Yes, and then it won't restore and gives an error 56 on the iMac when connected to iTunes. This is on a 9.7 inch iPad pro.Anyone else have the update crash and set your phone to "Connect to iTunes" mode?
Trying an upgrade through iTunes now but have never seen it do that on an OTA beta update before. May just be luck though.
[doublepost=1461273993][/doublepost]I was unable to pair my Garmin gps to my SE on 9.3.1. I decided to try 9.3.2B2, now it works.
Apple today released the second beta of an upcoming iOS 9.3.2 update to public beta testers, just a day after seeding the second iOS 9.3.2 beta to developers. iOS 9.3.2 beta 2 comes just over a month after the public release of iOS 9.3 and three weeks after the release of iOS 9.3.1, a followup bug fix update. iOS 9.3.2 has been in testing since April 6.![]()
Beta testers who have signed up for Apple's beta testing program will receive the iOS 9.3.2 update over-the-air after installing the proper certificate on their iOS device.
Those who want to be a part of Apple's beta testing program can sign up to participate through the beta testing website, which gives users access to both iOS and OS X betas.
iOS 9.3.2, as a minor 9.x.x update, focuses primarily on performance improvements and under-the-hood bug fixes to address issues that have been discovered since the release of iOS 9.3. We don't know all of the fixes that will be included, but significant Game Center bug appears to have been fixed in the first beta, while iOS 9.3.2 beta 2 added the ability to use Low Power Mode and Night Shift simultaneously. No other outward-facing changes or immediately apparent bug fixes have been discovered in the first two developer betas.
Article Link: Apple Seeds Second Beta of iOS 9.3.2 to Public Beta Testers
Actually no. If you follow my posts, which I'm assuming you don't. You would know I have a procedure that I do after every single update. I know how the battery of a build will be after 5 hours. It has been spot on Since iOS 8 beta. So thanks for assuming that I'm making things up.Lol, it came out yesterday at 10am, how did you get a chance to do enough testing in like 27 hours to know that "battery life improved a lot"??!
You sure you're not just making up what you want to be true with nothing factual to back it up whatsoever??
I'm reverting to 9.3.1 at the moment to keep the bug, I can't go back to slow animations![]()
I'm most likely staying on 9.3.1 unless 9.3.2 has some must have feature included. I've been reading alot of negative posts about the latest beta as far as stutter. I wonder if they broke something else while fixing the animation bug.
Welcome to pseudo-low power my friend!To all those people that said I was an idiot for wanting low power mode and night shift.....suck it.
That was certainly something prevalent in the iOS 8 days, but not that much in iOS 9 (at least not for most).When will the stability of Safari go back to being rock solid on iOS?
Almost every time I use it on my iPhone 6 Plus webpages crash and reload. There doesn't seem to be any pattern and it happens randomly on a diverse range of websites. I thought 9.3.1 was supposed to address an issue with Safari?
I'm running iOS 9.3.1 on an iPhone 6 Plus.
Actually no. If you follow my posts, which I'm assuming you don't. You would know I have a procedure that I do after every single update. I know how the battery of a build will be after 5 hours. It has been spot on Since iOS 8 beta. So thanks for assuming that I'm making things up.
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And thinking about it, if people know that their battery has taken a hit in less than 24 hours thats somehow 'acceptable' but saying it improved in 24 hours isn't?
If you must know, Two days ago with 3 hours of usage, 4 hours of standby, with almost all of the 3 hours being Real Racing 3, my battery was down to roughly 50%. Yesterday, after updating. With 3 hours of usage, 4 hours of standby, again most of the 3 hours was Real Racing 3 I was at 73%, you would say that has drastically improved, wouldn't you? Thats without me describing my very careful battery testing that I do after I immediately update.
If you are interested, I would gladly explain my process and the results since iOS 9.2.1, or even further back if you were interested. You can find most of these posts by looking through my account.
Sorry if my post was a little strong. Not a big fan of when people accuse of making things up. So I apologize to you. I should have been a little calmer.I humbly stand corrected.
I do NOT follow your posts, so it did sound suspect to me.
night shift with low power mode on will still get better battery then night shift without lower power mode right? Then thats all that matters. We are smart enough to make our own decisions.Welcome to pseudo-low power my friend!
Has anyone noticed any issues with scrolling in Safari with the 9.3.2 betas? (First attempt to scroll isn't registered but subsequent attempts are.) I don't seem to have the issue w/Chrome.
Well, we should similarly then be able to still enable push or fetch, or set the screen lock time to something greater than 30 seconds, or change other things that Low Power Mode sets in order to conserve a meaningful amount of battery.night shift with low power mode on will still get better battery then night shift without lower power mode right? Then thats all that matters. We are smart enough to make our own decisions.
Apple today released the second beta of an upcoming iOS 9.3.2 update to public beta testers, just a day after seeding the second iOS 9.3.2 beta to developers. iOS 9.3.2 beta 2 comes just over a month after the public release of iOS 9.3 and three weeks after the release of iOS 9.3.1, a followup bug fix update. iOS 9.3.2 has been in testing since April 6.![]()
Beta testers who have signed up for Apple's beta testing program will receive the iOS 9.3.2 update over-the-air after installing the proper certificate on their iOS device.
Those who want to be a part of Apple's beta testing program can sign up to participate through the beta testing website, which gives users access to both iOS and OS X betas.
iOS 9.3.2, as a minor 9.x.x update, focuses primarily on performance improvements and under-the-hood bug fixes to address issues that have been discovered since the release of iOS 9.3. We don't know all of the fixes that will be included, but significant Game Center bug appears to have been fixed in the first beta, while iOS 9.3.2 beta 2 added the ability to use Low Power Mode and Night Shift simultaneously. No other outward-facing changes or immediately apparent bug fixes have been discovered in the first two developer betas.
Article Link: Apple Seeds Second Beta of iOS 9.3.2 to Public Beta Testers
Been fine here. Something is most likely running rogue causing the heat. Sounds like you need to perform the "reset all settings" option. That typically will solve this type of behavior after an update. This does not loose your apps or data but does reset wallpaper and removed all wifi networks so you will have to add those back.My device: iPhone 6s Plus
Ever since this latest minor public beta update, I've experienced issues with the fingerprint sensor not recognizing any of my fingers, and the phone (not the sensor) seems to be getting extremely hot after only 5 minutes of usage (not plugged into the charger.
Anyone else have these or any other similar up issues with this update?
I've tried re-doing my finger print settings and have turned the phone on and off. No luck.
Battery life is great so far however, it's all very jittery now? Especially when I'm switching between apps. Tried restarting and same thing happening. Anyone else?
The weird thing is my mac is starting to do this too even though its not even on any beta...I'm getting lots of jittery animations switching between apps, moving around in mail, scrolling in Safari. Didn't notice it in beta1.
iPhone6s, did the usual reboot, force restart, but it's the same.![]()