iOS 16 will bring major changes and customization features to the Lock Screen, much-awaited changes in iMessage such as mark as unread and message edits, and so much more.
Users have long asked Apple to give them more personalization controls on iOS, and Apple is finally doing that with iOS 16. Unfortunately, all of iOS 16's new features, including the update itself, won't be coming to customers who own many older iPhones, with the most notable being the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus.
As a refresher, the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus were released in September 2016. The iPhone 7 Plus was the first iPhone to feature a dual-lens camera setup, and both models were the first to get rid of the physical Home button and replace it with a Haptic one. The iPhone 7 also marked the end of the headphone jack.
With iOS 15, Apple supported devices as old as the second-generation iPhone SE, including the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus. While it was expected that iOS 16 would drop support for the iPhone 6S, iPhone 6S Plus, and the now-discontinued iPod touch, surprisingly, Apple also dropped support for the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus.
Following Monday's WWDC keynote, iPhone 7 users shared their disapproval online over the lack of support for the upcoming release of iOS. "Wow. Surprised they ditched the 7/7+," one user wrote on the MacRumors Forums. Other customers voiced complaints on Twitter.
Apple to iPhone 6S, iPhone 6S Plus, iPhone SE and iPhone 7 users who will not be able to use iOS 16#WWDC22 pic.twitter.com/1uzfjCmE5D
— Kojo Darko (@Joeybneba) June 6, 2022
iPhone 7 didn’t have to lose iOS support, all you had to do was limit some of the lockscreen customizations and then the iPhone 7 could run iOS 16.
— Shawn Murphy (@iPodee) June 7, 2022
I love how Apple is forcing iPhone 6 and iPhone 7 users to upgrade with this iOS 16. Aggressive marketing at its best.#WWDC22 pic.twitter.com/1sZu41kMy6
— DME (@dme_363) June 7, 2022
Apple disappointed me because it turned off software support for no reason for iPhone 7, 7 plus, MacBook Air 2017, MacBook Pro 2016. We want ios 16 and macOS Ventura on these devices because they are still capable. @Apple that’s a big shame for you.
— Marius ASLAN (@AslanMarius) June 6, 2022
Apple not supporting ios 16 on iPhone 7 might be most weird thing i ever saw
— Pracar (@Not_Prasar) June 6, 2022
Worst part is
Ipads that are LESS powerful than iphone 7 wilk get the new ios
What kind of logic is that apple?
Why ,why,why?No iOS 16 support on iPhone 7,I was very nervous yesterday,even cried because no iOS 16 support for iPhone 7.I tested betas since iOS 14.6 and now I need to stay only on iOS 15💔ðŸ˜ðŸ˜¡ðŸ˜–
— Balogh Claudiu Gabriel (@Outland3r_2007) June 7, 2022
iPhone 7 and 7 plus are out of iOS 16. Mine is 8 Plus but even if mine comes out next year, I won't change iPhones. Seriously, I refuse to get one of those iPhones with a full screen, which are the worst with this horrible screen.
— Larissa Câmara 📱 (@lari_camara_) June 6, 2022
The reasonable explanation is that the A10 Fusion chip in the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus is simply not powerful enough to run iOS 16 and all its new features. That explanation, though, is invalidated when the sixth and seventh-generation iPad, both powered by the same A10 Fusion chip, are supported by iPadOS 16.
Furthermore, the fifth-generation iPad, which features the less powerful A9 chip compared to the A10 Fusion chip in the iPhone 7, is also supported by iPadOS 16. While iOS and iPadOS are different, they also share many of the same features and the same underlying technology.
In theory, Apple could have supported the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus with iOS 16 but just disabled some of the CPU and ML-heavy features for newer models.
By doing so, iPhone 7 users would still benefit from performance and security enhancements offered by iOS 16, as well as small refinements like the ability to edit iMessages, which don't require an intense amount of CPU work.
Offering only newer devices certain features that aren't available to older models is not something new, and a practice Apple is long accustomed to. As a matter of fact, several of iOS 16's latest features will only work with iPhones powered by the A12 Bionic and later.
As MacRumors reported in May, it was plausible that due to the higher memory on the iPhone 7 Plus, it would retain support for iOS 16, while the iPhone 7 would miss out. It seems as though, to avoid any possible confusion, Apple has just entirely dropped support for both iPhone 7 models instead of supporting one and not the other.
We've reached out to Apple to comment on why the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus won't be receiving iOS 16 and we'll update this article if we hear back.
This article, "Apple Faces User Backlash After Dropping Support for iPhone 7 From iOS 16" first appeared on MacRumors.com
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source https://www.macrumors.com/2022/06/08/apple-user-backlash-dropping-iphone-7-ios-16/
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