster wheel is spinning out of control!
Hmm, the Night Shift thingy looks a bit unpolished. I would have expected it to start at sunset, with a configurable time to go into full effect, so the display gets only slowly and continually warmer over some hours. This way you'd hardly notice anything changing and would still get the desired effect.
The screenshot in the article does not show all the scheduling options—there is also a sunset to sunrise option.
Hmm, I just updated and can't find the sunset to sunrise option... [Edit: You have to activate location services for timezone settings. If this is disabled the sunset-sunrise option will not be there with no warning or whatever]
OK, I tried it now (it's 22:00 now where I am) and I like Night Shift. Not exactly new, but well done. I still would like it to slowly ramp up between sunset and midnight or so, especially since this would be a visual indication of "it's getting late now", but so far I'm happy.
Night Shift is not available on iPhone 5 and previous models :-(
I can confirm that Night Shift isn't available on my 4S or iPad 2. Also, you can see the above reader comment confirmed at the bottom of this Apple page (http://www.apple.com/ios/updates/), in the first footnote, which reads "Night Shift is available on iPhone 5s or later, iPad Pro, iPad Air or later, iPad mini 2 or later, and iPod touch (6th generation)."
Night shift is not available in Battery Low Power Mode.
iPhone 5S that is
Catastrophe!
Many owners of iPad 2 wifi + 3g are getting the following message after downloading the iOS 9.3 update: "Your iPad could not be activated because the activation server is temporarily unavailable. Try connecting your iPad to iTunes to activate it."
Connecting to iTunes and re-downloading leaves the same problem.
Apple support says 'Just wait".
Our iPads are unusable..
Any fixes?
Thanks
I couldn't reach the iTunes servers from WiFi or using iTunes at the desktop this morning. I waited a few minutes, tried it again from the desktop, and it worked.
The servers were just busy. In the future, I suggest not trying to install a brand new update at a time when you need the device.
I am not sure it was a busy-server issue, because everything went smoothly for my iPhone, and most of the complaints on the Apple sites came from iPad 2 users like myself, who had success with other devices.
I tried to update my iPad 2 (just Wi-Fi, no cellular) to 9.3 this morning. It worked fine, though I had to type my iCloud password twice, as though the activation step tried once and got half-way and then had to touch back for another check on the password.
Looks like those iPad 2 issues were significant enough to get Apple's attention: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT206203s/span>
Also this article is well worth a read, seemingly; I haven't verified the details: http://www.slashgear.com/apple-releases-new-ios-9-3-update-after-older-devices-left-bricked-25433501/
Apple's thinking on iOS 9.3 feature additions seems clear to me. They have a lot of Education customers. In the Northern Hemisphere, school starts in September. Major OS upgrades, while sensible to be released in conjunction with new iPhones, are difficult to test and deploy during the academic year, so some schools keep using the previous OS (more so on the Mac side, but iOS as well). By bringing out features now that might have otherwise been held for iOS 10, they ensure a greater uptake in the Education sector. These are features that improve their competitive position in the Ed market, so they really don't want them sitting on the shelf for another year.
I updated my iPhone 5S to 9.3 and I still don't have Wi-Fi Calling as an option. Verizon is my carrier. Looking at a screenshot of the Settings > Phone screen in the support document about Wi-Fi Calling, I also see a number of other options I don't have: Call Forwarding, Call Waiting, and Show my Caller ID are all absent. Are those options that no one on Verizon has or might there be something wrong with my Verizon account?
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203032
In case it matters, the phone belongs to my employer under some kind of business account that prevents me from seeing the billing information on the Verizon web site you normally would.
I've heard from other people with employer iPhones who can't activate Wi-Fi Calling. I'm willing to bet that's the reason why it won't work.
Hey Curtis, I've looked into it some more, and from what I can piece together, Verizon requires an HD Voice-capable phone for Wi-Fi calling, which means you need an iPhone 6 or better.
Thanks. HD Voice sounds like a feature I'd like also though I'm not sure there's anyone else I would talk to that has a compatible phone right now. This "iPhone 6 or newer" requirement for both features sounds arbitrary and not based on the actual capabilities of the devices. At least the iPhone SE should support both.
http://www.verizonwireless.com/support/hd-voice-for-ios-faqs/
Wikipedia says the iPhone 5 and newer support HD Voice aka Adaptive Multi-Rate Wideband (AMR-WB).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_smartphones_with_HD_Voice_support#Apple
It seems that Apple has withdrawn IOS 9.3. My iPad mini says the SW is up to date at IOS 9.2.1.
Yes, it appears there were some activation problems.
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2016/03/apple-pulls-ios-9-3-update-for-older-devices-following-activation-problems/
I imagine it will be back soon.
I just discovered another major problem with iOS 9.3: I can no longer add ePub books to either my iPad Mini 3 or my iPhone 6 via iTunes. I CAN add PDFs however.
BTW, I had no "activation" problems other than the above and iPad kept re-syncing about 460 songs.
Photos app has gone buggy, tried using the red eye fix and got black spots all over the faces.