Filed under: A Bit Of Inspiration, Apple, Attitude & Aptitude, Technology
In the last couple of months, Apple launched iOS 17.
I used to love these software updates …
I’d look up tips and tricks on the internet and spend the day messing with all the features.
But now – after all these years of updates – things are getting a bit thin on the ground and you can almost hear the scraping of the barrel in terms of what is being added or updated.
One of those is a feature that can tell if you’re holding the phone too close to your eyes.
If you are … you get this:
All good eh?
Well, not so much.
Because when you are a short-sighted fool with only one working eye, you have to put your phone pretty close to your face all the time … which means your iPhone stops what you’re looking at to tell you it’s too close to your face ALL THE TIME.
I know Apple increasingly wants to be seen as a credible health-tech company.
I get it must be increasingly difficult to create new features that impress.
I appreciate this alert has some value – and you can [thankfully] turn it off.
But it all feels a bit try-hard, a desperate attempt to have new news.
I get it, but it feels counter to what they once said about their innovation approach:
“New is easy, right is hard”.
OK, so they said it as a brilliant response to claims they were falling behind in innovation compared to brands like Samsung … but over the years, I’ve really felt their approach to innovation was more about integration than one-off gimmicks.
And it was good.
Until now … unless, of course, they’ve done a collab with Spec Savers and I get an email notifying me I need an eye-test and they’ve already booked my appointment.
Or they just automatically increase the font size … which could also be said for this blog.