Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
What the hell happened to waiting to release stuff because "Details matter"? I know Apple wasn't perfect under Jobs but it wasn't this bad. The company seems too lax.

iOS releases under Jobs were much more iterational -- a few new APIs, some skeuomorphic doodads, that's about it. But under Cook, technical advancement has vastly increased in pace not only with iOS, but also ancillary systems it touches (iCloud, Apple Pay, Touch ID).

Doing while keeping to a yearly release schedule is IMO causing these software quality issues. The software engineers simply don't have enough time to work all the bugs out. I think Apple should move to a two-year iOS schedule, because I don't know what else can solve it but time. Throwing more engineers at a problem only helps to a certain point.
 
Different experience here

Due to a problem with the rear camera in my 4th generation iPad (stopped working, iPad is currently under repair) after upgrading to iOS 8, I apply reset all several times, both with iOS 8 GM and with iOS 8.0.2. I even tried downgrading to iOS 7.2.1 before giving up and send it to repair (under warranty). All these times I never lost my documents in iCloud Drive. I must say that I upgraded to iCloud Drive 200 GB plan as soon as I upgraded to iOS 8 since I was already using Yosemite beta 3.
 
Mvp

Just a quick shout-out

IMG_7396[1].JPG
 
All your docs are still in TimeMachine. Take a deep breath. You did make backups right?

I just checked my iCloud Drive and I have backups of all the iCloud documents for multiple dates and yes I'm running Yosemite PB3. Here are all your iCloud document backups...

/Volumes/{Your Time Machine Volume Name}/Backups.backupd/{Your Computer Name}/{Backup-Date-Time}/Machintosh\ HD/Users/{your username}/Library/Mobile\ Documents

just copy them to your desktop.

Then copy them again back to iCloud Drive through Finder.
 
I wonder if he even knows. How insulated is he? There's little incentive for lower levels to bring these kind of problems to the attention of the CEO.

If he's a smart man, he'll have an independent team of monitors who report only to him with news like this.

I also wonder how scary he is. There seems to be a general consensus that Steve was terrifying when angry, and would sometimes leave a trail of devastation - mass firings etc. I don't suppose we'll ever know, but I'm curious as to how much Tim makes people tremble with fear.

Right you are. If Steve was sitting behind the desk, I am sure people would be jumping off the building, not wanting to be the one to go in and tell him!
 
Come on, apple, don't go chasing waterfalls (maps, cloud storage etc.) and stick to the rivers you're used to (hardware, non-internet based software)!

This is getting ridiculous!

The new slogan for iCloud?
"iCloud privacy concerns? We keep your documents safe from everyone (even you). Your nude pics on the other hand ..."
 
iOS releases under Jobs were much more iterational -- a few new APIs, some skeuomorphic doodads, that's about it. But under Cook, technical advancement has vastly increased in pace not only with iOS, but also ancillary systems it touches (iCloud, Apple Pay, Touch ID).

Doing while keeping to a yearly release schedule is IMO causing these software quality issues. The software engineers simply don't have enough time to work all the bugs out. I think Apple should move to a two-year iOS schedule, because I don't know what else can solve it but time. Throwing more engineers at a problem only helps to a certain point.

The solution is to ship more often Not less.
 
I'll stick with OneDrive for the time being. iCloud Drive doesn't look ready for prime time.

Apple has never been any good at the "cloud." From MobileMe to this, they have fallen flat at times. This is the kind of thing they should be asking IBM to help them develop.
 
this is what happen when people install a beta in their main advice and come here to complain.
 
I don't understand why they don't simply anounce it a few months ahead and allow developers to test it so that all bugs can be fixed before the public launch.
 
How about Apple has the ******** who blocked Launcher do some QA and testing instead of making the user experience worse, eh?

Apple needs to pull complexity out of the OS, and that means getting rid of things that Apple can't do and add no value - scrap Maps, scrap Podcasts, scrap the App Store innovation tax.
 
Simple, they made the mistake of putting HW and SW under one hat. The result is that both lost focus, and their own philosophies.
Cooperation sometimes works better at a certain distance... just ask your relatives!


So you're saying the corporate structure inside Apple is responsible for the systemic issues we are seeing?

Not sure if I'm sold on that being the reason, I would guess it was the pressure to meet a deadline ie iphone 6 release date.
 
Geez I'm glad I switched to Google software, Apple seriously is producing complete crap these days.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.