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Do you agree with most of the fixes listed in the OP?


  • Total voters
    266
I can honestly say I wouldn't want most of what's listed in this thread.. Simply because it's bloat.

And I actually like how the iphone doesn't have any light notifications that blink.

All I want out of my phone now are widgets for calendar and weather.
 
Since this thread seems to be all about posting features there's absolutely no chance Apple will include in the next iPhone, I will add:

  • The ability consistently to make, receive, and maintain phone calls.
 
I can honestly say I wouldn't want most of what's listed in this thread.. Simply because it's bloat.

And I actually like how the iphone doesn't have any light notifications that blink.

All I want out of my phone now are widgets for calendar and weather.

Fair point. There needs to be an option to remove BS apps that you don't use. Right now, I have a folder full of Apple apps that I use for nothing. That said I think we are better served having phones that are very strong stable capabilities built into the phone rather than relying on third parties for apps that Apple should have been able to see an average user needing.
 
I saw that there was a discussion similar to this on Engadget and decided to put my condensed version of the wishlist there.

Bigger screen (over 4" at least, I'd prefer 4.3-4.5" because 5" is too big, the EVO is nice but could be bigger)
Look at Android (and Palm's) notifications, GPS, speech to text
Make a mod store so we don't have to jailbreak to do things you should have been able to predict we would want to do because we shouldn't have to watch Android people have all the fun.
I'd like to be able to mark podcasts for deletion upon syncing and make notes on podcasts.
The lock screen should display how many texts, calls, and voice mails you've received, the temperature and your upcoming appointments.
The calendar should sync with online calendars as easily as notes or email.
A dedicated camera button because its annoying when you're trying to catch something happening and the moment is over before the phone wakes up, click camera app, open camera, snap meanwhile miss the pic of the man stealing your car.
IR blaster (even though Engadget hates it) because it will be a while before every TV set in the world gets retrofitted with bluetooth.

This discussion continues on Macrumors
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/1021233/

http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/27/how-would-you-change-apples-iphone-4/

I didn't see anything on GPS in the list in the opening to this thread even though I think it gets edited over and over. The GPS on Google phones is superb. Having GPS with me was one of the main reasons I got an iphone the first time. The GPS on the iphone if used side by side is clearly inferior and warrants a mention on the list.
 
I saw that there was a discussion similar to this on Engadget and decided to put my condensed version of the wishlist there.

Bigger screen (over 4" at least, I'd prefer 4.3-4.5" because 5" is too big,
the EVO is nice but could be bigger)
Look at Android (and Palm's) notifications, GPS, speech to text
Make a mod store so we don't have to jailbreak to do things you should have been able to predict we would want to do because we shouldn't have to watch Android people have all the fun.
I'd like to be able to mark podcasts for deletion upon syncing and make notes on podcasts.
The lock screen should display how many texts, calls, and voice mails you've received, the temperature and your upcoming appointments.
The calendar should sync with online calendars as easily as notes or email.
A dedicated camera button because its annoying when you're trying to catch something happening and the moment is over before the phone wakes up, click camera app, open camera, snap meanwhile miss the pic of the man stealing your car.
IR blaster (even though Engadget hates it) because it will be a while before every TV set in the world gets retrofitted with bluetooth.

This discussion continues on Macrumors
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/1021233/

http://www.engadget.com/2010/08/27/how-would-you-change-apples-iphone-4/

I didn't see anything on GPS in the list in the opening to this thread even though I think it gets edited over and over. The GPS on Google phones is superb. Having GPS with me was one of the main reasons I got an iphone the first time. The GPS on the iphone if used side by side is clearly inferior and warrants a mention on the list.

I sure hope they dont keep making the phones bigger and bigger. I think 4-4.3 is big enough. I really dont want a phone that is bigger than an EVO and a Vibrant. Just too big to stick in your pocket.
 
Don't make it bigger. The iPhone 4 dimensions are of a perfect size. The screen isn't too small nor too big. This alas causes problems with app resolution.

Better notifications is a must, some way to queue them as well. Right now, if i get two text notifications, I have to tap close/view on one to get to the second. Not convenient.

Better lock screen. Seeing calendar, weather, etc. would be very useful.
 
I found these two amazing posts and absolutely had to share them...


For every best, there is also a worst. And because the iPhone’s bests are so great, expectations are high and the worsts become much more pronounced. Here, I go through my compilation of the iPhone’s worst worsts.

First and foremost, the iPhone is the worst smartphone I’ve ever seen when it comes to watching YouTube videos. Forgetting the fact that half the videos I try to watch aren’t compatible with iOS, videos that should work with the iPhone are terrible. Over 3G, the quality is horrendous. I get up to 6Mbps with AT&T, Apple — there’s no need to reduce the quality of the videos I’m trying to stream. Then, over Wi-Fi, the quality is spectacular but videos won’t play. Ever. If there ever comes a time when my iPhone can stream a YouTube video over Wi-Fi without choking every 2 seconds, I might pass out. It’s funny how critical Steve Jobs is of Adobe’s Flash when he’s perfectly content shipping this steaming pile of a YouTube experience.

The iPhone also has the worst auto-correct system ever devised by man. It doesn’t learn from habits, which means I have to reject the same changes repeatedly, forever. I also can’t add words, so the only way to get iOS to remember an unknown word is to add it to the address book. And speaking of the address book, I better not have any contacts prefaced with “Mr.”, such as one of my favorite little Chinese restaurants, Mr. Wok. If I do, I need to be prepared to constantly reject an unwanted change every time I type the word “me”.

It seems crazy that iOS still doesn’t support widgets. Widgets are great for grabbing information at a glance, and Apple’s competitors all make wonderful use of widget systems. But not Apple. I want to see the current weather in an instant. I want to see if I have any upcoming calendar appointments without a single tap. I want to see a small collection of items from my to do list. And so on. It’s a little scary that Apple realized how nifty it would be to show the current date on the Calendar icon but it hasn’t yet extended that functionality elsewhere.

And why doesn’t iOS include an easy way to perform simple functions such as enabling or disabling Bluetooth and Wi-Fi? If I want to save some precious battery life and disable Bluetooth when I’m not using it, it takes five taps. Compare that to Android, where disabling Bluetooth takes a single tap on a widget.

On we go, to one of the more popular gripes in recent months — multitasking. Apple is right that there are downsides to a completely open multitasking policy, but there are better solutions than the currently available workaround. State saving is great but Apple is holding developers back by limiting the number of available background APIs to just a handful. Then, it’s ridiculous that there is no way to close an app without saving its state. The iPhone is easily the worst when it comes to clutter in the app manager, and the solution would be all too simple. How about a long-tap on the home button to close an app, fellas?

While on the topic of easy fixes, I should certainly call out the Mail app. The iPhone’s email client is actually pretty fantastic, especially with the new features introduced in iOS 4. In several ways, however, it really is the worst mobile email client on the planet. It’s 2010 and I still can’t set a custom ringtone for new emails. I still can’t view only unread emails. I still can’t flag emails. I still can’t configure a unique email signature for each different email account. And, at least in my case, I still can’t send emails generated in third-party apps because they just sit in my outbox until I open each one and manually resend it.

Finally, my biggest complaint: Apple’s iPhone has the worst notification system known to man. It is, without question, abysmal.

iOS notifications are as disruptive as notifications on a mobile device can possibly be. A box pops up in the middle of the display, interrupts whatever might be taking place at the time, and prevents the user from doing anything else with the device until one of two things happens — the user must either interact with the notification (dismiss it or open the related app) or turn the display off and back on.

Then, when the stars are perfectly aligned, something special happens. The iPhone begins regurgitating an unstoppable stream of successive notifications that render the device inoperable. Calendar alarms, SMS notifications, WhatsApp alerts, banking notifications, new mentions and direct messages from Twitter, missed call alerts, Growl notifications, clock alarms, Words With Friends notifications, to do app alerts, sports scores… all popping, dinging and dancing at once.

I’m sure many users know this scenario all too well — I call it iPuke.

Apple is a company that puts a tremendous amount of time and effort into its user experiences and the results are typically astounding. In the case of iOS notifications, however, the results are downright embarrassing.
- BoyGeniusReport

Almost no one would argue that iOS is not a capable or fully featured smartphone platform. It handles media elegantly, is amazingly intuitive and offers a vast feature set to accommodate almost any need that a casual user, business user etc. may need. Rather than nitpick about small things that need to change (custom SMS ringtones), I'll outline 3 major areas of change I feel that iOS needs to excel in to move forward as a platform. It also so happens that these three areas come their competitors, as well as their own repertoire.

Notification Overhaul/Android

The intrusive bubble and badge system system for iOS worked at a time, but in the age of push notifications and an app store with a plethora of different types of apps in the user's hand, it no longer suffices. A bubble that pops up and must be addressed can be incredibly frustrating and distracting dependent upon what the user is doing. Simply disabling pop up notifications is not a solution, such as how one is notified of an e-mail, as one needs to completely stop what they are doing and return to the homescreen and search for the elusive badge (and subsequently differentiate it from other existing notifications).

How Android Does it Better

Android handles these notifications much more elegantly for three simple reasons: notifications on lock screen, widgets, and the "shade." The customization of Android allows the user to select what kinds of information is displayed on his or her lock screen, such as e-mails, twitter, weather, appointments, etc. This kind of information allows the user to preview the new activity without ever having to unlock the phone.

Widgets also allow the user to monitor activity without explicitly entering an app to do so. They are also dynamic homepage content, making the OS feel more "alive." (more on this later with WP7). Finally, the notification bar and drop-down "shade" show the user all of the apps that have new information for the user. The user decides how much this intrudes on their current activity. For example, they can ignore it and not have to address a popup to continue their current action. They can also glance at the notification bar and get a snapshot of all the activity occurring without explicitly addressing the information. Lastly, they can pull down the "shade" and have a concise list of all the apps that have notifications and what type of notification it is. From there, the user can directly address any given one of those notifications.

How can Apple take these to heart? Well, it's obvious they'll just need to straight-up copy two of them. Allow the user to have multiple, customized notifications on the lockscreen. Apple can achieve this while still providing a controlled, standardized experience. Second, they'll have to add notifications to the status bar. It's really the only place for these kinds of icons to appear that doesn't interfere with the user's current activities.

That leaves two that Apple will have to get creative with. For starters, a carbon copy of the shade would be illegal, unoriginal, and un-Apple. They would need to come up with some sort of way to view current notifications (perhaps a simple tap on the bar?) and present it in a quickly addressable, easy to view format. Perhaps they could do some sort of variant on how multi-tasking is handled.

The second area in which they'll need to get creative is widgets. The problem with widgets is that this likely mucks with Apple's treasured user experience more than they're willing to allow. How would Apple address this? Perhaps restricting size, location and being extremely strict on quality control and usefulness.

The Grid Is Dead/WP7

One of the hallmarks of iOS's current look and feel is its strict "grid" icon system. Apps are arranged in an equidistant 4x4 grid with a 1x4 dock static dock hanging out at the bottom. Due to the juggernaut march forward of the app store, Apple has introduced folders to mitigate the space issue. However, that's all it's done. The grid remains amazingly simple and wholly non-living. No matter what you do or how you interact with the OS, the grid remains, obstinate in its regularity of lack of imagination. This makes the OS feel "dead" because it has no dynamic nature either in how it looks or how you interact with it. The aforementioned widgets of Android address this in some regard. However, even android can seem a little lackluster at times.

Enter the Challenger

Windows Phone 7 was announced just today. But with it comes a drastic departure from its lineage and how we think of a smartphone's homescreen. Windows Phone 7 device homescreen are a bright assemblage of rectangles of differing sizes with white text against a plain black background. "That sounds pretty damn plain," you may say. And you're right. But it's how it's plain. This view is entirely minimalistic in its design, which is aesthetically pleasing in and of itself. What's more, these blocks vary in shape and size because Microsoft recognizes that different apps have a different prominence and level of information that they convey to the user. That's why these blocks themselves can give you small tid-bits of information live while you look at them. Instead of a dead assemblage of shapes and text, these boxes are always prepared to tell you something about that app's activity without having to actually fire it up.

Additionally, Microsoft seems to recognize something else. Smartphones are small compared to our notebooks and desktops. Rather than confine all the information you need to the small screen you have before you, more information is but a side-swipe away. The title of your current activity (say twitter) shifts partially to the left of the screen with the swipe, or extends beyond the right of the screen to show you that more information exists and is a swipe away. This concocts the mental image that there is a horizontally continuous roll of information that you can access. Whether they wonder if there is more information or features with a scroll up or down (or a venture into app settings through multiple buttons presses), the word at the top is all you need to look at. Again, this word will be simple white text against a black background-- minimalist with a pleasing font.

How does this improve over what Apple offers? It's the difference between laying out all the relevant information on a desk and stacking relevant files on a desk. Rather than thumb through the files and look at each label, you can use your eyes and awareness of the UI to scan and pan and gather the information relevant to you. This keeps you in the experience because (hopefully), you never have to execute a pre-determined set uf button presses/taps to get to a particular part of your app. It makes you OS less of a machine and more of a living being. It keeps your experience fresh and dynamic.

Now, how can Apple implement this concept in iOS? That's actually a very good question. I'm not quite certain how Apple could do it short of copying Microsoft in some places. In others, they can provide a way for apps to present information other than a badge without entering that app. This may necessitate size incongruity, which means it is not a straightforward concept to execute. As for the in-app experience, that's even tougher. It's not straightforward how to indicate, intuitively, that more options exist in an app and are a gesture, not a sequence of presses, away. Perhaps Apple needs to increase the amount of gestures apps can recognize to make these sorts of actions second nature. This extends into my final point.

Share the Love, Man

Apple has a lot of examples from the desktop OS market as to how they could improve their mobile device experience. The first one is gestures. They've gone to great pains (trackpad, magic mouse) to make gestures second nature for both desktop and notebook users of full-featured OSs. Multi-finger swipes, flicks, twists; you name it, they all do something different. There's no reason they can't bring this experience to iOS given app providers are given clear instructions on how to interpret these gestures different from actions that are specific to their apps. In some cases, some sort of pause or gesture mode may need to be occur to enter a "gesture" mode. Or perhaps in-app simply isn't the place for these yet. That doesn't mean the springboard can't interpret them.

Speaking of the springboard, there's lot of options. It's rumored that el-Jobso himself begrudgingly added the single button the face of the iPhone because it was simply unavoidable. However, it's seemingly a go-to for special springboard behavior. Before, double tap launches a specific app, now double tap launches us into multi-tasking mode. What's the problem with this? It forces us to change our mode of interaction with the device. We go from touchscreen to hard buttons to execute actions. Some people may like this mixture of input methods, even in mundane activities. For others, it infringes upon the fluidity of their experience. Dropping a thumb to that button forces their brain to change how it interacts with the device. It takes them out of the moment.

How do they get around that? Simple- vertical swipes. Say, for instance, a two finger swipe down brings you to multi-tasking. A two finger swipe up takes you to the previous app (this is not unlike Palm OS where you 'flick' to quit an app). A twist locks or unlocks orientation. The possibilities are endless (and customizable!). What's better is that you give the home button back to the user. Instead of thinking of an odd gesture to launch a specific app, bring back the double tap for things such as the camera. Precious seconds often matter there.

Second, desktop OSs obviously have more power available to them. This makes things like hover-over song previews possible. Some kind of dynamic action in homescreen apps could bring some life to the OS as previously mentioned. Devise a way for the OS, and its apps, to tell the user something without the user explicitly asking for it. I may want to ask my friend a question with my speech (launch the app). I may also want to just shrug my shoulders and offer a quizzical look (gesture). Why would that work? Because he's my friend, and he knows me well enough to know what I mean, even when I don't say it.

As smartphones become more powerful, CPU intensive actions like the above don't have to necessarily be seen as infeasible or battery chomping. The next generation of ARM cores (Cortex A9) promise to give us huge performance gains yet again while preserving our precious battery life. Given the competitive nature of the market, it's entirely possible that the iPhone 5 will feature this core(s) as a third consecutive CPU upgrade.

Conclusion

This discussion is not by any means meant to be exhaustive. In particular, I'm ignoring many of the wonderful things happening in the jailbreak community (lock screen info, biteSMS), which address many of the shortcomings I've outlined above. The problem with these is that they are not Apple provided. While some of them are excellent in quality, it's inevitable that some of them will feel awkward or "bolted-on" simply because of the limitations of the OS environment these developers must deal with. A user should never have to hack to get essential features.

Apple is not stupid. They've recently made many app store concessions in the face of anti-competitive practice investigations and heightening pressure from the android platform. It would seem likely that a notification overhaul is in store for iOS 5.x. (After all, what killer must-have feature remains after multi-tasking?) Let's just hope in addition to innovating, they're not afraid to examine where others' platforms beat theirs and adopt some of the core concepts that make those systems great. After all, we only see further by standing on the shoulders of giants.

Let's hope Apple heeds this advice. :)
 
If using the iPod App have the song playing in the top bar, drag it down to do forward, back, pause, play (kinda like the android menu bar)


Oh and this would be seck.

iphone-concept-1.jpg
 
I never could understand these transparent designs. Where do you expect the electronics to be? All the wiring, antennas, circuits, the battery, is there some way to make them all invisible that I'm not aware of?
 
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I do not expect many changes to the iphone hardware this year, but with some very nice mobile OS's out there now (android, WP7, webOS 2), I would hope for some big software improvements in iOS 5.

I think the single biggest feature they could add is a user accessible file system. Let us manage our photos and documents however we see fit, and the biggest thing is to allow third party apps access to this file system, no more syncing individual files to individual apps from iTunes.

Another feature I would like to see is social network integration. I would like to see things like: facebook birthdays in my calendar, latest status/tweets in contact information, allow the pictures app to show pictures from facebook/flikr/whatever (like WP7), and something which I thought was cool in webOS 2, ability to update status/post tweet from the search bar. Type something in spotlight and at the bottom underneath 'search web' maybe have 'post to facebook' or something. Apple could implement these features or could allow developers to add them (allow facebook app access to calendar and spotlight screen)

Widgets of some kind. I don't think apple will mix widgets in with the current grid icons, but maybe something like dashboard on OS X, bring up a widgets overlay, or when the phone is in landscape, switch to widget mode

And last but definitely not least, notifications. iPhone obviously needs to handle notifications better, and i would suggest using the lockscreen to display notifications
 
Don't make it bigger. The iPhone 4 dimensions are of a perfect size. The screen isn't too small nor too big. This alas causes problems with app resolution.

Better notifications is a must, some way to queue them as well. Right now, if i get two text notifications, I have to tap close/view on one to get to the second. Not convenient.

Better lock screen. Seeing calendar, weather, etc. would be very useful.

I've said before how much I want a bigger screen and how I think they need to start offering 2 screen sizes. I don't think a half inch is going to make that big of a difference in resolution, especially while the Samsung 4" phones are super AMOLED. I've said EVO sized phones are the way to go before, but after spending more time with one and a Samsung Captivate, I noticed that as much as I like the EVO's bigness, my thumbs do have to reach ever so slightly, which is slowing me down when writing which I had not noticed. 4" is just right.

It just hit me that my next iphone will be my third. Since these are basically $500-$600 computers, it would be better for consumers and the environment if we could take an older iphone in and have them upgrade certain pieces when the new phones come out. It might be too much to hope that you could order a customized phone the way that you currently order a customized PC but I'm sure lots of people would take advantage.
 
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A 4 inch phone with the same resolution as the iPhone 4 would be perfect
 
iOS5

DivX/Xvid/mkv support
REAL multitasking, i.e. kirikae+backgrounder
Widgets/Live icons with an ability to take the place of four or more icons
Themes
Integrated SIP support
Free navigation with an ability to download maps to use them offline
Ability to change SMS/email tones
Full Bluetooth support, sending files, contacts, syncing, etc...
Mass Storage Support on Windows
Alarm with a configurable snooze function
Better Notification System.
 
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Three things:
As far as wireless video output they're already providing that in IOS 4.2 with Airplay plus wireless printing with airprint (I still believe that they'll deliver this with shared printers in the future)
Also as far as using it as a Magic Trackpad, there are already free apps available that give you some of this functionality and it's only time before this becomes full functionality.
Also I would like not only to have a radio reciever but a radio transmitter to allow for playing music through your stereo.
Good work on the list, I sincerely hope that the apple engineers get a hold of this
 
A duh idea I'd like to see is apps being able to automatically add items on their calendar to the standard calendar app so that the iphone calendar is a master calendar.
My second idea might be too much wishful thinking, but seeing as the hardware doesn't really have to change that much, and most changes are in reality minor changes, I'd like to see Apple start some sort of program that makes it possible to update your phone rather than replace it every 2 years rather than designing them for the dump.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sW_7i6T_H78
I'd be willing to pay $100 for the upgrades rather than $200 for a whole new phone.
 
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IMO, redesigning the notification system should be Apple's #1 priority. Would also like a phone that left handed people can use without having to put a case on it.
 
IMO, redesigning the notification system should be Apple's #1 priority. Would also like a phone that left handed people can use without having to put a case on it.

What does being left handed got to do with needing a case? Im left handed and i can work it just fine.
Then again, i can do many things with my right hand that i can do w/ my left and actually have my phone in my right pocket or holster is on the right when i use it.

Still dont get your comment though.
 
Dear OP can you please change the title

its annoying to be wishing for something TWO generations in the future

why not just rename it "official wishlist thread, - fixes the iphone still needs"
 
I would like to input something as an iPod Touch owner, given this discusses iOS improvements. My suggestion goes as a hardware modification: 3G Broadband for the iPod Touch. They've got it on the iPad, and I'm sure they could cram it into the iTouch without resorting to the bulkiness of the iPhone.

Also, how about a kickstand that the 4G Evo sports? And of course, 3G videochatting is a must, because phone companies are getting on apple's back about how "FaceTime is limited to WiFi".
 
I can actually live with the screen size as it is now but I would really love Apple to up it to 4 inches, that's perfect. Wouldn't have to change much. And the other main things is the notification system. As said before, the lock screen should be displaying textes, email, missed calls and etc. I'm hoping this has to come by the next major iOS update.
I would love to see the UI get updated also, it's getting kind of old, dont really mind it but it wouldnt hurt.
And one more wish (I know wont happen) is maybe come with one more exclusive color. Of course we didn't "officially" get white with the 4 but hopefully we can have another option one day.
But yeah, mainly for me is the notification system and 4" screen wouldnt hurt
 
better spell check dictionary that includes the ability to add custom words

i hate the current spell check so much i have it off

*sorry if mentioned but i searched and no results
 
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