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29 June, 2016

HTC 10 review: One and only HTC phone that you should buy

HTC 10 review: One and only HTC phone that you should buy


HTC makes some amazing phones. There's no denying that. When in doubt, you can always check out the One M7, or any other One-range phone -- save the One M9 and M9+ , which were bad -- for that matter. If you're one on a tight budget, the company has a fair share of mid-level Desire phones that you can go for. HTC's One and Desire phones have always managed to stand out from the crowd on the back of their pleasing looks and polished user interface. No other company gets even close.


HTC was probably one of the first few companies to come out with a phone boasting of a rounded metal back with plastic antenna inserts on the back. And yet, every single time you see an all-metal phone with distinct antenna lines on the rear, you're instantly reminded of the iPhone. Well, the irony! A lot of this has to do with Apple's clever marketing strategies. HTC instead has relied heavily on carriers to promote its phones.


The times they are a-changin'. The company has grown wiser with time. The One A9 was only just the beginning ; the One X9, just a drop in the ocean. HTC was saving the best for the last. Enter HTC 10, HTC's best smartphone to date, and very well, the top contender for the best Android flagship phone of the year.

Design and build quality

All flagship HTC phones have carried the 'One' moniker for as long as, ahem, one can remember. All flagship HTC phones have also carried the 'M' moniker for as long as one can remember. Things are however different this time round.

The company has decided to let go of certain things that were holding it back in the past and for the first time built a flagship phone without the One and M monikers. The phone is now simply
called the HTC 10.

You might say the HTC 10 is just another smartphone with big bulging chamfers. But there's something very out of the ordinary about its ordinary design statement
Naming aside, the HTC 10 isn't all that different from last year's M9+. But that is alright. The M9+ looked beautiful and so does the HTC 10. In fact, unlike the M9+ that was slippery, the HTC 10 stays put in hands. It's safe to say that HTC's new phone hits the Samsung Galaxy S7 and LG G5 straight out of the ball park as far as ergonomics are concerned. It's just that good. The HTC 10 achieves this feat on the back of chamfers: big pointy edges that extend all along the rear of the phone.


HTC might as well have played safe and gone with something more - for the lack of a better word - regular. But honestly, HTC has played it safe for far too long. And it hasn't been helping its case
much. The company gave us the first glimpse into its wild side
when it launched the One A9, a phone that oddly resembled the iPhone. With the HTC 10, it's going for the kill. And no, it doesn't look anything like the iPhone, in case you're wondering.
You might say the HTC 10 is just another smartphone with big bulging chamfers. Take that away, and it's no different from last year's model. In fact, put it next to the Galaxy S7, and the HTC 10 doesn't have enough to make you want to pick it up on the spur of the moment. But, give it a try, and its build quality and subtle no-fuss looks will make you want to hold it some more. It's one of those instances where first impressions don't necessarily mean the end of the world.


It's not as slim and light as the Galaxy S7 and the LG G5, but it's
got just the right weight, and just the right girth... gives you something to hold on to: always a plus.
The front is very reminiscent of the One A9 with an oblong physical home button alongside curved 2.5D curved Gorilla Glass


3.
There's something very out of the ordinary about the HTC 10's ordinary design statement. Especially in the way the buttons just ease firmly into the edges, the grooved texture of the power button that feels confident to click, and the touch-sensitive home button on the front that doubles as a fingerprint scanner. Not to forget, it's super-fast and super responsive. If there's one thing that left me wanting, it has to be the backlit capacitive keys. They feel anaemic. Also, some waterproofing would have gone a long way in making me fall head over heels.


Display

The HTC 10 comes with a 5.2-inch QuadHD Super LCD 5 display with a 1440 x 2560-pixel resolution. Display is fantastic. But then, even last year's M9+ came with a fantastic display. So, what's different? HTC says the 10's new LCD 5 panel is 30 per cent more colourful and 50 per cent more responsive to touch than its predecessor. The difference will be indiscernible to most users, but there is, a difference nonetheless.

HTC seems to have gotten things right as far as colours are concerned. The HTC 10 takes things forward after the One A9. Although, it dumps the AMOLED panel of the One A9 in favour of a more neutral LCD panel, colours look every bit as rich and vibrant as on the former. The phone has excellent viewing angles and outdoor legibility is just spot on. It doesn't get as overboard with colours as the Galaxy S7, but a more neutral palette is all the more soothing to the eyes. The only quibble I do have with the HTC 10 is the lack of an always-on display, something that both the Galaxy S7 and LG G5 have.

Software

The HTC 10 runs Android 6.0.1 Marshmallow-based Sense UI. Sense was already a pretty good user interface. Folks back at HTC have made it even better with its latest iteration.

While Samsung still feels obliged to stuff TouchWiz with some bloat or unwanted
apps, even in its most toned down avatar, HTC has gone ahead and reduced their number to almost a zero.

If that wasn't enough, it has also removed many duplicate apps and instead gone with only stock Android solutions. For instance, Google Photos is your basic gallery app on-board the HTC 10.
By minimising bloat and omitting duplicate apps, HTC has made an already smooth UI, smoother. And it's every bit as customisable. Sense gives you many options to tinker around with the user interface. You get to change themes, icons, tones and more. A new addition to Sense is freestyle layout themes. Freestyle layout themes essentially allows you to place stickers on your home screens. Each sticker can be assigned with a specific widget or function. I didn't find it very useful, but for someone who's into a lot of tailor-made stuff, it's nice to know the option is there.

Performance and battery life

A top-tier Android flagship phone in the year 2016 would be incomplete without Qualcomm's Snapdragon 820 processor. This one's clocked at 2.2GHz - in the HTC 10 -- and coupled with Adreno 530 GPU and 4GB of RAM. It comes with 32GB of internal memory which is further expandable by up to 2TB via microSD card. The single-SIM phone supports 4G LTE connectivity.
A combination of high-end hardware and slick, bloat-free software ensures the HTC 10 runs smooth as butter, and has absolutely no trouble whatsoever in dealing with tasks, both basic and hard-grinding. Graphical games are handled well, with no lag at all, even at maxed out settings. All this, and the HTC 10 still manages to stay cool as a cucumber. The only time that it did get warm - visibly - was while charging, and that's not really a point of concern.
The HTC 10 is an absolute treat for audiophiles. That's right, BoomSound is back with a bang, only this time it's sporting an all new look and feel. HTC has replaced the dual stereo setup of the company's heydays - much to my disappointment -- with a mono speaker out, and opted for a separate tweeter (bottom) and subwoofer (top) each with its own dedicated amplifier. The result, well, it doesn't sound quite as good as it used to, once upon a time, but it also doesn't get any better than it, in this day and age. Let's just say, the Galaxy S7 and the LG G5 (and the iPhone 6S) sound ridiculously quieter in comparison. The HTC 10 doesn't outdo the HTC One M8 though.
But then, the HTC 10 has an ace up its sleeve. The phone supports Hi-Res Audio and can upscale all (lower-res) audio to 24-bit quality. It also ships with dedicated Hi-Res earphones in the box for the purpose. The Hi-Res Audio + Hi-Res earphones combo is without a doubt the most compelling feature to buy the HTC 10. It's just that good (read, loud).

The HTC 10 is also the first Android smartphone in the world to support Apple's AirPlay wireless audio streaming format out-of-the-box. This means it can stream audio to Apple certified speakers as well as Apple TV.
Phone calls made with the phone are of excellent quality and we did not encounter any odd call drop issues with our review unit.
The HTC 10 is backed by a 3,000mAh battery which is non-removable. For your reference, battery life of the HTC 10 is somewhere in the middle of the Galaxy S7 (max) and the LG G5 (min). You can call it decent, at best. While extreme usage got us close to 13 hours, moderate to light usage got us close to one full day, without breaking a sweat. Most users, with more generalised usage will be able to squeeze out one to one and a half day out of the phone. Also, Qualcomm's Quick Charge 3.0 means the phone charges like a bullet.

Camera

The HTC 10 sports a 12-UltraPixel camera on the rear with F1.8 aperture, laser autofocus, Optical Image Stabilisation and dual-LED flash. The HTC 10 uses the same sensor as the Nexus 5X (and Nexus 6P for that matter) but a different (and brighter lens). HTC's UltraPixel sensor is notorious for allowing more light into the lens, resulting in brighter pictures. This in tandem with OIS should technically entail in the best Android flagship camera phone of the year. Well, it's not. The Galaxy S7 is.
The HTC 10 isn't so much of a bad camera phone - it's pretty good actually - as it is inconsistent. Normally, it would go about clicking pretty detailed photos in varied light conditions (even tricky, and low light) without losing a breath. Then all of a sudden, it would overexpose a shot leaving behind blown out highlights and throwing colours totally off guard.
The HTC 10 compensates for its hit-and-miss rear camera by giving you the best front-facing camera in a high-end phone this year
The camera app has to be the biggest highlight of the HTC 10. It is pretty well-equipped - replete with 4K (with Hi-Res Audio), RAW support and full-on Pro modes - and boasts of the best navigation scheme - with buttons and no text -- I've seen in a flagship smartphone. Also, it's up and running in a jiffy. In fact, the whole thing (including autofocus and shutter speed) works like a speeding bullet.
The HTC 10 compensates for its hit and miss rear camera by giving you the best front-facing camera on-board any high-end flagship this year. The phone has a 5-megapixel camera on the front with f/1.8 aperture, autofocus, Optical Image Stabilisation and a screen flash. Clicks some amazing and detailed selfies, this one. Even in tricky light situations.



Should you buy it?

The HTC 10 is easily the best phone that HTC has built in like forever. The phone has all the bells and whistles of a top-tier flagship, and it's safe to say that it delivers on almost every front as well. It has top-notch build quality, a sharp display with good viewing angles, a fantastic front-facing camera with OIS, flagship-class performance and decent battery life. The star of the show however has to be the phone's bloat-free Sense UI and its Hi-Res Audio prowess. No other phone comes even close to the HTC 10 in this regard.
Is it perfect? No. Is it the best Android flagship phone of the year? Not really. The Samsung Galaxy S7 (and Galaxy S7 Edge) still has my vote - because, well, camera and battery life -- but, that's just my opinion. The HTC 10 gets dangerously close. In fact, if you're willing to give the HTC 10's hit and a miss rear camera the benefit of doubt, there's frankly no compelling reason why you shouldn't go for it, even at a price as high as Rs 52,990.

This is the phone that long-term HTC fans have always wanted, this is the phone that long-term HTC fans have always deserved.


What's New in macOS Sierra


macOS Sierra, the next-generation Mac operating system, was unveiled at the Worldwide Developers Conference on June 13. Apple chose to do away with the OS X name in favor of the new "macOS" name to bring the Mac operating system in line with iOS, watchOS, and tvOS. 
The main new feature in macOS Sierra is Siri integration, bringing Apple's personal assistant to the Mac for the first time. Siri offers many of the same capabilities available on iOS, along with Mac-specific functionality like the ability to search through documents to quickly find files. 
There's also an option to pin Siri search results to the Today section of the Notification Center or to add them to documents to provide up to date information at a glance. Siri can also do things like search through Photos, set reminders, initiate FaceTime calls, and more. 
In Photos, computer vision and new deep learning algorithms allow the app to recognize people, places, and things in images using facial, object, and scene recognition, using the information to group images into intelligent collections and enable powerful search capabilities. A new "Memories" tab creates curated collections of past photos to resurface old memories, and there's a new "Places" album for displaying all photos on a world map. 
Messages has rich links for previewing web content and watching video clips directly within the app, and it supports iOS 10 sister features like bigger emoji and "Tapback" options for quickly responding to messages with icons like a heart or a thumbs up. In iTunes, Apple Music is redesigned with a bolder look and a simpler interface to improve music discovery.
Continuity features are expanding in macOS Sierra with the introduction of a new "Auto Unlock" option for Apple Watch owners. When an authenticated and unlocked Apple Watch is in close proximity to a Mac, it unlocks automatically without the need to enter a password. Also new on the Continuity front is Universal Clipboard, a feature for copying something on one Apple device and pasting it on another. 
Deeper iCloud integration makes all of the files stored on the desktop or the documents folder of a Mac available on all of a user's devices, including other Macs, the iPhone and the iPad through the iCloud Drive app, and the web through iCloud.com. 
macossierrafilesicloud
All Mac apps, first and third-party, are able to use multiple tabs in macOS Sierra, so in apps like Pages, users work with multiple tabs instead of multiple windows when accessing more than one document. Picture in Picture multitasking is also new in the OS, allowing users to watch a video while doing other things. 
Apple is introducing a new Apple File System (APFS) built around SSDs and engineered with native encryption as a primary feature. There's also a new Optimized Storage feature that frees up space on a Mac when storage is getting low. 
Along with iOS 10, macOS Sierra supports Apple Pay in the web browser, letting users pay for purchases made on the web with Apple Pay. Payments are authenticated through a connected iPhone using Touch ID or an unlocked Apple Watch. 
macOS Sierra is currently available to developers and will see a public beta release in July before launching to the public in the fall. 

The macOS Name

Apple's Mac operating system has long been known as "OS X" since 2001, but in 2016, Apple shifted from OS X to macOS to unify operating system names across its entire product lineup.
macOS joins iOS, tvOS, and watchOS, and though Apple has moved from OS X to macOS, it has continued naming Mac operating systems after California landmarks. In 2016, macOS is "macOS Sierra," named for the Sierra Nevada mountains that span from central California to Nevada. 

Siri

For the first time, Apple's Siri personal assistant is available on Macs through macOS Sierra. Siri can perform the same functions available on iOS, like answering simple queries, looking up information, sending messages, opening apps, and more, plus there are Mac-specific functions. 
Siri is able to search through your files to quickly find content that you're looking for with queries like "Find me the documents I opened last week." Siri also understands context, so that can be followed up with further refinements like "just the ones John sent me."
In macOS Sierra, Siri can be accessed through an icon on the menu bar, a dock app, or a user-specified keyboard command. 
Siri results, which are displayed in individual windows, can be pinned to the Today section of the Notification Center for later reference, or inserted into a variety of documents. Siri results are dynamic and are kept up to date, so if you ask Siri about the score of a particular sports game, you can pin the resulting answer to the Notification Center where you'll be able to see score changes at a glance. 
siriwaveform
The ability to pin Siri results to the Notification Center essentially gives you a huge array of widgets that are kept up to date with relevant information. 
Siri is also able to assist with your day to day work and help with multitasking. Siri can find you web images, which can be dragged directly into a document, or the assistant can bring up a Map to a party that can be included with email invitations. A lot of work has been done to make Siri useful in many different ways in the Mac. 

EXAMPLE SIRI FOR MAC QUERIES

  • Show the PDFs in my downloads folder
  • Just the PDFs I worked on last week (a refining request)
  • Look up the score for tonight's football game
  • Get directions to the closest coffee shop
  • How much free space is on my Mac?
  • Locate all the files I worked on yesterday
  • Play some 80s songs (Apple Music subscription required)
  • What's the weather like in San Diego?
  • Show me photos I took last year
  • Send a message to John

Continuity

There are expanded Continuity features in macOS Sierra, including a new automatic unlocking feature and a universal copy paste option. With automatic unlock, an authenticated Apple Watch can be used to unlock a Mac over Bluetooth whenever you are near your Mac. 
Universal Clipboard allows you to copy something on a Mac and then paste it on an iPhone or iPad and vice versa. It's essentially a cross-device copy paste feature. 
macossierrauniversalclipboard

Photos

The Photos app features a new "Memories" section designed to surface photos that you might have forgotten about, like past trips. It's intelligent and can group photos based on time, location, and even the people and objects in the photo thanks to new computer vision advances. 
With Memories, you can quickly generate little video montages of the photos from specific trips or locations, with the app automatically adding music, titles, and transitions. Music can be customized to convey a specific feeling, like "Epic," "Sentimental," and "Happy," or you can add your own. Titles and the photos included in each video are also customizable. 
macossierraphotosmemories
Some of the memory categories Photos surfaces includes Recent events, Last Week, Last Weekend, Year summary, Trips, Birthdays, and more. 
To power Memories and other features, Photos scans all of your pictures and determines who and what is in them, enabling powerful new search capabilities based on topics. Because Photos can tell what's in a photo, you can search for images with cats, trees, mountains, and tons more. 
There are also newly improved facial recognition features that can better tell who is in an image, and all images of people are organized into a "People" album.
According to code buried within macOS Sierra, the Photos app in iOS 10 and macOS Sierra is able to distinguish between seven different facial expressions including greedy, disgust, neutral, scream, smiling, surprise, and suspicious.
When it comes to scene and object recognition, it appears Photos is able to recognize upwards of 4,000 different items across a wide variety of categories.
A new "Places" album organizes all of your photos onto a world map so you can see all of the images you've taken in every location around the world. Zooming in lets you see the photos you shot in each place, while zooming out offers a wider overview. 
As in iOS 10, it's now possible to edit Live Photos using filters and other image adjustment tools. Third-party developers are also able to use a Live Photo Editing API to create tools for editing Live Photos. 
Photos also has a new "Brilliance" tool for pulling in highlights and adding contrast to improve the detail in images.

Messages

Messages now supports rich links, so you can see previews of content like websites right in the messages feed. With rich links, videos can also be played without leaving the messages app. 
macossierramessages
iOS 10 Messages features, including "Tapback" for quickly responding to messages with an icon like a heart or a thumbs up and bigger emoji, are available in macOS Sierra. When sending one to three emoji, they're displayed much larger than normal.

Apple Music

The Apple Music section of iTunes has been redesigned with a simpler interface that's supposed to make it easier to discover new music to listen to. Tabs now include "Library," "For You," "Browse," and "Radio," for better content discovery, and a new "Search" tab makes searching for songs and albums quicker.
macossierraapplemusic
As with the iOS 10 version of Apple Music, the new look focuses on album art, with a bright, simple aesthetic featuring bold headlines and lots of white space. There's also a new feature for viewing lyrics to songs while listening to them using the MiniPlayer. 

iCloud

In macOS Sierra, all files stored either on the desktop or in the Documents folder are automatically synced to iCloud, making them available on other Macs and on iOS devices. On other Macs, when logging into an iCloud account, desktop and Document files are seamlessly synced and immediately available. 
On the iPhone and iPad, files located on the desktop or in the Mac's document folder are available through the iCloud Drive app. 
Files are also available on Windows machines through the iCloud for Windows app and they can be accessed on iCloud.com, making them available on all devices that support a web browser. 

Optimized Storage

Optimized Storage is a new feature designed to automatically free up storage space when a Mac's HD or SSD is running out of room. Optimized Storage stores infrequently used items in iCloud and removes the from the Mac, plus it sends reminders to users to prompt them to delete used app installers and clear out duplicate downloads, caches, logs, and more.
iCloud-1
Files that are moved to iCloud include ePub books that have been read, old screenshots, iTunes U courses, full-resolution photos, unused Mac App Store apps, old presentations, old image and text files, old documents, unused fonts, old Mail attachments, and more. 
Data that can be permanently removed includes Apple Music caches, trash items after 30 days, web caches, cached Map tiles, fault and error logs, inactive iTunes downloads, Quick Look thumbnails, IPSW files from iTunes, inactive Mac App Store downloads, Xcode caches, old iPhone backups, orphaned iTunes database files, and more. 
iCloud-2

Apple Pay

Alongside iOS 10 and macOS Sierra, Apple is expanding Apple Pay to the web. On participating websites that have signed up to accept Apple Pay, the payments service can be used for web purchases. Apple Pay purchases made on the web are authenticated through an unlocked Apple Watch that is attached to a user's wrist or through the Touch ID button on the iPhone. 
applepayweb
Payments are confirmed with a finger on the Touch ID button or through double clicking on the side button of an authenticated Apple Watch. 

Other Features

PICTURE IN PICTURE

In iOS 9, Apple introduced a Picture in Picture multitasking feature for iPads, and in macOS Sierra, that feature is expanding to the Mac. When watching a video in Safari or iTunes, it can be floated over the desktop so you can continue to work on other things. 
The floating video can be resized, dragged, and pinned to any corner of the Mac's screen. 

TABS

Tabs are being expanded from Safari to all Mac apps that support multiple windows, such as Maps, Mail, Pages, Numbers, Keynote, and more. In those apps, instead of having to open multiple documents at one time, users are now able to access more than one document through multiple tabs. 
macossierratabs
In an app like Pages, for example, when in full screen mode, you can copy/paste between documents or reference multiple documents through tabs. In Maps, you can browse through multiple locations, and in Mail, you can work on multiple email drafts at one time without being overwhelmed with windows. 
Tab support is also being extended to third-party apps. 

SAFARI EXTENSIONS

Safari extensions, previously downloaded through the web, have moved to the Mac App Store in macOS Sierra. Moving extensions to the Mac App Store will give them more visibility while also ensuring they adhere to Apple's standards. 

SAFARI PLUG-INS

In Safari 10, included in macOS Sierra, Apple disables common plug-ins like Adobe Flash, Java, Silverlight, and QuickTime by default in an effort to focus on HTML5 content and improve the overall web browsing experience. Accessing this content on websites where it is required now requires playback to be authorized with a click. 
webpluginssafari10

NEW FILE SYSTEM

Apple is introducing a new file system in macOS Sierra called Apple File System or APFS
APFS supports nearly all of the features of the existing HFS+ file system, but it is optimized for Flash/SSD storage and features strong encryption, copy-on-write metadata, space sharing, cloning for files and directories, snapshots, fast directory sizing, atomic safe-save primitives, and improved file system fundamentals. 
APFS is currently in the early stages of testing and available only to developers. Apple is planning to release APFS in 2017, so it won't initially be included with macOS Sierra. 

RAID SUPPORT

Apple has reintroduced the ability to create and manage RAID volumes in Disk Utility on macOS Sierra, functionality that available in earlier versions of OS X but was removed in OS X El Capitan.
RAID-Assistant-macOS-Sierra

GATEKEEPER CHANGES

Apple has tweaked System Preferences to remove the Gatekeeper security option that allowed apps to be downloaded from anywhere rather than just from the Mac App Store or from trusted developers. 
sierragatekeeper
Apps from untrusted developers can still be opened by clicking "Open Anyway" in System Preferences --> Security & Privacy, but there is no longer a universal option to automatically open all downloaded apps.

DIFFERENTIAL PRIVACY

iOS 10 and macOS Sierra include a new Differential Privacy feature that allows Apple to gather data and customer usage patterns from a larg number of users without compromising individual security. 
In macOS Sierra, Differential Privacy is used to collect data to improve autocorrect suggestions and Lookup Hints. 
Differential data collection is entirely opt in and users can decide whether or not to send data to Apple. 

Compatible Macs

macOS Sierra will run on the following Macs:

2009 AND LATER

  • iMac
  • MacBook

2010 AND LATER

  • MacBook Air
  • MacBook Pro
  • Mac mini
  • Mac Pro

Release Date

macOS Sierra is available for developers as of June 13, and Apple plans to release a public beta in July. The operating system, which will be free to download, will see a public release this fall.
One of the biggest changes found in iOS 10 will be one of the first things you see upon installing the update. Indeed, the Lock screen in iOS 10 has received what amounts to an overhaul and a rethinking of its functionality. Have a look at our hands-on video walkthrough as we explore the iOS 10 Lock screen’s ins and outs.

Bolder font

Apple has definitely scaled back its race to be thin when it comes to font weight. You’ll notice much thicker fonts in apps like the Music app, and you’ll also notice thicker fonts for the Lock screen clock and date.

Slide to unlock no more

The famous “Slide to unlock”, that’s been an iPhone staple since Steve Jobs revealed it on stage at Macworld in 2007, is no more. Instead, slide to unlock has been replaced by “Press home to unlock”. Pressing the iPhone’s Home button is the key to unlocking your iOS device in iOS 10.
If you have Touch ID enabled, pressing the Home button with a registered fingerprint will cause your device to unlock. If you don’t have Touch ID enabled, then pressing the Home button invokes the passcode screen.

VIDEO WALKTHROUGH



At the top of the Lock screen, in the status bar, you’ll notice a lock icon denoting the current status of your iPhone. If the Lock icon is present, that means the device needs to be unlocked first. If the Lock icon is not there, it means that you can unlock the device simply by pressing the Home button.
Slide to unlock is no longer a thing in iOS 10, but there are good reasons for that, as you’ll see in the rest of our walkthrough.
iOS 10 Lock screen

Raise to wake

One of the big complaints about the new Touch ID 2 found on the iPhone 6s and iPhone 6s Plus, was that it was just too fast. It was so fast that the slightest touch of the Home button with a registered finger would cause your iOS device to unlock. Normally, speed would be a good thing, but since the Lock screen contains notifications, unlocking the iPhone too fast would cause those notifications to be missed.
With iOS 10, Apple has solved this issue by implementing raise to wake functionality. Just like its name states, merely raising your iPhone will cause it to wake up and display any Lock screen notifications. This means that you no longer have to press a button to view the current time or any pending notifications.

Camera shortcut

Instead of swiping up from the bottom right-hand corner of the Lock screen, accessing the Camera from the Lock screen in iOS 10 is accomplished via a left swipe on the screen. To close the Camera interface, simply press the Home button to head back to the Lock screen.

Continuity app shortcuts work the same

You can still launch content from other devices using the Continuity app shortcut located in the bottom left-hand corner of the Lock screen. The Continuity app shortcut is one of the few things that remains unchanged about the Lock screen in iOS 10.

Notification Center

Users can still access Notification Center directly from the Lock screen by swiping down from the status bar area. Since Notification Center no longer features a so-called Today View, only notifications are shown in Notification Center. If you wish to view widgets, you’ll need to perform a right-swipe gesture on the Lock screen.
But here’s the really cool thing about how the Lock screen works. If you have notifications for certain apps set to not show on the Lock screen, you can still view those notifications via the Notification Center while on the Lock screen, after verifying with Touch ID. When you do so, you’ll see all of your hidden notifications automatically appear.
iOS 10 Lock screen widgets notification center

Lock screen widgets

In iOS 10, Widgets play a big role in providing information via app icons (using 3D Touch shortcuts), via the Home screen and Notification Center, and via the Lock screen. To access Lock screen widgets, perform a right swipe on the Lock screen.
Like Today View widgets on older versions of iOS, the widgets on the Lock screen can be added, removed, rearranged, and in some cases, expanded.
The Lock screen widgets interface also features a handy Spotlight search bar, which rests right above the current date and time. Users can utilize 3D Touch gestures on Spotlight suggestions or search results to launch directly into specific areas of your favorite apps right from the Lock screen.

Music controls

The Lock screen music controls look largely familiar, although there are some subtle changes that eagle-eyed users will notice. For starters, everything is slightly bigger. Text is bigger, and the sliders and scrubbers are wider and bigger as well.
The small vertical line on the time scrubber has been replaced by a small ball, and the ball used for the volume scrubber is now slightly larger.


Lock screen music controls

Pausing an in progress track has the same effect on the album artwork as it does in the stock Music app. The album artwork gets smaller when music is paused, and slightly increases in size when the tunes begin playing again.
Unlike previous version of iOS, pressing the Home button no longer hides music controls on the Lock screen. This is because the Home button is now directly tied to unlocking the device, unlike in times past.

Conclusion

The basic mechanics of how the Lock screen works have changed, which will take some time for iOS 9 users to get used to. However, I believe that the changes improve the Lock screen’s overall functionality, and that users will enjoy these updates once they get accustomed to them.
What are your thoughts on the Lock screen in iOS 10? Sound off in the comments down below.