Crappy answer. They may have gotten moderately better, but sharing content amongst a family blows. And the gimped, jacked up family sharing isn't the answer for everyone.Don't share an iCloud account. Sorry, but that's the only answer. They're meant for one person, several devices. You can try to tune it and what it syncs in the settings but in general, it's one account per person.
If it helps, you can actually sign in with a second for certain things, like notes, contacts, calendars, etc.
Crappy answer. They may have gotten moderately better, but sharing content amongst a family blows. And the gimped, jacked up family sharing isn't the answer for everyone.
I lot of us do this and don't appreciate Apple yet again telling us we are using it wrong. If enough of your customers are doing this, then you designed it wrong. Which isn't surprising since Apple has traditionally until very recently pretended families didn't exist and that everyone just exists singly drifting along attached to nothing.
It was bad enough when they made our phones ring with each other's phone calls on wifi with that continuity/handoff update.
/endrant
Well, crappy or not, it's the real answer. Someone agreeing with you that it would be great if it didn't do that now in iOS 9 doesn't give you an answer or change anything, right?Crappy answer. They may have gotten moderately better, but sharing content amongst a family blows. And the gimped, jacked up family sharing isn't the answer for everyone.
I lot of us do this and don't appreciate Apple yet again telling us we are using it wrong. If enough of your customers are doing this, then you designed it wrong. Which isn't surprising since Apple has traditionally until very recently pretended families didn't exist and that everyone just exists singly drifting along attached to nothing.
It was bad enough when they made our phones ring with each other's phone calls on wifi with that continuity/handoff update.
Edit: This may actually be a handoff thing and not iOS 9? If so we just turned off handoff.
/endrant
That's what everyone said every other time an iCloud conflict came up. Always worked around it.Well, crappy or not, it's the real answer. Someone agreeing with you that it would be great if it didn't do that now in iOS 9 doesn't give you an answer or change anything, right?
Well, hopefully you'll find a way to work around it. That said, the OP does specifically ask for a way to fix it (and nothing about confirmation), so in that respect someone pointing out a way to fix it (even if that doesn't end up being the way someone would want to do it) seems fitting.That's what everyone said every other time an iCloud conflict came up. Always worked around it.
I'd be more interested in confirmation that this is an iOS 9 specific inclusion and then what the workaround is.
Crappy answer. They may have gotten moderately better, but sharing content amongst a family blows. And the gimped, jacked up family sharing isn't the answer for everyone.
I lot of us do this and don't appreciate Apple yet again telling us we are using it wrong. If enough of your customers are doing this, then you designed it wrong. Which isn't surprising since Apple has traditionally until very recently pretended families didn't exist and that everyone just exists singly drifting along attached to nothing.
It was bad enough when they made our phones ring with each other's phone calls on wifi with that continuity/handoff update.
Edit: This may actually be a handoff thing and not iOS 9? If so we just turned off handoff.
/endrant
I've read too many reviews about the "well, but" problems with family sharing. The kind of issues I've read about are exactly the things that would drive me away. And it still doesn't fix my main gripe with shared photos.
I think you are right. This sounds familiarI had the same issue between my daughters phone and mine with iOS 8. If I remember correctly turning off iPhone cellular calls under FaceTime settings got rid of it. Not sure if it works under iOS 9 still.
Doesn't remotely do what I want it to.You can easily share photo streams with everyone and his dog. What's your issue with that?
Does find my phone work the same when way when using using two Apple ids that are linked via family share? We use it all the time to find out where each other is. Also helped when her phone was stolen and the police went over got it back from the thief.BitTorrent? Merely sharing apps between users from one purchase is pirating. But that's besides the point and what someone teaches their kids is right from wrong is not the business of an idiot such as myself.
Pictures? Shared photo stream works fine, even on older devices like a 4S (what I was using when I started with it). I'm in a family album with 400+ photos and a friends album with 1800+ photos. If anything it's easily more reliable then photos seeding across devices because it operates independently.
Pictures seems like a weird thing to mention anyway. So your family share a single album? Meaning if your wife takes a picture of a recipe you have to look at it? At dinner do you guys go through the album deleting stuff that was just temporary to avoid anyone getting angry their pictures were deleted by someone else? Man, if anything this is a reason to have separate accounts.
Is their any other content you share that requires being on the same account?
Does find my phone work the same when way when using using two Apple ids that are linked via family share? We use it all the time to find out where each other is. Also helped when her phone was stolen and the police went over got it back from the thief.
Well, if it makes you feel better, you can still use your same AppleID for iTunes and App Store purchases (iCloud is for data sync, not so much for purchases) as those are still separate settings. So, you two can use ONE AppleID for purchases (Settings, App Store and iTunes Store) and each have your own info for iCloud (Settings, iCloud) data like calls, messages, email, contacts, calendars, etc... the 'personal' stuff. Just trying to help.
"Everyone else does it" stopped working when I was about 7... truly, there are legal and privacy implications that, as a corporation, they must abide by for reasons bigger than either of us.
I thought you can sign in separately for iTunes/App Store and iCloud/iMessage/FaceTime?
An example would be the following:
ID 1 is for one person and also signed into iTunes/App Store as the main account
ID 2 is signed into iCloud/iMessage/FaceTime and then signs into iTunes/App Store using ID 1's account for joint purchases etc, keeping all else separate.
Or has this been made easier now with family share? Also not condoning piracy, this is convenient to use with your kids.
It's not a bad suggestion, but sharing iCloud does does a lot more of what we need.You're right, you can. That's what I had mentioned. He said that would not do what he needs, however.
I thought you can sign in separately for iTunes/App Store and iCloud/iMessage/FaceTime?
An example would be the following:
ID 1 is for one person and also signed into iTunes/App Store as the main account
ID 2 is signed into iCloud/iMessage/FaceTime and then signs into iTunes/App Store using ID 1's account for joint purchases etc, keeping all else separate.
Or has this been made easier now with family share? Also not condoning piracy, this is convenient to use with your kids.