A guide to iOS 18's hidden features and smaller updates

Apple-WWDC24-iOS-18

Image Credits: Apple

Apple’s iOS 18 update became available to all users on September 16. Ahead of the release of Apple Intelligence, the most important new features have been the ability to customize icons on the Home Screen, swap out app shortcuts on the Lock Screen, the redesigned Control Center, support for RCS, and the new Passwords app.

But there are a ton of other small and fun changes that might be useful, as well.

We put together a list of some of our favorite under-the-radar features that you might have missed.

Settings

Instead of listing all apps on the main page of the Settings app, which can lead to a lot of scrolling for those with a lot of apps installed, Apple now has a separate Apps menu dedicated to your apps. This cleans up the busy Settings screen and makes it more obvious where to find controls for individual apps.

Image Credits: Screenshot by TechCrunch

Photos

The Photos app now allows you to view your photo library without screenshots. You can tap on the sorting icon in the bottom left corner and uncheck screenshots under “View Options” to hide your screenshots from view.The Utilities collection in the Photos app has new content types like documents, receipts, handwriting, illustrations, and QR codes to make it easier to find certain information in your photos. Plus, you can view recently added, edited, and shared media items.The Photos app automatically suggests photos that are suited for wallpapers.You can now copy edits from one photo to another, including aspect ratio for crop, exposure, and white balance.The Photos app also organizes your travels automatically in a Trips section and groups together people and pets, so you can find photos that contain both your partner and your cat, for instance. A new video speed control feature lets you create slowed-down video effects.

Camera

One of the prime complaints for users was that music playing through earphones paused when they were taking a photo or a video. iOS 18 solves that problem, as music will continue to play through Bluetooth connections when snapping a photo or video. The Camera app also gets a new 5-second timer along with existing 3- and 10-second timers.

Control Center

You can customize your Control Center with widgets and buttons on iOS 18. In addition, one of the key changes in the new view is that you now have a power button in the top-right corner. This means you don’t have to hold the power button and volume down to turn off the device — you can access it from the Control Center instead.

Image Credit: Screenshot by TechCrunch

Messages

The Messages app finally lets you schedule messages for later, but this option is hidden in the + menu, rather than as an option associated with the send button, which could make it hard to find.

Image Credits: Screenshot by TechCrunch

iMessage also now lets you send images in full resolution up to 100MB in size.Text Effects add animated effects to any letter, word, or phrase, like Explode or Ripple, making conversations more visually interesting. You can also add text formatting like bold, underline, italics and strikethrough. When off the grid, you can send messages via satellite when you otherwise don’t have a signal. You can now “Tapback” with any emoji or sticker and multiple Tapbacks are spread out so you can more easily see the most recent three that were added.

Safari

Safari now has a feature to remove distracting items from a webpage. This feature won’t let you remove ads, but it can clean up some areas of the website you don’t need or don’t want to see. For instance, if a website insists that you sign up for their email newsletter, you can hide the signup box. (The Browser Company’s Arc browser implemented a similar feature last year.)Summary highlights will let you read a summary of an article before reading the whole thing. Other highlights will point you to helpful information about people, music, movies or TV shows.

Weather

The Weather app now has a widget prominently displaying Fees Like temperature merged with the actual temperature in the detailed view. So you can easily compare both.The Weather app will also show wind speeds, gusts, and directions more prominently.You can now set Home and Work locations from contacts in the Weather app.

Siri

AirPods now let you respond to Siri message announcements by shaking or nodding your head. That means you can receive or reject calls by mere gestures.

Weather view iOS 18
Image Credit: Screenshot by TechCrunch
Image Credits: Screenshot by TechCrunch

Podcasts

The new Podcasts app allows you to jump to a specific chapter from the progress bar if a podcast has defined them.The Podcasts app also gets the ability to reorder and remove episodes in the listening queue.You can share a specific part of a podcast using the podcast transcript.

Maps

Maps has added new topographic maps, hikes, and route creation, rivaling popular third-party tools like AllTrails.The Maps app will let you save hikes available across all U.S. national parks offline. Plus, you can create and save your own walking and hiking routes.Apple is making the Maps app more useful for discovery by letting you compare places by browsing photos, ratings, and price levels.

Notes

Notes now support collapsible sections so you can build structured documents within the app. The app has also added audio recording support, meaning you can record an audio session right from your note so you can keep the audio together with your comments, checklists, and documents. You can even edit the note while recording. The Notes app also supports PDF inline search and different colored highlighting.Both Notes and Calculator support solving math equations. You can also add various graphs and variables related to equations.

Image Credits: Apple

Mail

The Mail app finally has a way to group emails by a sender. You can perform quick actions on them, including marking emails as read, and deleting and archiving them.A new Transactions category will help you more easily find order confirmations, receipts, shipping, and travel information. Meanwhile, an Updates category will collect your Newsletters, news items, and social updates in one place, similar to Gmail.From Transactions, Updates, and Promotions, those items that are time-sensitive will still appear in the Primary section. (They’ll also be labeled with their category icon for easy reference.)There are new cleanup tools available from the Mail app, plus on iCloud.com, and via iCloud Mail settings.

Utilities and Keyboard

The keyboard now supports multiple languages in one keyboard. It also detects the last language you use in apps like Messages and switches automatically.Apple has also introduced a unified picker for emojis and stickers in the keyboard and made them both searchable.The Calculator can now evaluate expressions, assign variables, and create graphs. You can ask permission to remotely control a friend’s device when providing tech support. The flashlight interface on select phones has a fun new makeover for iOS 18. You can control variable brightness and a way to adjust the width of the beam.

Journal

The Journal app lets you log your mood. The time you spend writing in the journal will be logged in mindful minutes.The app also has support for audio transcriptions and printing your entries.You can add reminders to write and prompts to your Home Screen via widgets to get you in the habit of journaling.

Calendar and Reminders

With iOS 18, Calendar will show timed reminders, and you can create new items or edit them directly in the app.The Calendar also has new views for days, weeks, and months, so you can easily skim through your schedule.Separately, the Reminders app now has multilingual grocery lists and recently deleted lists.Apple now allows you to quickly set up new items for family lists like shared calendars, grocery lists, and password lists.

Files

The Files app lets you keep specific iCloud files or folders on your phone, always downloaded and synced.iPhones with iOS 18 now support more file formats, including APFS, exFAT, or MS-DOS (Fat32), while formatting external drives. You can also erase these drivers from the Files app.

Apple TV app

The Apple TV app now has Amazon Prime Video’s X-Ray-like feature called InSight that displays information about the actors and music in a show or movie. A new ‘enhance dialog’ feature will help you better hear what’s being said, even during scenes with loud effects and music.

Home

With the Home app update for iOS 18, you can unlock connected doors hands-free. You can also add up to 29 guests to give them time-based access.You can unlock Ultra Wideband-compatible smart locks (available next year) without taking your phone out of your pocket.

Accessibility

iOS 18 has new accessibility features, including eye tracking to control the interface of your phone.

Plus, users can set custom utterances to invoke actions such as going to the Home screen, opening the camera, triggering a shortcut, or invoking a Siri request.

Image Credits: Apple

iOS 18 also has vehicle motion cues in the form of dots on the edges of the screen to help you with motion sickness. These dots will give you an indication of the vehicle’s movement. You can set it on, off, or in automatic detection mode.Music Haptics will match the iPhone Taptic Engine with the rhythm of songs allowing the deaf and hard of hearing to enjoy Apple Music.

Additional reporting: Sarah Perez

Meet Wayther, an iOS weather forecast app designed specifically for road trips

Image Credits: Wayther

A new iOS app called Wayther wants to help you better plan your road trips by giving you real-time road conditions and weather forecasts along your route. Created by indie developer Axel Le Pennec, Wayther gives you weather forecasts along your route up to 10 days in advance. 

Le Pennec, who has been building iOS apps since 2013, told TechCrunch that he came up with the idea for Wayther after adding a weather forecasts feature for his digital boating log book app, Skipper. 

“In addition to having the ability to record a boat trip in Skipper, I also wanted to add a new feature that would allow users to plan a future trip and check the weather along the route,” Le Pennec said. “I realized that it was a nice feature for the app, but maybe it was also an idea for another app that could be used by more users like truckers or travelers.” 

Le Pennec then decided to create Wayther.

Image Credits: Wayther

Wayther lets you pick different routes and adjust your departure or arrival times to find the perfect window for a safe and fun trip. The idea behind the app is to get rid of the need to type multiple locations into a weather app when planning a road trip and trying to determine when potentially bad weather might hit. 

You can identify severe weather alerts, poor visibility and night driving conditions. Plus, you can plan out your trip during scenic times like sunrise or sunset. 

Once you enter your starting point and destination into the app, it will give you three routes from which to choose. Wayther then gives you detailed weather forecasts at different points along your route. The app’s interactive map will show you a trip overview and detailed timeline. 

The app works in all countries where Apple Weather is available and supports both metric and imperial units. Wayther isn’t just aimed at car trips, as it can also be used for motorcycles, RVs, trucks, buses and bikes too. 

Image Credits: Wayther

Le Pennec told TechCrunch that this is just the first version of the app, and that he has a slew of features planned, such as the ability to add stops, view route history, save favorites and see live updates while driving. Le Pennec is also waiting on authorization from Apple to build a CarPlay app, and is also working to add better OS integration with widgets, Live Activity and Siri shortcuts. 

In addition, Le Pennec wants to make the app available in more languages, starting with French, German, Spanish and Italian. 

Wayther offers a free trial that gives three trips for free. After the trial period, you can choose from $1.99 weekly, $2.99 monthly or $14.99 yearly plans.

Apple iPhone user

Apple's public betas for iOS 18 are here to test out

Apple iPhone user

Image Credits: Apple

Apple released the public betas for its next generation of software on the iPhone, Mac, iPad and Apple Watch on Monday. You can now test out iOS 18 and many of its new features, except for Apple Intelligence, which is coming to beta this fall, and provide feedback to Apple.

Anyone interested in trying out Apple’s upcoming software upgrades can sign up for the Apple Beta Software Program on its website. There you can enroll your device to access early versions of these features. iOS 18 includes several new customization options for your Home Screen. For instance, you can now place app icons and widgets wherever you’d like on your iOS Home Screen, and give all of them a colored tint.

Other features you can check out in the iOS 18 beta is the iPhone’s completely new layout for the Photos app. The Messages app is also getting new features, including the ability to use Tapbacks with any emoji or sticker you’d like. In Wallet, the iOS 18 beta will allow early access to Tap to Cash, where Apple users can touch devices together to make in-person payments.

Once you’re finished trying out the iOS 18 beta, you can restore a previously released OS version by following Apple’s instructions here. The company notes you can only roll back to an older software on the iPhone, iPad and Mac. You’ll have to stick with the beta version on the Apple Watch until iOS 18 officially rolls out in the fall.

One feature we’re particularly excited to try in the iOS 18 beta is the ability to say “yes” or “no” to Siri by nodding your head while wearing AirPods Pros (you’ll need the 2nd generation for this one). This feature was unveiled during Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference in June.

Another feature that caught everyone’s attention during WWDC was Apple Intelligence, the iPhone maker’s answer to our current AI craze. It will not be available in today’s public beta release. When it does come out, it will be limited to the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max.

Without Apple Intelligence, iOS 18 beta feels like a TV show that’s waiting for the finale

iOS 18 could 'sherlock' $400M in app revenue

Apple app store icon

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Apple’s practice of leveraging ideas from its third-party developer community to become new iOS and Mac features and apps has a hefty price tag, a new report indicates. Ahead of its fall release, you can download the public beta for iOS 18 right now to get a firsthand look at Apple’s changes, which may affect apps that today have an estimated $393 million in revenue and have been downloaded roughly 58 million times over the past year, according to an analysis by app intelligence firm Appfigures.

Every June at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, the iPhone maker teases the upcoming releases of its software and operating systems, which often include features previously only available through third-party apps. The practice is so common now it’s even been given a name: “sherlocking” — a reference to a 1990s search app for Mac that borrowed features from a third-party app known as Watson. Now when Apple launches a new feature that was before the domain of a third-party app, it’s said to have “sherlocked” the app.

In earlier years, sherlocking apps made some sense. After all, did the iPhone’s flashlight really need to be a third-party offering, or would it be better as a built-in function? Plus, Apple has been able to launch features that made its software better adapted to consumers’ wants and needs by looking at what’s popular among the third-party developer community.

Of course, this practice also raises the question as to whether Apple is leveraging proprietary data to make its determinations about what to build next, and whether the apps it competes with are being offered an even playing field. For example, before Apple launched its own parental controls system, it shut down many third-party apps that had built businesses in this space by saying their solutions were now noncompliant with its rules and policies. The apps weren’t offered access to a developer API for managing Apple’s built-in parental controls for years, prompting an antitrust investigation.

In more recent years, Apple has “sherlocked” third parties with launches of features like Continuity Camera, medication tracking, sleep tracking and mood tracking, as well as apps like Freeform and Journal. This year, it turned its attention to password managers, call recording and transcription apps, those for making custom emoji, AI-powered writing tools and math helpers, trail apps and more.

In an analysis of third-party apps that generated more than 1,000 downloads per year, Appfigures discovered several genres that had found themselves in Apple’s crosshairs in 2024.

In terms of worldwide gross revenue, these categories have generated significant income over the past 12 months, with the trail app category making the most at $307 million per year, led by market leader and 2023 Apple “App of the Year” AllTrails. Grammar helper apps, like Grammarly and others, also generated $35.7 million, while math helpers and password managers earned $23.4 million and $20.3 million, respectively. Apps for making custom emoji generated $7 million, too.

Image Credits: Appfigures

Of these, trail apps accounted for the vast majority of “potentially sherlocked” revenue, or 78%, noted Appfigures, as well as 40% of downloads of sherlocked apps. In May 2024, they accounted for an estimated $28.8 million in gross consumer spending and 2.5 million downloads, to give you an idea of scale.

Many of these app categories were growing quickly, with math solvers having seen revenue growth of 43% year-over-year followed by grammar helpers (+40%), password managers (+38%) and trail apps (+28%). Emoji-making apps, however, were seeing declines at -17% year-over-year.

Image Credits: Appfigures

By downloads, grammar helpers had seen 9.4 million installs over the past 12 months, followed by emoji makers (10.6 million), math-solving apps (9.5 million) and password managers (457,000 installs).

Although these apps certainly have dedicated user bases that may not immediately choose to switch to a first-party offering, Apple’s ability to offer similar functionality built-in could be detrimental to their potential growth. Casual users may be satisfied by Apple’s “good enough” solutions and won’t seek out alternatives.

However, apps that continue to develop new features and add enhancements beyond what Apple includes while also taking advantage of other new ways to reach users, like through Apple’s improved Siri, may have a better shot than others.

Image Credits: Appfigures

This story was originally published June 18 and was updated to include information about the iOS 18 public beta.

With the latest iOS 18 developer beta, Apple makes flashlight UI more fun

Image Credits: TechCrunch

Apple initially added a new flashlight UI in iOS 18’s third developer beta, and with iOS 18 now available in public beta, you can try one of the most underrated additions to your iPhone right now.

The company had already introduced a new way to control True Tone Flashlights on iPhone 14 Pro and 15 Pro models. Unlike the previous controls of on/off and four levels of brightness, the new controls include variable brightness and a way to adjust the width of the beam. The controls in the first beta just had vertical and horizontal lines to represent them, and it took users a second to get accustomed to it.

However, with the iOS 18 developer beta 3, Apple has made the feature and design more amiable and simpler to use. The new design has a curved line to indicate both width of the beam and brightness. The UI also shows a dotted curved lineup top to indicate the peak intensity mark.

This is not a massive change, but it just makes for a fun design shift. As an added bonus, it also makes the flashlight more useful.

The third developer beta brings another design change, automatically converting third-party apps’ icons to a dark shade. Previously, only Apple’s native apps had new dark-tinted icons.

What’s more, the company has added a new dynamic wallpaper that changes colors based on the time of the day.

This story was originally published July 9 and was updated to include information about the iOS 18 public beta.

Meet Wayther, an iOS weather forecast app designed specifically for road trips

Image Credits: Wayther

A new iOS app called Wayther wants to help you better plan your road trips by giving you real-time road conditions and weather forecasts along your route. Created by indie developer Axel Le Pennec, Wayther gives you weather forecasts along your route up to 10 days in advance. 

Le Pennec, who has been building iOS apps since 2013, told TechCrunch that he came up with the idea for Wayther after adding a weather forecasts feature for his digital boating log book app, Skipper. 

“In addition to having the ability to record a boat trip in Skipper, I also wanted to add a new feature that would allow users to plan a future trip and check the weather along the route,” Le Pennec said. “I realized that it was a nice feature for the app, but maybe it was also an idea for another app that could be used by more users like truckers or travelers.” 

Le Pennec then decided to create Wayther.

Image Credits: Wayther

Wayther lets you pick different routes and adjust your departure or arrival times to find the perfect window for a safe and fun trip. The idea behind the app is to get rid of the need to type multiple locations into a weather app when planning a road trip and trying to determine when potentially bad weather might hit. 

You can identify severe weather alerts, poor visibility and night driving conditions. Plus, you can plan out your trip during scenic times like sunrise or sunset. 

Once you enter your starting point and destination into the app, it will give you three routes from which to choose. Wayther then gives you detailed weather forecasts at different points along your route. The app’s interactive map will show you a trip overview and detailed timeline. 

The app works in all countries where Apple Weather is available and supports both metric and imperial units. Wayther isn’t just aimed at car trips, as it can also be used for motorcycles, RVs, trucks, buses and bikes too. 

Image Credits: Wayther

Le Pennec told TechCrunch that this is just the first version of the app, and that he has a slew of features planned, such as the ability to add stops, view route history, save favorites and see live updates while driving. Le Pennec is also waiting on authorization from Apple to build a CarPlay app, and is also working to add better OS integration with widgets, Live Activity and Siri shortcuts. 

In addition, Le Pennec wants to make the app available in more languages, starting with French, German, Spanish and Italian. 

Wayther offers a free trial that gives three trips for free. After the trial period, you can choose from $1.99 weekly, $2.99 monthly or $14.99 yearly plans.

Apple iPhone user

Apple's public betas for iOS 18 are here to test out

Apple iPhone user

Image Credits: Apple

Apple released the public betas for its next generation of software on the iPhone, Mac, iPad and Apple Watch on Monday. You can now test out iOS 18 and many of its new features, except for Apple Intelligence, which is coming to beta this fall, and provide feedback to Apple.

Anyone interested in trying out Apple’s upcoming software upgrades can sign up for the Apple Beta Software Program on its website. There you can enroll your device to access early versions of these features. iOS 18 includes several new customization options for your Home Screen. For instance, you can now place app icons and widgets wherever you’d like on your iOS Home Screen, and give all of them a colored tint.

Other features you can check out in the iOS 18 beta is the iPhone’s completely new layout for the Photos app. The Messages app is also getting new features, including the ability to use Tapbacks with any emoji or sticker you’d like. In Wallet, the iOS 18 beta will allow early access to Tap to Cash, where Apple users can touch devices together to make in-person payments.

Once you’re finished trying out the iOS 18 beta, you can restore a previously released OS version by following Apple’s instructions here. The company notes you can only roll back to an older software on the iPhone, iPad and Mac. You’ll have to stick with the beta version on the Apple Watch until iOS 18 officially rolls out in the fall.

One feature we’re particularly excited to try in the iOS 18 beta is the ability to say “yes” or “no” to Siri by nodding your head while wearing AirPods Pros (you’ll need the 2nd generation for this one). This feature was unveiled during Apple’s Worldwide Developer’s Conference in June.

Another feature that caught everyone’s attention during WWDC was Apple Intelligence, the iPhone maker’s answer to our current AI craze. It will not be available in today’s public beta release. When it does come out, it will be limited to the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max.

Without Apple Intelligence, iOS 18 beta feels like a TV show that’s waiting for the finale

iOS 18 could 'sherlock' $400M in app revenue

Apple app store icon

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch

Apple’s practice of leveraging ideas from its third-party developer community to become new iOS and Mac features and apps has a hefty price tag, a new report indicates. Ahead of its fall release, you can download the public beta for iOS 18 right now to get a firsthand look at Apple’s changes, which may affect apps that today have an estimated $393 million in revenue and have been downloaded roughly 58 million times over the past year, according to an analysis by app intelligence firm Appfigures.

Every June at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, the iPhone maker teases the upcoming releases of its software and operating systems, which often include features previously only available through third-party apps. The practice is so common now it’s even been given a name: “sherlocking” — a reference to a 1990s search app for Mac that borrowed features from a third-party app known as Watson. Now when Apple launches a new feature that was before the domain of a third-party app, it’s said to have “sherlocked” the app.

In earlier years, sherlocking apps made some sense. After all, did the iPhone’s flashlight really need to be a third-party offering, or would it be better as a built-in function? Plus, Apple has been able to launch features that made its software better adapted to consumers’ wants and needs by looking at what’s popular among the third-party developer community.

Of course, this practice also raises the question as to whether Apple is leveraging proprietary data to make its determinations about what to build next, and whether the apps it competes with are being offered an even playing field. For example, before Apple launched its own parental controls system, it shut down many third-party apps that had built businesses in this space by saying their solutions were now noncompliant with its rules and policies. The apps weren’t offered access to a developer API for managing Apple’s built-in parental controls for years, prompting an antitrust investigation.

In more recent years, Apple has “sherlocked” third parties with launches of features like Continuity Camera, medication tracking, sleep tracking and mood tracking, as well as apps like Freeform and Journal. This year, it turned its attention to password managers, call recording and transcription apps, those for making custom emoji, AI-powered writing tools and math helpers, trail apps and more.

In an analysis of third-party apps that generated more than 1,000 downloads per year, Appfigures discovered several genres that had found themselves in Apple’s crosshairs in 2024.

In terms of worldwide gross revenue, these categories have generated significant income over the past 12 months, with the trail app category making the most at $307 million per year, led by market leader and 2023 Apple “App of the Year” AllTrails. Grammar helper apps, like Grammarly and others, also generated $35.7 million, while math helpers and password managers earned $23.4 million and $20.3 million, respectively. Apps for making custom emoji generated $7 million, too.

Image Credits: Appfigures

Of these, trail apps accounted for the vast majority of “potentially sherlocked” revenue, or 78%, noted Appfigures, as well as 40% of downloads of sherlocked apps. In May 2024, they accounted for an estimated $28.8 million in gross consumer spending and 2.5 million downloads, to give you an idea of scale.

Many of these app categories were growing quickly, with math solvers having seen revenue growth of 43% year-over-year followed by grammar helpers (+40%), password managers (+38%) and trail apps (+28%). Emoji-making apps, however, were seeing declines at -17% year-over-year.

Image Credits: Appfigures

By downloads, grammar helpers had seen 9.4 million installs over the past 12 months, followed by emoji makers (10.6 million), math-solving apps (9.5 million) and password managers (457,000 installs).

Although these apps certainly have dedicated user bases that may not immediately choose to switch to a first-party offering, Apple’s ability to offer similar functionality built-in could be detrimental to their potential growth. Casual users may be satisfied by Apple’s “good enough” solutions and won’t seek out alternatives.

However, apps that continue to develop new features and add enhancements beyond what Apple includes while also taking advantage of other new ways to reach users, like through Apple’s improved Siri, may have a better shot than others.

Image Credits: Appfigures

This story was originally published June 18 and was updated to include information about the iOS 18 public beta.

With the latest iOS 18 developer beta, Apple makes flashlight UI more fun

Image Credits: TechCrunch

Apple initially added a new flashlight UI in iOS 18’s third developer beta, and with iOS 18 now available in public beta, you can try one of the most underrated additions to your iPhone right now.

The company had already introduced a new way to control True Tone Flashlights on iPhone 14 Pro and 15 Pro models. Unlike the previous controls of on/off and four levels of brightness, the new controls include variable brightness and a way to adjust the width of the beam. The controls in the first beta just had vertical and horizontal lines to represent them, and it took users a second to get accustomed to it.

However, with the iOS 18 developer beta 3, Apple has made the feature and design more amiable and simpler to use. The new design has a curved line to indicate both width of the beam and brightness. The UI also shows a dotted curved lineup top to indicate the peak intensity mark.

This is not a massive change, but it just makes for a fun design shift. As an added bonus, it also makes the flashlight more useful.

The third developer beta brings another design change, automatically converting third-party apps’ icons to a dark shade. Previously, only Apple’s native apps had new dark-tinted icons.

What’s more, the company has added a new dynamic wallpaper that changes colors based on the time of the day.

This story was originally published July 9 and was updated to include information about the iOS 18 public beta.