Apple Delays Work on Next Year's iPhone, Mac Software to Fix Bugs
In a rare move, Apple Inc. has paused development of next year's software updates for the iPhone, iPad, Mac, and other devices to address software bugs. The company's software is known for its clean interfaces, easy-to-use controls, and focus on privacy, making quality control crucial.
Highlights:
- Apple delayed development of next year's software updates to fix bugs.
- The company's software engineering management team found too many "escapes" – an industry term for bugs missed during internal testing.
- Apple is lifting the pause on software development this week.
Apple's software engineering management team discovered too many bugs in early versions of next year's operating systems, prompting a one-week halt on new feature development. The company is focused on fixing these bugs before resuming work on new features.
Apple's software is known for its clean interfaces, easy-to-use controls, and focus on privacy, making quality control imperative. The company has put more emphasis on quality in recent years, even if it means delaying new features.
In 2018, software engineering chief Craig Federighi pushed back several unreleased iPhone features until the following year due to software bugs. In 2019, he overhauled the way Apple develops software to further prevent problems.
Despite Federighi's policies, the latest round of development hasn't gone as smoothly. With thousands of Apple employees working on a range of operating systems and devices, it's easy for glitches to crop up.
Apple is expected to resume software development this week and still launch its major software overhauls in September 2024. For next year, the company is planning to focus on integrating generative AI into its products.