It’s always exciting to update your iPhone to explore all the new features, especially in iOS 16. You have lock screen customization (with widgets), the ability to unsend and edit text messages, improved privacy and security features, and more.
That should be enough to get you updated from Apple to the latest iPhone OS, but there’s always a reason or two to hit the pause button and stick with the OS you’re currently running. If you haven’t updated to iOS 16, here’s why you might have to wait – now.
Your iPhone battery may be draining faster than usual
There isn’t a universal cause for battery drain immediately after a major software update like iOS 16, but it happens to some people almost every year. If your battery health is already bad, you may need to hold off on updating to iOS 16 for a while.
Here are a few reasons why iOS 16 might drain your battery:
Your phone is working overtime in the background. New features may require your files to be indexed to work properly, such as the improved search feature and the duplicate feature in the Photos app.
Your app does not support iOS 16. Developers have plenty of time to update their apps to the latest update, but if they don’t, those apps may drain more power because they’re outdated.
Of course, there are always software bugs that can drain your battery life in the background. Even if you wait for a future iOS 16 update, you may still experience some battery drain for the first few days, but this will usually go away once your iPhone has completed the software update.
You may encounter errors that can cause problems with your iPhone
No matter how perfect a software update looks, some bugs are sure to slip through the cracks. That’s why Apple sometimes releases “dot updates” shortly after major updates to address issues such as: battery drain, lag, forced app closes, phone restarts, unavailable features
The iPhone 14 and 14 Pro appear to have gotten the iOS 16.0.1 update to fix some activation and photo issues — even though the phone hasn’t even been officially released yet.
If you’re concerned about issues like this, you may want to wait until most major bugs are fixed in subsequent iOS 16 updates.
You can prevent others from unsending text messages
One of the biggest new features in iOS 16 is the ability to unsend and edit text messages. You have two minutes to recall a text message and 15 minutes to edit a sent text message, but if you’re on iOS 15, the feature won’t work as expected.
If you’re on iOS 15 and someone running iOS 16 tries to recall a text message they sent you, they won’t be able to. Instead, they’ll get a message that says “You didn’t send a message. They may still see it on devices that haven’t updated the software.” Essentially, as long as you’re on iOS 15, they can’t cancel Send you any text message.
Continuing to use iOS 15 will also affect editing text messages, though not much. Instead of editing the message, it sends extra text for each edit.
You may not get all the new iOS 16 features you want
Not every iPhone running iOS 16 will get all the new features, like a battery percentage icon in the status bar or live captions for videos and FaceTime calls. Unfortunately, older iPhone models, like the iPhone X, iPhone 8, and iPhone XR, won’t receive every new feature available in iOS 16.
Apple has released the developer version of iOS 16.1, adding support for the battery percentage feature to the iPhone XR, iPhone 11, iPhone 12 Mini, and iPhone 13 Mini.
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