The Apple iOS 14 update for the iPhone lineup, which was expected to roll out yesterday to all users, is now finally available to all iPhone users globally. Unlike what happened with previous versions of iOS, not all users received the update at the same time. There are no official reasons why that happened, and it must be said that it was pure conjecture based on the trend of previous years on the exact time of deployment, but it left many who hoped to be able to download and install the new iOS 14 on their iPhones immediately, they were frustrated. The official communication from Apple had not at any time confirmed an exact time for the launch and availability of iOS 14 on September 16. With that said, iOS 14 is now available for all iPhones. The first release of iOS 14 happened at 10:30 PM IST, a timestamp that has been common in previous years, but many users got the update a few hours later.
There are significant changes under the hood with iOS 14, including a revamped home screen with the ability to add widgets, new app library curations, a compact UI for interactions including Siri and incoming phone calls, a new app. called Translate, Application Clips that allow you to download a usable portion of the application to test before downloading the full application, as well as significant improvements in privacy and security. The question is: can your iPhone run iOS 14?
You will be lucky with iOS 14 if you have an iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone 11 Pro Max, iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max, iPhone XR, iPhone X, iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 7, iPhone 7 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone SE (2nd generation) and iPhone SE (1st generation). In fact, iPod touch (7th generation) will also receive the iOS 14 update. This means that in the year since the iOS 13 update was released, no device has lost support and all iPhones running iOS 13 will also receive The update to iOS 14. Look how far the update compatibility goes, with the iPhone 6s released in 2015 as the best example, and it’s still hard to beat Apple’s compatibility approach when it comes to new software updates. .
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