Key announcements from Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference 2021

7 June 2021, 21:24

Apple's iOS 15 software
iOS 15-hero-3up_screen. Picture: PA

Everything you need to know about the new features coming to your iPhone and other devices later this year.

Apple has completed its annual preview of the new features coming to the iPhone and its other devices and services later this year.

Here is a look at the key updates on the way when the software is released to the public in the autumn.

– iOS 15

The biggest update in iOS 15 is coming to FaceTime, which in the wake of the pandemic and the rise of apps such as Teams and Zoom, is now going to look and feel much more like those platforms.

FaceTime users will be able to schedule calls for the first time, and share links to join the virtual gatherings, links which will even enable Android and Windows users to join FaceTime calls via a web browser – another first.

The other big change is something Apple is calling Focus.

This takes the Do Not Disturb feature and allows users to customise it further, with new Focus themes which block out notifications from friends and family when switched to work mode, or shut out notes from colleagues when a user wants to spend quality time with loved ones.

Notifications have also been undated with a new Summary tool, which will group certain, less-pressing alerts together as a collection and can be scheduled to come through when you’ve got more time to go through them.

Elsewhere, the Wallet app is expanding to now support house and hotel room keys, as well as office passes for the first time, so users can tap with their iPhone to enter.

Apple Maps has been given a new, more detailed 3D look too, while the iPhone camera is now able to spot and lift text from images.

– iPadOS

The widgets introduced to the iPhone home screen last year are now coming to iPad, while multitasking tools have been enhanced to give users ways to customise different split-screen set-ups.

A Quick Note feature is coming too, meaning users can swipe from the corner of the screen at any time and within any app with an Apple Pencil to launch a new note and quickly scribble down what they need to.

– watchOS

Health and wellbeing were again key parts of the Apple Watch software update, with a new Reflect app joining the Breathe feature inside a new Mindfulness app.

Reflect will ask users to think of a happy thought or moment of joy for a few seconds and focus on it, as a new alternative to the breathing exercises in the Breathe app.

Meanwhile, tai chi and pilates workouts have been added to the Fitness apps, and Portrait photos can now be used as interactive watch faces.

– macOS

To be called macOS Monterey, the next version of the computer software will include a new tool called Universal Control, which will enable people to use a single mouse and keyboard to control and navigate the screens of up to three different devices.

For example, someone editing an image on a MacBook will be able to use the trackpad to move over and take control of their iPad set up next to them, and even an iMac as well if they have one – allowing them to work across the three machines at once.

Safari, Apple’s web browser, has also been given a redesign, with a more compact, tidier address bar and tabs section and the ability to group tabs into collections for the first time.

Apple boss Tim Cook said all the new software would be released to the public in the autumn, likely to coincide with the launch of the next iPhone and other Apple hardware.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

A woman’s hand presses a key of a laptop keyboard

Competition watchdog seeks views on big tech AI partnerships

A woman's hands on a laptop keyboard

UK-based cybersecurity firm Egress to be acquired by US giant KnowBe4

TikTok�s campaign

What next for TikTok as US ban moves step closer?

A laptop user with their hood up

Deepfakes a major concern for general election, say IT professionals

A woman using a mobile phone

Which? urges banks to address online security ‘loopholes’

Child online safety report

Tech giants agree to child safety principles around generative AI

Holyrood exterior

MSPs to receive cyber security training

Online child abuse

Children as young as three ‘coerced into sexual abuse acts online’

Big tech firms and financial data

Financial regulator to take closer look at tech firms and data sharing

Woman working on laptop

Pilot scheme to give AI regulation advice to businesses

Vehicles on the M4 smart motorway

Smart motorway safety systems frequently fail, investigation finds

National Cyber Security Centre launch

National Cyber Security Centre names Richard Horne as new chief executive

The lights on the front panel of a broadband internet router, London.

Virgin Media remains most complained about broadband and landline provider

A person using a laptop

£14,000 being lost to investment scams on average, says Barclays

Europe Digital Rules

Meta unveils latest AI model as chatbot competition intensifies

AI technology

Younger children increasingly online and unsupervised, Ofcom says