While performance hasn’t suffered on 64-bit devices like it suffered on 32-bit devices, it is a far cry from perfection, and performance issues are immediately noticeable if you update far enough. I have an iPhone 6s on iOS 13 and it is significantly slower, with notoriously bad keyboard lag than my 6s on iOS 10, which is flawless. Yes, it isn’t an iPhone 4s on iOS 9, but it isn’t perfect, either.Newer versions of iOS haven’t significantly impacted the performance of older hardware since the days of iOS 9 on the iPhone 4s and iPad 2. The A13 can handle iOS 16 no problem.
Thank you. Honestly that isn't my experience. iPad 5gen decreased its performance a lot since the last iPadOS version I had installed on it, years ago.Newer versions of iOS haven’t significantly impacted the performance of older hardware since the days of iOS 9 on the iPhone 4s and iPad 2. The A13 can handle iOS 16 no problem.
Yes, and actually, battery life is one of my main concerns. The iPad 9 Gen I have is perfect for my case, I don't want to ruin it. It is still perfectly running version 15.4.1.While performance hasn’t suffered on 64-bit devices like it suffered on 32-bit devices, it is a far cry from perfection, and performance issues are immediately noticeable if you update far enough. I have an iPhone 6s on iOS 13 and it is significantly slower, with notoriously bad keyboard lag than my 6s on iOS 10, which is flawless. Yes, it isn’t an iPhone 4s on iOS 9, but it isn’t perfect, either.
I will say, however, that Apple deserves praise for not obliterating performance as they used to. Battery life is the issue nowadays, with iOS updates rendering devices as useless as a main device.
Apple forced my 9.7-inch iPad Pro from iOS 9 to iOS 12 and I have to say that performance is almost perfect. Battery life isn’t, but performance is. And that is great. iOS/iPadOS 13 brought about severe performance issues on A9-based devices, however, relative to iOS 9-12. Up until iOS 12 it was perfect, then it wasn’t. Like I said, however, it is far better than it used to be, and they’re certainly far more usable, at least in terms of performance. Battery life is the complete opposite, and devices are now rendered useless through a massive degradation in screen-on time.
I actually have an iPad Air 5, but I can’t tell you whether iPadOS 16 is perfect on it because it is running (and will run, forever) iPadOS 15.Yes, and actually, battery life is one of my main concerns. The iPad 9 Gen I have is perfect for my case, I don't want to ruin it. It is still perfectly running version 15.4.1.
I'm wondering if better versions (like the iPad Air 5th Gen with M1 processor and 8 GB of RAM) would handle better in these cases (future-wise).
Why did you take that option, if I may?I actually have an iPad Air 5, but I can’t tell you whether iPadOS 16 is perfect on it because it is running (and will run, forever) iPadOS 15.
Because iOS updates always worsen performance and battery life. Apple does not allow us to downgrade, so the only way I have to combat this is by staying behind.Why did you take that option, if I may?
Does it not affect the integration between other Apple devices? Or even with iCloud?Because iOS updates always worsen performance and battery life. Apple does not allow us to downgrade, so the only way I have to combat this is by staying behind.
Nope. New features obviously aren’t available, but overall integration is perfect.Does it not affect the integration between other Apple devices? Or even with iCloud?
@FeliApple I mean, you have an M1 (which will absolutely shred anything you throw at it) and you can always go for a battery replacement in a few years when you get towards 80% battery life. Don't handicap yourself too much - enjoy your device and many of the new features.Because iOS updates always worsen performance and battery life. Apple does not allow us to downgrade, so the only way I have to combat this is by staying behind.