iOS 17 added a bunch of cool new features to the iPhone.
iOS 17 was released on September 18, 2023. It was a smaller update, but there are still plenty of awesome features you can check out. iOS 17 is no longer the current version of iOS.
Contact Posters are a redesigned screen that shows up when you call someone. It’s really easy to set up if you’ve customized your Lock Screen before.
NameDrop is an easier way to give someone your contact information — just touch the top of your phones together.
Standby activates when your phone is charging and sitting horizontally. Your phone can be used like a smart display that you can set up on your night stand or desk.
If you start to AirDrop a photo, video or file to someone else but your phones get out of range from each other, the transfer will continue remotely over the internet.
In Settings > StandBy, you can set StandBy to turn off automatically, after 20 seconds or never (if your phone has an always-on display).
You can mark not just a song, but an album or playlist in Apple Music and filter your library to show only your favorites.
When you’re editing an Apple Music playlist, you’ll see suggested songs at the bottom that you can add with one tap.
The new Journal app lets you document major life events, scrapbook your getaways and keep a personal diary.
You can reply to an iMessage with a sticker.
If you want a “private browsing mode” in Apple Music, you can set up a Focus mode that turns off Listening History. Songs you listen to with this Focus enabled won’t show up in your listening history or affect your recommendations.
You can record Spatial Videos that you’ll be able to play back in full 3D on a Vision Pro headset in the future. (On other devices, it’ll play just like an ordinary 2D video.)
A new playlist in Apple Music plays all the tracks you’ve marked as Favorites. Mark a song as a Favorite by tapping the star button from the Now Playing screen.
If you have a ticket saved in the Apple Wallet app, you can share it with someone else simply by holding your phones together.
Stolen Device Protection can protect your iPhone in the event that someone steals your phone after learning your passcode. If someone tries to use your iPhone passcode to make any changes to your Apple ID, they’ll need to authenticate with Face ID and wait an hour. This delay gives you time to sign into Find My on someone else’s device and put your iPhone into Lost Mode.
With collaborative playlists in Apple Music, you can invite another Apple Music subscriber to add songs with you. You can get help making a roadtrip or party playlist ahead of the event.
A new Unity Bloom wallpaper celebrates Black history. It comes with a matching Watch face and band.
iOS 17.4
iPhone sideloading just got much closer to reality.
Third-party app marketplaces, also known as alternate app stores, will let other companies like Meta, Epic Games and AltStore to create their own app stores outside of Apple’s control. AltStore PAL is the first marketplace, where you can download the Delta game emulator and Clip clipboard manager.
Third-party payment apps can use NFC (near-field communication) for contactless payment, just like Apple Pay.
Other browsers like Chrome and Firefox can use their custom web engines.
Cross-platform tracking detection will notify you if a compatible Bluetooth-enabled tracking device has been following you, even if it’s not made by Apple nor made specifically for Find My.
iOS 17.7 released on September 16, 2024 — the same day as iOS 18.0 — with important security patches. iOS 17 will continue to receive minor security updates for the next couple years.
New emoji in 2024
These are all the new emoji in iOS 17.4.
Update to iOS 17.4 to get the new emoji. The new emoji include a face shaking up and down, a face shaking left and right, a phoenix, a lime, a brown mushroom, a broken link, updated family icons and a set of people icons that are now facing right instead of left.
iOS 17 supported devices
iOS 17 runs on the iPhone XS and newer, dropping support for the iPhone X and iPhone 8.
iPhone 15, 15 Plus, 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max
iPhone 14, 14 Plus, 14 Pro and 14 Pro Max
iPhone SE (3rd generation)
iPhone 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max
iPhone 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max
iPhone SE (2nd generation)
iPhone 11, 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max
iPhone XR
iPhone XS and XS Max
iOS 17 Jailbreak
Jailbreaking an iPhone has gotten harder every year. The only jailbreak exploit for iOS 17 is known as palera1n, which only works on iOS devices with an A11 chip and older.
Unfortunately, Apple dropped support in iOS 17 for all iPhones with an A11 chip, the iPhone X and iPhone 8. As such, you can only jailbreak iOS 17 on the basic iPad (6th generation) and iPad (7th generation).
When does iOS 18 come out?
iOS 18, the next major version of iOS, was announced on June 10 at Apple’s Worldwide Developer Conference, WWDC24. Marquee features include the ability to customize the Home Screen by freely arranging app icons and recoloring them to match a theme, a new customizable Control Center, an all-new Photos app and Apple Intelligence.
Journal lets you build a scrapbook or a diary on your iPhone. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
A diary can be a great and invaluable record of your life, but who has time for that? Well, now you do: Apple’s iPhone Journal app makes keeping a diary a breeze. Really, it couldn’t be any easier.
Apple’s Journal app, newly updated in iOS 18, lets you build a record of your life into a multimedia digital diary. Your iPhone will pull together details from your photos, locations and events to give you prompts for memories worth writing about.
Here’s the nitty gritty on using the Journal app — and its latest features.
Checking iPhone 15 battery cycle count is easier than it used to be. Image: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac
The latest iPhones show the devices’ battery cycle count, helping users track the long-term “health” of the battery. Displaying this data is simple, though it’s somewhat hidden.
In addition, you can check when the iPhone 15 or 16 was manufactured and first activated. (Note: This does not work with previous iPhones.)
Come together. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
A hot feature of Apple Music playlist collaboration. In advance of a party, road trip or any kind of themed event, you and others organizing the music can build a playlist together.
This isn’t to be confused with a similar feature, SharePlay, which lets people in the same room add songs to a live queue. SharePlay is more ephemeral; it lets others nearby play songs in the car or to a Bluetooth speaker without passing around your unlocked phone.
A shared Apple Music playlist is saved and can be replayed at any time. To find out everything you need to know about Apple Music playlist collaboration, keep reading or watch our quick how-to video.
Ever wonder what these symbols mean? Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Those tiny, cryptic symbols on clothing tags and car dashboards can confuse anyone. However, your iPhone camera can quickly decipher the meaning of laundry symbols and dashboard icons. You don’t need to look up a guide or Google their meaning. Just take a picture and your iPhone will tell you.
While in my testing the iPhone didn’t identify every single symbol, the feature will do in a pinch. And if you want to use a third-party app for the best possible results, I can recommend two that I found on the App Store that can help you.
Schedule payments using the easiest way to pay someone — Apple Cash. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Set up scheduled, automatic Apple Cash payments to send money to your friends or family on a regular basis. You can use this to pay back your housemates for bills, send your kids some money or pay back personal debts.
Apple’s mental health tracking feature makes it easy to log your feelings and see what’s bothering you most. Image: Duke kgomotso/Wikimedia Commons/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Here’s how to keep track of your mental health using the new mood-tracking feature in iOS 17. Logging how you feel throughout the day with your iPhone should help you identify what’s causing you trouble or what works for you, whether it’s work, family, exercise, sleep or other things.
In order to make any kind of meaningful change, you need to understand fully what helps, what doesn’t, and what you can do. And that means effectively tracking your mental health. Luckily, starting your log is easy. Set it up once, and your phone will ask you every day so you don’t forget.
Let me show you how to start a log of your mental wellness in iOS 17.
Turn your iPhone into a smart display on your desk. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
StandBy mode is a headline iOS 17 feature that turns your iPhone into a smart display on your nightstand, at your desk or in the kitchen. It’s an attractive way to put your phone to work as a small information board or digital clock when you’re not using it.
Of course, it works best if you have a phone with an always-on display like the iPhone 14 or 15 Pro. However, it works on any iPhone with MagSafe running iOS 17. Best of all, StandBy remembers different preferences for different rooms, so you can set it up as a bedside clock in the bedroom, a digital photo frame in the living room, or a music controller in the kitchen. Here’s everything you can do with StandBy on your iPhone.
Speed up this common gesture on your iPhone. Image: Apple/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
A hidden setting in iOS 17 will speed up Haptic Touch, the fantastic feature that lets you preview links and bring up option menus on your iPhone. If you use Haptic Touch all the time like I do, changing this setting will make your iPhone feel supercharged. It brings up handy shortcuts — hidden actions, content previews and contextual menus — in a flash. And that saves you precious time as you tap around your screen.
Alternatively, if you find Haptic Touch annoying and trigger it accidentally all the time, you can slow down the time needed to activate the gesture. That way, a tap won’t be mistaken for a tap-and-hold.
These secret gestures will speed up your iPhone. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Here are a few secret tricks and gestures that will help you get around your iPhone faster. These hidden gestures help you text pictures to your friends faster, scroll through big pages and screens, type special characters and use your phone one-handed.
A smarter way to keep tabs on your loved ones’ travels. Image: Boonlert Aroonpiboon/Wikimedia Commons/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Check In is an iPhone feature that tracks your travels and lets contacts know when you’ve safely reached your destination. It’s great for traveling, or kids going to and from school, or even going on a date. You no longer need to count on remembering to text someone when you make it home safely — your iPhone will let them know for you.
Check In is like sharing your ETA in Apple Maps, but tweaked for personal safety. Friends, family and loved ones will be automatically notified if you’re stopped for any reason before reaching your destination. The safety feature also offers timer-based check-ins, which come in handy for situations like meeting a stranger from Craigslist. If you don’t check in after a set time, your iPhone will alert your contacts.
Here’s how to use it — frankly, every parent should know how this works.
More like “videomail” or “videomessage.” Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
You can send a FaceTime voicemail to someone if they don’t answer when you need to video chat. It’s better than leaving a regular voicemail because it’s video — you can relay a message quickly or show something off on camera.
For instance, if your dog or your human child is doing something cute, or if you want to get a second opinion on an outfit, you might want to show someone. If they don’t answer your FaceTime call, you can record a video to send them to watch later.
There are unspoken rules and tricks to getting your bug reports fixed. Image: Apple/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
June is the best time of year to give feedback to Apple on betas for iPhone, Mac, iPad and Apple Watch. Just after the company releases the initial betas of its upcoming software updates, this is when Apple engineers have the most time to address bugs and make changes. And that makes this the optimal time to file Apple bug reports.
It won’t be long before Apple coders’ task lists fill up through the fall, when the new software will be released. After that, teams are rearranged to make the sprint toward the next year’s Worldwide Developers Conference.
How do you file a bug report or send in feedback on iPhone or Mac? Apple made a tool called Feedback Assistant that will guide you through the process. It’s available if you’re running a developer or a public beta of iOS, macOS or iPadOS.
So if you have any input, you’d best make yourself heard now.
Find your way around the store faster by converting your Reminders list into a grocery list. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
In iOS 17, you can use Apple’s Reminders app as a grocery list app on your iPhone. It automatically sorts items you add into common sections, which proves incredibly helpful when you go shopping. Just open the Reminders app, and you can easily see if you’ve got everything you need as you’re making your way through the store.
I’ll show you how to use it, including how to share your Reminders app grocery list with someone else so you can both add items and check them off the same list.
A modern solution to an age-old problem. Photo: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Whether it’s wedged between the cushions or kicked far under the couch, a handy-dandy feature in iOS 17 and tvOS 17 lets you find your lost Apple TV remote using your iPhone.
The mind races when one imagines how many hours of human life might have been saved if everyone had this feature 30 years ago. Let me show you how to find your AWOL Apple TV remote with your iPhone.
When I say “killer,” I mean in the awesome way. I do not endorse committing murder with your contact card. But if you can figure out how that works, I’d be curious. Image: Apple/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Contact posters let you customize how your Apple contact card looks to other people. If you call someone — and they have your contact info in their address book — your customized contact poster will appear on their screen. If you’re running iOS 17 and don’t know how to create a Contact Poster, let us show you how. (The process might look familiar if you’ve set up a custom Lock Screen.)
Done right, contact posters look great — way better than the old thumbnail images that preceded them. Plus, it’s really easy to turn an ordinary picture into a gorgeous-looking contact poster. And once you set it up, everyone with your matching phone number and/or Apple ID will see your chosen contact picture and personalized contact poster.
Don’t want to miss those important calls about my Lightning cable wholesaling business. Image: D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Using two iOS 17 features in tandem gives you a great way to stop unknown callers on iPhone. The Live Voicemail feature pairs very well with Silence Unknown Callers. With both of these turned on, unwanted calls will be far less intrusive, but you will still be able to pick up the important calls as they come in.
Here’s how to use Live Voicemail and Silence Unknown Callers to avoid phone spam and other annoyances without missing crucial calls.
Old photos that resurfaced on your iPhone due to a bug were not seen by anyone else. Screenshot: Apple
Apple provided more details Thursday about a nasty iOS 17.5 bug that resurfaced old and deleted photos for some iPhone users. Since the software glitch resurfaced photos from as far back as 2010, some people theorized that iCloud Photos secretly stored their deleted images.
However, Apple shot down such theories in its explanation. (The company rolled out iOS 17.5.1 on Tuesday to patch the bug.)
Find charging stations from Apple Maps. Image: Ank Kumar/Wikimedia Commons/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Apple Maps makes it easy to find EV charging stations while you’re on the road to figure out where you can top up your electric car. Apple added some powerful new features in iOS 17 to simplify this sometimes-daunting process for EV owners. Now you can see electric car charger availability, charging speeds and connector types so you can find a way to juice up your vehicle.
When will Siri get that long-overdue brain transplant? Image: Cult of Mac
This week on Cult of Mac’s podcast: With the many AI-powered features reportedly coming in iOS 18, a Siri revamp sounds possible — and promising! We talk about OpenAI’s startlingly good GPT-4o demos and wonder if Siri will ever amaze us like that.
Also on The CultCast:
Who will be Apple’s next CEO? Cupertino reportedly has a couple familiar faces on its short list.
New features in iOS 17.5 are … OK. However, some of the accessibility features coming later this year — including Vision Pro-style eye tracking for iPhone — look pretty incredible.
Those rumors of future folding iPhones just won’t stop.
Listen to this week’s episode of The CultCast in the Podcasts app or your favorite podcast app. (Be sure to subscribe and leave us a review if you like it!) Or watch the video live stream, embedded below.
You don't need an internet connection to use Apple Maps with iOS 17. Image: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac
iOS 17 allows Apple Maps users to download maps for offline use and generate turn-by-turn directions with them. This can be a lifesaver when traveling in remote areas without a cellular connection.
It’s not complicated, but there are several steps to go through if you want to download Apple Maps of certain cities or regions. Here’s how to do it.
iOS 17.5 will introduce a handy 'Repair State' option. Photo: Lyle Kahney/Cult of Mac
A new feature in iOS 17.5 will allow you to submit your iPhone for repair without turning off Find My and Activation Lock. Apple added a new Repair State mode in iOS 17.5 beta 4 for this.
Currently, you must turn off the security feature on your iPhone before submitting it for repair. Failure to do so could prevent Apple technicians from repairing your device.
iOS 17.5 beta 1 is light on changes. Image: Ed Hardy/Cult of Mac
Following a lull of a few weeks, Apple seeded the first beta of iOS 17.5 to developers Tuesday. While iOS 17.4 was a big release, iOS 17.5 beta 1 packs relatively minor (albeit important) changes.
Below are all the changes we have spotted in the first iOS 17.5 beta.
It's easy to customize your iPhone's look by adding widgets and removing app icons you don’t want to see. Image: Kristin Hardwick/Wikimedia Commons/D. Griffin Jones/Cult of Mac
Your iPhone doesn’t need to look like it came from 2012. You can easily swap out wallpapers and/or customize iPhone Home Screen layouts by adding widgets and folders (and by hiding unwanted apps from your view).
This guide will help set up your iPhone screen so it looks exactly how you want it to.
These new MacBook Airs sound like absolute screamers. Photo: Apple/Cult of Mac
This week on Cult of Mac’s podcast: Surprise! Apple drops new MacBook Airs with M3 chips inside. The new laptops’ specs and first benchmarks make the performance boost sound quite impressive indeed. But what should we expect next for the MacBook, and when should we expect it?
Join us for a titillating conversation about the current state (and future) of Apple’s laptops.
Also on The CultCast:
Apple launched the M3 MacBook Airs with amazing specs, but nothing but a press release. Sounds like it’s about to do the same with new iPads. There’s a lot to look forward to if you’re a fan of Apple tablets.
An inside look at the canceled Apple car project offers fascinating details about crazy prototypes, dashed dreams and crushing indecision.
How cool would a MacBook with a folding 20-inch screen be?
The European Union demands a cool 1.8 billion euros from Apple over its dealings with Spotify. Sounds like a shakedown!
iOS 17.4 brings some useful new features to your iPhone, and Griffin tells us all about the best ones.
Listen to this week’s episode of The CultCast in the Podcasts app or your favorite podcast app. (Be sure to subscribe and leave us a review if you like it!) Or watch the video live stream, embedded below.