Apple's iOS 8 now on 68% of devices as distribution growth holds steady
According to the latest statistics from Apple, distribution of company's iOS 8 mobile operating continues to plod along and is now installed on 68 percent of iPhones and iPads registered to the iOS App Store.
While it's not setting any records, iOS 8 adoption is steadily rising and now accounts for 68 percent of iOS devices linked to Apple's App Store, up 8 percent from statistics reported in late November. Apple posted the latest numbers to its developer website on Wednesday.
Unsurprisingly, older iOS versions saw respective shares decrease over the same time period, with iOS 7 decreasing from 35 percent to 29 percent, and iOS 6 or below moving from 5 percent down to 4 percent of App Store registrants. The consistently rising share of iOS 8 users suggest new device sales are moving the needle helped along by a trickle of late upgraders.
In early October, iOS 8 adoption saw a brief period of stagnation after a buggy iOS 8.0.1 update inadvertently disabled cellular connectivity and Touch ID for iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus owners. The slowdown followed an initially strong uptake typical of Apple's major platform releases.
Distribution picked up when Apple released iOS 8.1 in October, activating touchless Apple Pay transactions for iPhone 6.
The most recent iOS 8.1.2 update was released in December to rectify an issue concerning missing iTunes ringtones, as well as patch security holes.
While it's not setting any records, iOS 8 adoption is steadily rising and now accounts for 68 percent of iOS devices linked to Apple's App Store, up 8 percent from statistics reported in late November. Apple posted the latest numbers to its developer website on Wednesday.
Unsurprisingly, older iOS versions saw respective shares decrease over the same time period, with iOS 7 decreasing from 35 percent to 29 percent, and iOS 6 or below moving from 5 percent down to 4 percent of App Store registrants. The consistently rising share of iOS 8 users suggest new device sales are moving the needle helped along by a trickle of late upgraders.
In early October, iOS 8 adoption saw a brief period of stagnation after a buggy iOS 8.0.1 update inadvertently disabled cellular connectivity and Touch ID for iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus owners. The slowdown followed an initially strong uptake typical of Apple's major platform releases.
Distribution picked up when Apple released iOS 8.1 in October, activating touchless Apple Pay transactions for iPhone 6.
The most recent iOS 8.1.2 update was released in December to rectify an issue concerning missing iTunes ringtones, as well as patch security holes.
Comments
Lollipop is for suckers.
At present no % at all. I suppose because it is still available only on Nexus devices.
There's one vendor who seems to get it right and that's Motorola. Their Moto X, G and E received Android 5.x already and in some cases before even the Nexus models. How? They stay close to stock Android so not much needed in adjustments once the code from Google arrives.
It would be faster if people wouldn't be afraid of their older iphones becoming slower with the update (and it happens, sadly). I don't like the idea of my new Plus will work slower in two years than now.
I put iOS 6 on my 3GS. It was still useable....
Let's hope they fix it and make it better, along with the mandatory apps that you can't get rid of.
A friend had an iPhone 4S and got rid of it after the iOS 8 update. Too slow. Same as the iPhone 4S we had. Too slow and nearly unusable. Maybe flattening and reloading would improve things with a fresh install.
Search is still broken. Start a search, then re-search and your results don't show up.
For the most part, iOS 8 seems okay, but people are not going to be happy installing on older devices.
but...but...Android again?
There's one vendor who seems to get it right and that's Motorola. Their Moto X, G and E received Android 5.x already and in some cases before even the Nexus models. How? They stay close to stock Android so not much needed in adjustments once the code from Google arrives.
Smart move but my be a result of having been under their umbrella for awhile.
Meanwhile Lollipoop reaches what %?
At present no % at all. I suppose because it is still available only on Nexus devices.
2.1% "A figure that has been 'flat-lining' for some time" (source below)
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2384995/android-50-lollipop-is-installed-on-21-percent-of-devices
SuckerGate ??
"ANDROID LOLLIPOP: WHY SO MANY BUGS?"
"A short-lived enthusiasm …"
"but more important bugs appeared later ."
"And no … it’s still not finished and worse , the latest bugs are much more troublesome."
http://androidphonehub.com/news-2/android-lollipop-why-so-many-bugs/
You’re not an idiot, so you know the difference between outright mocking and whataboutism.
Don’t demean yourself.
Did you catch that whataboutandroiditis from [@]SolipsismY[/@]? He had it the other day, and now you do.
I probably did ask about Android but I don't know in what regard. I think I asked today or yesterday if ad revenue in apps was included with the payout totals for each platform.
It was more like a week or two ago. I guess we now know its incubation period as digitalclips became symptomatic today.
Edit. It was 22 days ago.
I still think that's a legitimate question, but he could have caught [E-Bola, Forumitis, Androidea Simplex II, ???] from me.