iOS 9.3: What features are in the new iPhone and iPad update?


iOS 9.3: Night Shift, Education and Notes

Update: Apple’s iOS 9.3 was officially announced at the company’s keynote today. Here’s everything we know about the new iPhone and iPad update.

iOS 9.3 is the biggest incremental iPhone and iPad update in several years, as Apple has new software features that go as far as changing your sleeping habits.

That’s right, it has the long-sought-after iPhone Night Shift feature, which controls the blue light levels emitted from your screen, and it’s finally out of beta so that everyone can download starting today.

Plenty of other useful features are here as well: multi-user support for students, Apple Notes locked behind a password (or Touch ID) and tweaked News, Health and Apple CarPlay apps. In the US, Verizon gains Wi-Fi calling – finally.

All of this is coming to devices that currently run iOS 9 as well as a new phone and tablet: iPad Pro 9.7 and iPhone SE, which launch March 31 in the 13 countries including the US, UK and Australia.

Night Shift

I’ve read dozens of news stories that tell me I shouldn’t go to bed staring at my iPhone 6S Plus, my iPad Air 2 or my new MacBook, but do I follow those wise instructions? No.

Night Shift is the iOS 9.3 solution I’ve been waiting for, because it won’t require me to change my nighttime reading and working habits. It automatically tints my screen to warmer colors.

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

“Many studies have shown that exposure to bright blue light in the evening can affect your circadian rhythms and make it harder to fall asleep,” according to Apple.

What’s neat is that iOS 9.3 uses the clock and geolocation to determine the sunset, and the screen becomes progressively more orange-tinted throughout the night, exactly like f.lux on Macs and Reader’s Edition on Amazon Kindle HD 8.

The completely optional Night Shift mode is found in Settings > Display and Brightness > Blue Light Reduction, with a slider bar to control how orange or blue it looks, and to adjust the schedule.

Apple’s swipe-up-from-the-bottom Control Center overlay menu adds Night Shift to the bottom row of quick settings. It’s flanked by flashlight and timer on the left and calculator and camera on the right. That’s how important this feature is for the new update.

It’s all designed to allow your eyes to relax so that falling asleep is easier, and when it’s time to wake up, the screen color shifts back to normal.

Multi-user user support… kind of

Buried in the iOS 9.3 release notes is the first sign of multi-user support, only it’s strictly for classroom iPads right now.

Apple calls this new app suite ‘iOS in Education’, and the highlight is the fact that it enables students to log into any iPad in any classroom and pick up where they left off.

iOS 9.3 release date features and news

This makes a lot of sense for a school’s shared iPad experience, and it comes with Photo IDs to denote profiles and simple passwords for younger students.

iOS in Education also includes three other apps meant for teachers and school officials: a new Classroom app for teach-guided lessons that ensures the students follow along, and Apple School Manager and Managed Apple IDs for consolidated admin portals.

Even if you’re not going to school, the simple fact that Apple has built one form of a multi-user login experience should give you high hope for a similar iOS 10 experience in a few months.

Apple Notes password protected

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

Before the new iOS 9.3 arrived, keeping confidential information in Apple Notes could be a little risky. Anyone could nab your unlocked iPhone and scan the secrets you jotted down.

Thankfully, the power of Touch ID and passcodes are now a part of Apple Notes. Far too many people (read: parents) keep all of their financial data, medical information and passwords in this not-so-secret app.

iOS 9.3 allows your vulnerable folks to protect certain notes under lock and fingerprint for extra security. It also lets you sort everything by date created, date modified and alphabetically now.

iOS 9.3 update: Apple News, Health and CarPlay

Apple News curation tweaks

Apple News is a little more personal and a little easier to navigate in iOS 9.3, though it doesn’t address its biggest design problems. That may have to wait until iOS 10.

Instead, the pre-loaded Flipboard clone now has a more personalized “For You” section based on your interests, and new suggestions with trending topics and Editor’s Picks.

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

It’s more streamlined now because stories with a video can be played straight from the feed, and the iPhone now supports a landscape view for everyone. The entire app loads faster, too.

None of this helps the fact that Apple News is an extremely siloed app. I really dig Samsung’s easier-to-access Flipboard integration, which occupies the leftmost homescreen of its devices, like the Samsung Galaxy S6, Galaxy Note 5 and Galaxy Tab S2. But this is a start.

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

New Apple Health dashboard

Apple Health is becoming a little less lifeless with the iOS 9.3 update thanks to new, worthwhile third-party app suggestions and Apple Watch integration. It’s about time.

Tracking down which third-party apps deliver the metrics you want is going to be easier because Health makes suggestions in its existing categories, like Weight, Workouts or Sleep.

The next time you go to Health to track your weight, you’re going to see “Apps for Tracking Weight” at the bottom with at least five alternate apps you may want to try instead. Sadly, there’s still no Fitbit integration on the horizon.

The dashboard is about to change if you own an Apple Watch. Apple sensibly added its Activity metrics of move, exercise and stand to the Health app’s opening menu. Don’t be alarmed. The separate Activity still exists if you prefer that interface.

CarPlay Music and Maps enhancements

Apple CarPlay is slowly driving alongside the shoulder of the highway, trying to pick up speed by rolling out in 2016 and forthcoming 2017 cars and trucks.

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

The iOS 9.3 CarPlay update is going to give it a minor boost starting with Apple Music tweaks. New (expert-picked) and For You (preference-based) songs are now part of the music menu.

The Nearby feature found in Apple Maps on the iPhone and Apple Watch is also coming to CarPlay cars, helping you find points of interests when you need them the most.

Minor iOS 9.3 changes

That’s everything Apple tells you about iOS 9.3 upfront, but the software update has a few more goodies buried within its app-filled menus.

We’ve discovered new 3D Touch shortcuts for preloaded apps: Weather, App Store, Stocks, Health, Compass and Settings are all a tiny bit easier to navigate in iOS 9.3.

Need to tell Siri something in Hebrew, Finish or Malay? Apple’s personal assistant now understands those languages, bringing the total up to 37 languages.

In the US, Verizon customers can take advantage of Wi-Fi calling, as beta 3 finally adds this long-promised feature. Sure, Verizon’s signal is often strong, but even it falters inside tall skyscrapers.

iOS 9.3 update release date news and features

Finally, although iOS 9 release notes don’t address the newly discovered 1970 glitch that bricks your iPhone and iPad if the date is set to January 1, 1970, expect there to be a vague reference to that in the final version of the text.

With iOS 9.3 out now for public consumption, everyone can download it and fall asleep while reading your iPhone or iPad in bed.

Source: techradar.com

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9 Comments
  1. Reply Alexandrine Schinner March 22, 2016 at 12:34 am

    I'm SO glad you split this content onto two pages. I would be exhausted if I had to view it all on one page. Thank you, TechRadar!

  2. Reply Gail Murray March 22, 2016 at 12:44 am

    I wish Apple would allow an app similar to Motorola's Smart Actions app. Also, I would love to see this: If you lose your iPhone somewhere, and a bad guy gets a hold of it, all he or she, would have to do is shut it off so it can't be tracked….Well…..to prevent a bad guy from doing that, a PIN or fingerprint should be required to shut off the iPhone. That way it stays on and it can be tracked via another apple product or thru the internet. That's my two cents……

  3. Reply Ava Kihn March 22, 2016 at 1:05 am

    PLEASE tell me they've fixed the heavy noise reduction, which makes photos look waxy and smeared (even bright light), the IQ on the 6S is the worst I've seen, take a portrait photo and look at it at 100% on a monitor, looks like a watercolor painting and much worse than other high end smartphones… PLEASE Apple bring the natural look to photos back as soon as possible!!!

  4. Reply Evans Steuber March 22, 2016 at 1:10 am

    Actually you can adjust how red-shifted the screen is.

  5. Reply Prof. Immanuel Bruen II March 22, 2016 at 2:29 am

    Apple introduces many features which are really useful. As an Apple user I am happy to see these features. But I think night mode won't help me a lot. Because I don't like the yellow color screen. It is better to use a screen protector like "ocushield" rather than using this feature.

  6. Reply Boris Ondricka Jr. March 22, 2016 at 3:58 am

    I updated my iPhone 6s Plus to iOS 9.3 and my phone feels a lot more snappier now.

  7. Reply Isai Ernser IV March 22, 2016 at 6:11 am

    Looking forward to this. I've just recently installed Flux on my Mac so this is good timing.

  8. Reply Gregg Tromp March 22, 2016 at 7:09 am

    That is an excellent idea! I have thought about that flaw but have never lost my phone so it was not enough concern to think of the solution. But requiring the pin or the fingerprint to shut down a device seems a simple additional step that should not be a bother to anyone and would provide a lot of potential benefit. Nice!

  9. Reply Jeremy Abbott March 22, 2016 at 7:56 am

    untill your touch screen faults and you need the capability of a force shut down…

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