Apple announces iOS 15 with new FaceTime, iMessage, focus, privacy features

Apple announces iOS 15 with new FaceTime, iMessage, focus, privacy features
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Washington, US: Tech giant Apple has officially unveiled iOS 15, with improvements and updates to iMessage and FaceTime. There's also a new system-wide emphasis on sharing and communication, as well as more privacy-related features. Apple previewed iOS 15 during last night's WWDC keynote, highlighting some changes coming to FaceTime and notifications, as well as more privacy controls, reported The Verge.

1. FaceTime: FaceTime got some major updates, with spatial audio that reflects the speaker's location on-screen, and voice isolation to help reduce distracting background noise. Portrait mode's blurred backgrounds can also be used in FaceTime, and users can also share music and videos during calls. It's also possible now to include Android users on FaceTime with a shareable link that opens the call in a browser.

2. Redesigned notifications: Notifications got a new look with contact photos on text notifications and bigger app icons. Notifications have also got new filter modes in iOS 15, called Focus. This allows you to customize which notifications appear during different activities, like while you're working, and sync across all devices. You can set a custom home screen page with widgets and apps appropriate for your chosen Focus mode. There's also an option to batch certain notifications and receive them as a digest at certain times of day as a summary.

3. iMessage: iMessage got a few updates, too. iOS 15 makes it possible for others to see when you've enabled Do Not Disturb mode by way of an automatic status update in Messages. It's also possible to override Do Not Disturb for urgent messages. Photos shared in messages are automatically grouped into collages or stacks and will appear in other places like your photo gallery and memories.

4. Updated privacy controls: iOS 15 includes a move to bring all Siri request processing on-device by default. Users will also get an App Privacy Report with a seven-day summary of how often apps accessed location information and your phone's microphone or camera. Mail will also block tracking pixels commonly used in marketing emails to determine whether an email was opened and read.

5. Apple Wallet: Apple Wallet will support a wider range of items, like hotel room keys and relevant identification information for TSA.

6. Weather app: The weather app will display more information with new full-screen maps and a wider range of animated backgrounds. Maps got some attention too, with "significantly enhanced details in cities" and a three-dimensional city driving view when using the navigation on the phone or on CarPlay.

7. Safari: Changes are coming to Safari across the Apple ecosystem, including on iOS. It will offer a simpler tab bar design as well as support for grouped tabs that sync across all devices. Safari on iOS will also support browser extensions.

8. Other updates: Other updates include the ability to search text in photos courtesy of a new feature called LiveText, including the ability to search photos in Spotlight, AirPods audio updates, and the ability to locate AirPods Pro and AirPods Max using Find My. Apple said that iOS 15 will be available for the public this fall for iPhone 6s and newer models, with a developer beta arriving today and a public beta next month.