ios 14 officially sucks, at least for me

Update 19 September

It “magically” fixed itself. Read all about it here: /2020/09/18/ios-14-no-longer-sucks-quite-as-bad-at-least-for-me/ . Regardless of whether it works, I stand by my comments below.

Original Post

As of yesterday I can no longer log into the App Store and perform such necessary tasks as update my installed apps on my iPhone 11 Pro Max. Up to this point I performed my updates manually, after at least looking at what was being updated, and why.

I own a copy of that very expensive iPhone 11 Pro Max with the super fabulous iOS. Before the update I had no App Store issues on that combination. After updating to iOS 14, I get a big fat black screen with the tastefully dark text telling me “Cannot Connect to App Store.” Isn’t that just fucking lovely. All I have on that damn screen to help me is a button to “Retry,” which I can assure you doesn’t do a fucking damn thing to fix the problem.

Yes. I. Am. Royally. Pissed.

What makes this even worse is that none of the solutions I’ve found apply to this problem, not even Apple’s official fix, which I will neither link to nor repeat because it’s as busted as everybody else who copied it. Basically, the final solution is to go to “iTunes & App Store” and log out, then back into the App Store. The only problem is that’s changed for iOS 14. First, this:

There is no longer an iTunes part to App Store. There used to be at one time, but not now. When you click on App Store, you’re presented with this:

Did you notice where you can log out and then back in again into the App Store? No, neither did I.

This is not a failure of testing. This is a failure of fundamental software design at Apple. Who in God’s name came up with this overall design? Why in God’s name isn’t there a button on the first screen that asks you, do you want to log out/log into the App Store? More significantly, why in God’s name isn’t there an explanation as to why you can’t connect to the App Store? As in, help the end user fix their problem? Is that too much to ask? No, dammit, it IS NOT.

I am a long time Apple user, and I have never had any issues like this with Apple products over decades of use. I have always been pleased with Apple. But Apple has really screwed the pooch with this. Fortunately for me I’ve got all the apps I really want installed on my iPhone, and I’m hoping that by turning on “App Updates” that it will automatically update my apps, which is about 99% of what I want. If I want to install a different app, I’ll install it on one of my iPads (which are also up to iOS 14 and can see the App Store just fine, thank-you-very-much) and see if it’s automatically shared to my iPhone. I haven’t tried that trick just yet.

Update

I just tried that trick, and it works. I installed ‘Night Sky,” the “App of The Day” for today, onto my iPad Pro (the 9.7″ 2016 release, first generation) running iOS 14. It installed just fine, and then it also installed in parallel on my iPhone. The only big caveat with this method is that the app must have both an iPhone and an iPad version. iPhone-only versions won’t work, because the App Store on an iPad won’t allow an iPhone-only app to install on an iPad.

 

what time is it in london? daringfireball gets its knickers in a knot over the answer

Just about everybody and their sibling(s) knows who John Gruber is, and his blog, “DaringFireball” ( https://daringfireball.net/ ). In the past, before today, I’d regularly stroll by to read everything he posted. 99% of the time I’d nod my head in agreement with his opinions and observations and then move on to something else. Except for today.

Today, Gruber wrote ‘What Time Is It in London?’ ( https://daringfireball.net/2020/05/what_time_is_it_in_london ) in which he took Apple to task because Siri, when asked the question, supposedly took too long and then answered with the time in London, Canada.

Nilay Patel asked this of Siri on his Apple Watch. After too long of a wait, he got the correct answer — for London Canada. I tried on my iPhone and got the same result. Stupid and slow is heck of a combination.

So one of Gruber’s Twitter buddies tweets his experience asking the question, and Gruber gives it a try and finds the same issue. That’s fine as it goes. Except it gets much worse. In the next paragraph Gruber writes:

You can argue that giving the time in London Ontario isn’t wrong per se, but that’s nonsense. The right answer is the common sense answer. If you had a human assistant and asked them “What’s the time in London?” and they honestly thought the best way to answer that question was to give you the time for the nearest London, which happened to be in Ontario or Kentucky, you’d fire that assistant. You wouldn’t fire them for getting that one answer wrong, you’d fire them because that one wrong answer is emblematic of a serious cognitive deficiency that permeates everything they try to do. You’d never have hired them in the first place, really, because there’s no way a person this lacking in common sense would get through a job interview. You don’t have to be particularly smart or knowledgeable to assume that “London” means “London England”, you just have to not be stupid. (emphasis mine)

The stench of arrogance and entitlement that runs through this paragraph is so strong as to be unbelievable. It’s a good thing I never worked for John Gruber, because if I had and I’d done something, anything, that he deemed to be stupid and “emblematic of a serious cognitive deficiency” I’d have turned around and left far faster than he could have fire me. I would have, in effect, fired him as a boss. Who really wants to work for such a toxic individual?

If I’d run across this type of “problem”, I would have stopped and asked why that kind of result to the question. For software systems, that means letting someone know this is an issue and helping to resolve it. If it’s a person I stop and understand why they delivered that kind of answer. Who knows why? Taking something like this completely out of context and then rage-blogging about it only shows how immature the author (in this case one John Gruber) is. When it especially comes to people, I don’t believe in disposable people. I’m retired now, but I really have tried to be a mentor to those who’ve worked for me, not some bastard boss from hell.

I read that article early this morning while in my doctor’s office (many of us old retirees have Medical Issues that need looking into from time to time). I couldn’t try this in the waiting room, since a doctor’s waiting room, even during COVID-19, should be quiet. But when I got home around noon I tried it, and I got the “correct” answer. Later in the day I tried it again, and then this evening, before I wrote this post, I tried again and grabbed screen shots off my Apple Watch and iPhone. My hardware, in case you’re interested, is a Series 3 Apple Watch and an iPhone 11 Pro Max, both running the latest software that dropped yesterday.

Thanks, John, for helping me to cut my screen time down further. I now have more time to devote to what’s really important, helping others.

Series 3 Apple Watch, watchOS 6.2.5
iPhone 11 Pro Max, iOS 13.5