Source - http://www.technewsworld.com/
By - Richard Adhikari
Category - Suites In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
By - Richard Adhikari
Category - Suites In Miami
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Suites In Miami |
The issue affects just a fraction of a percent of customers who use
the system, Apple told the paper, promising a fix in an upcoming
software update.
This will be the second fix since the iOS 7 was released Sept. 18.
The first was issued Sept. 20 to resolve a problem with the iPhone 5s
fingerprint scanner.
At least 16 iOS 7 problems have surfaced so far, including a bug that
lets anyone bypass the iPhone's lockscreen, glitchy media controls,
users receiving other people's messages or contacts, and complaints that
the user interface causes motion sickness.
"Quantitatively, I can't tell you that this is a new record for bugs," ABI Research
Senior Analyst Michael Morgan told MacNewsWorld, "but I will say this:
Apple has opened the door for this to be a buggy release."
Apple did not respond to our request to comment for this story.
Users have been complaining about the problem with iMessage since June, when the beta was released to registered iOS developers.
User Kjt822
complained about iMessage to the Apple Support Communities on June 3.
On July 21, user BarnYard_63 told the Apple Support Communities that
some addressees were not getting iMessages and that Apple Support had denied there was a problem with iMessage.
In the ensuing discussion, BarnYard_63 pointed out that angry users
had sent 323,000 tweets about iMessage not working in the previous two
days. On Aug. 5, the user said Apple had continued to deny there was a
problem.
User gjn6595
brought up the problem with iMessage to the Apple Support Communities Sept. 7 and user Seanm85
did so Sept. 18.
"I would say iOS 7 is buggier than 6 or 5, but that is just an
impression and not an empirically based judgment," Andrew Jaquith, chief
technology officer at
SilverSky, told MacNewsWorld.
Perhaps iOS 7 is especially buggy because Apple was trying to do too much at one time.
New OS releases "are always going to be buggy, but Apple did a lot of
big things at once, and they were under time pressure to deliver -- so
it's entirely possible that they didn't do quality checks as thoroughly
as they could," ABI's Morgan said.
"Normally [Apple] adds a few new features, maybe they add in a Siri,
and that's your ordinary update," Morgan explained. "This time you have
feature tweaks, a hardware-based fingerprint scanner, the switch to
64-bit processing, and the whole new UI design paradigm."
Apple's release process is also to blame, Ken Dulaney, a vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner, told MacNewsWorld.
"The real criticism is the way they test out the OS," Dulaney said.
"Windows sits out in the open market for months and months to shake it
out; Apple keeps [iOS] under wraps with limited distribution."
Apple's practice of rolling out an update to everyone at once makes
things worse, Morgan suggested. "Once they release a new piece of
software, the whole user base is on it and it all happens at once, so
all the problems happen to everybody at the same time."
The situation will probably get worse: "As iOS gets more complex --
as it inevitably will -- the process Apple uses will continue to be
challenged to keep the introduction bugs at a minimum level," remarked
Gartner's Dulaney.
Still, "it's just growing pains," Morgan said. "Most of the issues will be dealt with in the next few months."
About one-third of SilverSky's customers have upgraded their devices
to iOS 7 "without too many issues," said Jaquith. "I would say that yes,
it is up to snuff, but if you are affected by one of the issues, that
won't be much comfort until Apple fixes them."

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