Now that iOS 10 beta 2 is available, here are all the new features and changes Apple has introduced with second beta of iOS 10 on iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices.
Apple has officially made available for download iOS 10 beta 2 for compatible iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices three weeks after releasing beta 1 seed. After an exhausting, but highly rewarding week of hosting developers at its annual Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC 2016) in San Francisco this year, the company has found the time to push out the second pre-release seed of the next iteration of the iOS mobile platform, which as always, is available for those 13 million+ registered developers of Apple Developer Program to download, install and test immediately.
Apple has released first new animated sticker packs for the Messages app in iOS 10 beta. These sticker packs can be downloaded right now from the App Store.
We have some news on the jailbreak front. The Chinese Pangu team has demonstrated iOS 10 jailbreak, as well as hinted at an iOS 9.3.2 jailbreak coming soon for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices. Here are the details.
iOS 10 has another handy little trick up its sleeve that wasn't announced by Apple. It can intelligently have just the one device respond to a "Hey Siri" command where iOS 9 would simply have multiple devices try to offer an answer.
If you have a 3D Touch compatible iPhone, then iOS 10 looks all set to introduce a new feature that will afford you with the ability to prioritize the downloading and installation of apps when restoring from an iCloud backup.
CarPlay in iOS 10 got an update as well. Here are all the new features that are coming to your car as part of Apple CarPlay update in iOS 10.
How to get all of the new 72 emojis that are part of Unicode 9.0 on your iOS 10 and iOS 9 running iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices right now.
There are a whopping 72 new emoji winging their way to your iPhone and iPad, likely with the upcoming iOS 10 update, after the Unicode standards team announced their release this week.
Whenever Apple releases a beta version of a major revamp of iOS following its WWDC keynote session, there's an acceptance that developers and security researchers will take the opportunity to pull the firmware's codebase apart to see what they can find.
















