iOS 18 hits 68% adoption across iPhones
While there is no fixed date for an iPhone SE release, several of Apple's second-tier products have launched in the late March to early April window. This includes the first Apple Silicon iMacs, the M2 MacBook Pro laptops, the iPad Air 5, and more. In addition to the iPhone SE, Apple is expected to debut the iPad 11 and the iPad Air this spring.
While iOS 18.3 does offer new features, none of them are what most users would consider game-changing to the overall iOS 18 experience. That is to say, if you don't like what Apple is doing with its latest OS versions and Apple Intelligence, nothing about this new version is likely to convert you.
There’s another iPhone software update coming, as soon as this month. Here’s everything you need to know about the next release, called iOS 18.3, when it’s coming and what will be in it.
A recent app debacle serves as a cautionary tale that helps explain why the days of big iOS redesigns are likely over.
Apple today seeded the release candidate versions of upcoming iOS 18.3 and iPadOS 18.3 updates to developers for testing purposes, with the
Apple introduced iOS 18 and iPadOS 18 in September, alongside the launch of the iPhone 16 series of smartphones featuring new hardware capable of supporting Apple Intelligence. With the release of the iOS 18.3 update, Apple completed the rollout of the first batch of AI features.
iOS 18.3 will bring a number of changes including new Camera Control features, bug fixes and importantly, AI changes including temporarily removing an Apple Intelligence feature.
OS 18.3 isn’t the most feature-packed release, but it does represent a big moment for Apple Intelligence. Here’s why.
The next iPhone update will land in a matter of days but it looks like there may have been a surprise change. Here’s what’s happening.
Apple's iOS 18 is improving the user experience with AI-powered tools, deeper customization, and enhanced privacy, driving strong adoption across iPhones and iPads.
The adoption rate is even higher for iPhones launched in the last four years, with a whopping 76% running iOS 18. The data also shows that 19% of all iPhones are still running on iOS 17, while 13% are on an even older version. Among iPhones launched in the last four years, 19% still use iOS 17 and 5% are on an earlier version.