ios 15 should learn from Android 12
Ios 14.5 has already has gone live and keeping in mind that it carries some steady enhancements to the iOS programming that ran out of the container in the iPhone 12 arrangement, we here at XDA feel iOS actually has a few approaches prior to coordinating with Android inconvenience
Better Notification Management
I regularly awaken to many notifications from Gmail, WhatsApp, and Telegram. In the event that my everyday driver is an Android, I see only three notification cards — one for each application — on the grounds that Android bunches all notifications from one application together.
I can extend and see every individual message in the event that I so decide, yet until I do that, my notifications remain perfectly coordinated.
Free Homescreen Grid
The iPhone 12 Pro Max is an unwind mobile phone to use with one hand. But some other mobile phone can’t use one hand because Today most people used widescreen mobile phones,
When these mobile phones struggle much to use one hand, but Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra or LG Wing with one hand does not struggle much because they place all apps at the bottom of the screen.
When we use a 6.7-inch iPhone 12 Pro Max or a 5.4-inch iPhone 12 Mini, the app home screen grid is set, and apps must start at the top of the screen in left-to-right order. Examine the picture below and tell me which phone tends to be easier to use with one hand. To get to Spotify on the iPhone in the picture, I have to let go of my grip and stretch my fingers.
Rotate Suggestions
Both Android and iOS have the option to lock portrait orientation, which prevents apps from rotating when the screen is tilted sideways. This is particularly useful while talking on the phone while lying in bed. On iOS, however, the lock is permanent. This means that if my portrait orientation lock is on and I want to watch a video in landscape orientation, I’ll have to go into the control center and toggle the portrait orientation lock off.
Predictive Dialing
As of now, iPhones are unable to perform this feature. In reality, iOS won’t show you the contact’s name until you’ve entered the entire phone number. Even if you’re off by one digit, iOS won’t budge. As an example, consider the following screenshots: My girlfriend’s contact wouldn’t appear on an iPhone until I finished entering all eight digits of her phone number; on an Android, the dialer had already ide
And iOS didn’t even try to scan for T9 Dialing. If you need to find a person by name, go to the Contacts tab and type their name into the search bar. It’s inconvenient, particularly if you’ve grown accustomed to dialing up contacts on Android with such ease.