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IOS 9.3

iOS 9
A version of the iOS operating system
IOS 9 Logo.png
IOS 9 Homescreen.png
iOS 9.3.5 running on an iPhone 6S, showing some of the default apps.
Developer Apple Inc.
Source model Closed, with open source components
Initial release September 16, 2015; 19 months ago (2015-09-16)
Latest release 9.3.5 (13G36) / August 25, 2016; 8 months ago (2016-08-25)
Platforms
Kernel type Hybrid (XNU)
License Proprietary EULA except for open-source components
Preceded by iOS 8
Succeeded by iOS 10
Official website iOS 9 at the Wayback Machine (archived September 6, 2016)
Support status
Third-party application support only

iPod Touch

iPad

iOS 9 is the ninth major release of the iOS mobile operating system developed by Apple Inc., being the successor to iOS 8. It was announced at the company's Worldwide Developers Conference on June 8, 2015, and was released on September 16, 2015. It was succeeded by iOS 10 on September 13, 2016.

iOS 9 incorporated many feature updates to built-in apps. Most notably, Notes received the ability to draw sketches with different tools, image insertion, prominent visual appearance for website links and map locations, and advanced list formatting; an all-new Apple News app aggregates articles from different sources; and Apple Maps received mass transit support, although in a limited number of locations at launch. Major new system updates include proactivity, where Siri and advanced search are combined to make the operating system more contextually aware of information (such as time and location), and can provide the user with information ahead of time. For searching, the proactive intelligence can display instant results in a widget-like format, including weather, sports, news, and more. iOS 9 also added multiple forms of multitasking to the iPad. In iOS 9.3, Apple added a Night Shift mode that changes the color of the device's display to a warmer, less "blue light" shade, to prevent any potential negative screen effect on users' circadian rhythms. Additionally, iOS 9 brought new user experience functions, including Quick Actions, and Peek and Pop, based on the touch-sensitive display technology in the iPhone 6S. Quick Actions are shortcuts on home screen app icons. Users can preview ("Peek") at content without moving away from the current screen before they enter ("Pop") the previewed content into full view.

Reception of iOS 9 was positive. Critics praised proactivity and Siri for making the Notification Center a central location for all information, and the potential for future updates to improve the functionality. The new multitasking features for the iPad were complimented, as were drawing and photo insertion in the Notes app. However, Apple News was criticized for a low number of decent-looking articles, and Apple Maps was criticized for the limited geographical availability of mass transit support.


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