![]() I opened this topic as macOS thread, as I'm expecting more professionals here than in the iOS thread. ![]() Luckily, after the scandal they stopped it and now even a few years old iPhones are smooth on home screens. And even that's assuming that something else used most resources of older iPhones, which I'm quite sure is not the case at all. It's just the matter of thread priority and Apple clearly didn't want to do this. I've been super suspicious about this, because making UI smooth is easy even in resource-hungry environment. Or does it not? What is exactly happening in these new versions that use more resources all the time? I remember that before this "battery saving" (yeah, right) scandal blew up, every iOS version made home screen slower on older iPhones. When we install new versions, our hardware "naturally" becomes more and more obsolete. Unless this feature works in the background, it has no impact on performance whatsoever. ![]() I'm a programmer myself and I know this is not the case. Most people think that adding features to software makes it slower. Most people I talk about with about this disagree. ![]() I have an unpopular and perhaps a little controversial opinion that Apple makes old devices obsolete on purpose. I'm expecting this, but saying just in case. ![]()
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