Could just buy the new 9.7" iPad with A10 Fusion for iOS 11.I am SO sorry! you are missing so many new features for iPads in iOS 11...
Could just buy the new 9.7" iPad with A10 Fusion for iOS 11.I am SO sorry! you are missing so many new features for iPads in iOS 11...
I am SO sorry! you are missing so many new features for iPads in iOS 11...
I cannot really answer your question but I will offer an opinion:I'm still running 10.3.3 on my iPad Pro 9.7. The new features of ios 11 sound nice, but I'm so afraid of a drop in performance and battery life that I haven't updated yet. My ipad runs flawlessly on 10.3.3 that it's hard to think I would enjoy ios 11 any more.
Anyone have any experience going from ios 10 to 11 on a pro 9.7? I'd really rather maintain my flawless performance.
I'm keeping my Pro 9.7 at 10.3.3 but toying with getting the 2018 iPad for iOS 11. If I get one, it'll be 128GB LTE and $559 isn't quite the instant purchase that $329 is.I'm still running 10.3.3 on my iPad Pro 9.7. The new features of ios 11 sound nice, but I'm so afraid of a drop in performance and battery life that I haven't updated yet. My ipad runs flawlessly on 10.3.3 that it's hard to think I would enjoy ios 11 any more.
Anyone have any experience going from ios 10 to 11 on a pro 9.7? I'd really rather maintain my flawless performance.
I agree, regarding the switch from iOS 9 to iOS 10. However, if the new iPad-only features in iOS 11 interest you at all, upgrading is worth it, IMO. My A9X device (1G 12.9” iPP) is running iOS 11 perfectly.I cannot really answer your question but I will offer an opinion:
Stay on iOS 10. I have a 9.7 Pro on iOS 9, and performance is flawless. Some people say it works fine, but it's a one-way street. If you don't like how it works, performance drops, or something breaks, there is no way back. As per the new features: Would you really update for features which you might or might not use frequently, and have the drawback of potential unsolvable performance drop? New features sound nice, but if you have the unlucky fate of updating and either something going wrong or performance dropping, the new features will be really expensive, and will you be able to tolerate it when all you had to do to maintain performance was not update?
I updated in the past, regretted it, and thought of all this. This is why my Pro is still on iOS 9, of course, working flawlessly.
I see it more like a gamble. It might work flawlessly. It might not. You never know. If you've read all the experiences people have had when updating to iOS 11 they really are all over the place. Someone who has updated can tell you how it works in his/her case, but you can never know for certain how will it work in your case.I agree, regarding the switch from iOS 9 to iOS 10. However, if the new iPad-only features in iOS 11 interest you at all, upgrading is worth it, IMO. My A9X device (1G 12.9” iPP) is running iOS 11 perfectly.
UPDATE!
I accidently started the iOS update to 11. After finishing, I feel that my iPad mini 2 now crashes far less than before. Perhaps keeping it at 10.3.3 was a foolish idea. I am happier with it now than before the update.
I was not expecting this to be the case at all. Now, the version installed was 11.2.5, so perhaps the earlier iOS 11 versions caused more trouble.
My daughter’s iPad mini 2 “updated itself” to iOS 11.2.6 and works great. As a bonus, she really likes the new dock, etc. No new lag was introduced; it may actually have gotten “snappier”.Please update us. I have a mini 2 on 10.3.3 and it runs absolutely fine. The only reasons I might want to upgrade are safety and longevity. But I'm cautious as hell.
Much appreciated!
My daughter’s iPad mini 2 “updated itself” to iOS 11.2.6 and works great. As a bonus, she really likes the new dock, etc. No new lag was introduced; it may actually have gotten “snappier”.
True; people’s experiences seem to vary greatly.Thanks for the update. I still have time to decide. It's difficult because experiences are so mixed. Good to hear that the unintentional update worked great for you. I have 2 mini 2's, maybe I'll try one first somewhere in late august and see what happens.
But are the vulnerables worth it? KRACK being one of them?To me, the new features are not worth the new bugs.
What did Apple do with Airplane Mode?My IPP 10.5 is still at 10.3.2 and will remain that way.
Thanks to a tvOS profile
Not going to update and see my battery wasted so quickly, plus I didn't like what Apple did with Airplane Mode.
http://macintoshhowto.com/hardware/emf.htmlWhat did Apple do with Airplane Mode?
I'm done pushing for the ability to downgrade to a previous version of iOS. I'll settle for an option to tell iOS "no longer notify me that an iOS update is available". As a workaround, I've installed the tvOS beta profile on my iPhone SE and iPad Mini 4 (too late for my 12.9 iPad Pro). Should Apple prevent that workaround from working, then that is the time I'm "done" with iOS devices.My 2nd gen iPad Pro 12.9 is on iOS 10.3.3. I had upgraded to iOS 11 when it launched and my battery life literally halved and stuttering was everywhere more noticeable thanks to the higher refresh rate which makes even the tiniest stutters irritating. Needless to say I went back to iOS 10 and it will stay that way till I get the next iPad. Not going to bother with iOS upgrades on older devices. My iPad Air 2 has had a noticeable drop in performance on iOS 11 and my iPad Pro 12.9 runs extremely fluidly and smoothly on 10. I experienced iOS 11 on it once and that taught me a lesson I would never forget.