iOS 12 was released today.
I’ll wait until 12.1 (or 12.0.5) is released, thanks. More and more, companies are using the consumers as the last line of QA/QC. A lot of the early release Ruger GP-100 .44s went back to the factory for rework, a problem that is, by no means, confined to Ruger alone. I'm starting to note tremors in the Force when it comes to Kimber's revolvers.
Being on the cutting edge isn't all that it's cracked up to be.
We Also Learned About Assumptions Today!
53 minutes ago
9 comments:
Normally a good practice that I follow too...however, 12 had quite extensive Beta testing and shows up to a 70% improvement in performance for the iPhone 5s, 6 and 6s. Being a cheapskate, that’s me, so I trying it out and it looks really good right now. It also promises better battery life, and that’s looking possible too.
At IBM, this was about making your date (deadline). Which meant tossing untested shit over the wall to system test where they were supposed to turn shit into gold. And they got blamed for not making their date.
I ran the beta on my iPad Mini2 - worked great. Updated my iPhone SE today, and it certainly seems faster. No problem getting the update, or installing it, but I had a full battery - the update requires you to have 60% charge before it will install.
Cutting edge is cool.
Bleeding edge is not.
But ... but .... racegun!
;-)
One thing I really don't like on my iPhone is how often it pesters me to upgrade. If there isn't a patch for a bad security hole I don't EVER want to be the first kid on the block to do that. That said, IIRC iOS 12 is resistant to the police snooping software that hacks in via the computer-phone interface. That's a reason to maybe upgrade sooner rather than later. But you know how paranoid I am.
16 new Security Patches in iOS12...plus moving the numbers key and putting the emoji key there...that’s what’s pissing me off the most. So far, so good on the iPhone6, but the iPad Air2 (with a very weak battery) is running faster but showing an even weaker battery...win some, lose some. But as Borepatch said, if there is anything important on your iDevice, iOS12 is a good upgrade for security.
OK, OK, sold! I'll install it.
Ok, I'm a little afraid of "screen time". In my head I only spend an hour or so, but I think the first weekly report is going to give me cold, hard numbers to refute that - detailing what apps and how much time with each. Ok, very afraid.
Be aware that to stop the 2FA nag, you must turn it on and then use the email to return to previous setting...which includes a required password change. The bastards didn’t offer an off switch! Downgrade path to 11.4.1 is still open, but very sluggish performance returns.
Post a Comment