• Apple Senior VP Craig Federighi unveiling iOS 13's dark mode at WWDC earlier this month. Ron Amadeo
  • Among other notable iOS updates coming this fall: the camera will get some extra digital muscle, like the ability to adjust lighting on your photos (mimicking what pros might do with physical lights in a studio). Apple
  • Maps has a gotten an overhaul powered by many, many miles of lidar-attached driving. This is the same area with the left screen demoing the new level of detail. Apple
  • More Memoji customization is coming your way, including things like more granular skin tone selection… Apple
  • …and the ability to choose lip color, piercings, hats, mouths, and more. Apple

Sure, some users will appreciate iOS 13's dark mode, but features that relate to privacy, quality of life, and user advocacy are likely to be the ones that make the biggest difference for people when Apple's new iPhone, iPad, and iPod software arrives later this year.

To that point, uninstalling an app to which you have a paid subscription in iOS 13's latest beta release will lead to a prompt to potentially unsubscribe from that app. This might be a good idea because odds are decent that if you're deleting the app, you're not planning to use the related service anymore.

Of course, that won't always be the case: you could just be removing the app temporarily, you could still plan to use it on another device, or you could even just wish to keep supporting the developer who made it. The prompt just says "Manage Subscription," which is what copywriters might call a soft call-to-action—it's not telling you to unsubscribe, it's just making it an option.

MacStories editor Federico Viticci brought this to users' attention Read More – Source

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Ars Technica

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