teethdoc
Pre-takeoff checklist
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teethdoc
Silver Crowns will play taps at your services.
Silver Crowns paid for my airplane.
Silver Crowns will play taps at your services.
Okay, I have an iPad2 and am still running iOS 5.1.1. I take it Foreflight 5.4 will not be available to me unless I upgrade to iOS 6? I've held off doing that for many moons because I didn't want to lose the traffic feature in Maps. Now that I have (and like) Inrix for traffic, I don't care about Maps, so I'm willing to consider the iOS 6 upgrade.
What gotchas do I need to worry about going to iOS 6 on an iPad2?
Is the upgrade fairly bulletproof now or do I still need to be careful (back everything up, etc.)
What about performance? Typically upgrading to a new OS always makes hardware run slower. Anyone running iOS 6 on an iPad2 care to comment? Is it noticeably slower but still tolerable? Barely noticeable? A pig?
I'll just run my FF IPAD1 until it doesn't work anymore and then I'll worry about replacing the iPad. Yes I know I'm missing the terrain and other new features. There's no point in buying computer technology is ADVANCE of needing it.
This is Foreflight's doing, not Apple. They should take their iPad-1-generation of Foreflight and upload it as a new app to the app store. From there they should continue to release bug fixes for critical safety items for at least another year or so.
If Foreflight does not do the above I will be highly disappointed in them.
Okay, I have an iPad2 and am still running iOS 5.1.1. I take it Foreflight 5.4 will not be available to me unless I upgrade to iOS 6? I've held off doing that for many moons because I didn't want to lose the traffic feature in Maps.
The phrase "I could care less" is widely used and known to be essentially the equivalent of "I could not care less". Whether grammarians are happy or not is moot. The phrase is ubiquitous and widely and accurately understood.
Search the terms on line and you'll find many discussions.
I hope you see that it's an OK phrase to use, but if you don't, I could care less.
This discussion cracks me up. We spend a lot of money on flying but yet when it comes to a revolutionary device and app, we can't fork out ~0.5 AMU every 3-4 years for a device that gives you access to a bunch of new features. That's a ~$125 per year, assuming the old device is worthless at the end of the period (which it isn't).
When I said no traffic I meant no real time traffic speeds. Yes there is a toggle to Show or Hide Traffic. With Show Traffic enabled I see construction tags in places, and red dashes along some routes that I'm guessing represent blocked lanes, but nothing like the old green/yellow/red markings showing traffic speeds. Some people are saying that it still shows yellow and red for slowdowns, but all I see is yellow everywhere.I'm running iOS 6 on an iPad2 and haven't noticed any material difference.
And, my "Maps" app still has a "Show Traffic" or "Hide Traffic" button under the fold. Is there a difference?
...The careless factor seems to be very common within many threads. Bad spelling, lack of proper punctuation, poor structure, and wrong words that are pronounced the same demean the comprehension of a good premise...
Okay, I have an iPad2 and am still running iOS 5.1.1. I take it Foreflight 5.4 will not be available to me unless I upgrade to iOS 6? I've held off doing that for many moons because I didn't want to lose the traffic feature in Maps. Now that I have (and like) Inrix for traffic, I don't care about Maps, so I'm willing to consider the iOS 6 upgrade.
What gotchas do I need to worry about going to iOS 6 on an iPad2?
Is the upgrade fairly bulletproof now or do I still need to be careful (back everything up, etc.)
What about performance? Typically upgrading to a new OS always makes hardware run slower. Anyone running iOS 6 on an iPad2 care to comment? Is it noticeably slower but still tolerable? Barely noticeable? A pig?
I have an IPad2 and 3G IPhone. It is just my luck that I renewed in July. My bad, for not paying more attention and trusting them to the nth.
It's pretty amazing that they would drop support for a device that's barely over three years old. I was thinking of trying out Foreflight, but not anymore.
I still might get an iPad at some point, but if I do, I'll have to justify it for reasons other than Foreflight.
Your subscription will still be good, you'll still get all the new charts as they come out - You just won't be able to get versions later than 5.3.3 on your iPhone. (Your iPad is still good.) BTW, I remember people complaining that ForeFlight was almost unusably slow on the iPhone 3G at least two years ago - Are you really still using it on a 3G, or do you have a 3GS?
It bears pointing out that *Apple* dropped support for these devices a year ago - You can't run iOS 6 on them. That is the main reason that ForeFlight won't be releasing future software upgrades to them, as they'd be stuck with the iOS 5 API and be unable to take advantage of the new features of iOS 6 and 7.
ForeFlight is not the bad guy here - They're keeping the chart updates coming, as promised! But they have to make a business decision whether to support legacy devices and stagnate in the face of ever-increasing competition, or to continue to innovate and bring new features to the overwhelming majority of their users who have already upgraded their devices.
People, technology doesn't stand still, and you can't expect it to. If you have an older device, you'll still be supported - My choice of words for the subject line was poor - you just won't be able to upgrade past 5.3.3. The point of posting this thread was to alert you to the fact that you should upgrade to ForeFlight 5.3.3 *now*. App Store -> Updates. Go.
This reinforces my hatred for Apple products.
This is Foreflight's doing, not Apple.
LOL, yep it is Apples fault.
This isn't Apple's doing. Apple at least continues to provide the legacy versions of iOS. Foreflight does not, even when, they have paying customers that are mid-subscription on those legacy versions and have no ability to upgrade.
It bears pointing out that *Apple* dropped support for these devices a year ago - You can't run iOS 6 on them.
That is the main reason that ForeFlight won't be releasing future software upgrades to them, as they'd be stuck with the iOS 5 API and be unable to take advantage of the new features of iOS 6 and 7.
ForeFlight is not the bad guy here - =
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It bears pointing out that *Apple* dropped support for these devices a year ago - You can't run iOS 6 on them. That is the main reason that ForeFlight won't be releasing future software upgrades to them, as they'd be stuck with the iOS 5 API and be unable to take advantage of the new features of iOS 6 and 7.
l
ForeFlight is not the bad guy here - They're keeping the chart updates coming, as promised! But they have to make a business decision whether to support legacy devices and stagnate in the face of ever-increasing competition, or to continue to innovate and bring new features to the overwhelming majority of their users who have already upgraded their devices.
Incorrect. You can still reload and restore an older iOS device if it needs reloading. Plug an older device into iTunes and it'll put iOS 5 ok the device if it can't put iOS 6 on.
Also incorrect. Jesse is right, they need to fork so someone with an older device can still reload the App if they have to reload the device.
That's not what I said. I said that you can't run iOS 6 on old devices. You won't be able to run FF 5.4 on old devices either. In that realm, ForeFlight has supported these devices for a year longer than Apple has.
I'm sure that a business decision was made, with the data that only FF has available, that it was more important to avoid confusion on the part of new users as to which version to install than it was to fork the app in the store.
I'm sure that FF's stellar customer service folks will have a way of dealing with the situation of somebody needing to reinstall.
I'm sure that FF's stellar customer service folks will have a way of dealing with the situation of somebody needing to reinstall.
As a Windows developer and iPad 1 / FF user I have to express some sympathy for Foreflight.
There are only so many times you can write code like:
if [current os] then [Do something cool] else [disable the cool feature]
before you really complicate your testing and risk introducing bugs. And even if you don't introduce bugs, you have users of the old system starting to feel more and more red haired step children.
Perhaps this is a case where some tough love is indicated.
And as far as not being able to reliability back up your copy of the ForeFlight installer, that's not their fault.
It's a feature we iOS users should enjoy.
They're pushing a newer version overtop of the current App that won't run on the older device. This means they're going to:
1) have no way to push updates to iPad 1 users if they encounter a bug
2) ipad 1 users will have no real way to reinstall Foreflight if something happens to their install
The proper thing would be to fork the App.
Imagine if you just paid for a 12 month subscription and you read this. I'd be ****ed. They're completely abandoning such users cutting off any real way to continue to support them. Like I said, the proper thing, would be for them to fork and not allow new subscriptions on the older hardware then continue to support the iPad 1 users until their subscriptions run out.
I can understand not supporting old devices on the new OS after a certain point, but I don't see how the issues you raise justify making the old OS unavailable for those with old devices.
Bottom line is that one needs to add the cost of a new device every 3 years to the cost of the subscription. If you get a 64 MB device, just figure another $700 (or $333 per year) in device amortization/replacement cost. It makes the move to electronic charts that much less compelling if you just fly VFR within a reasonable distance of home. MOST folks will continue to have operating older iPads when they are obsoleted. Heck, I have a 10 year old PC running Linux just perfectly.
No the annoying part is when you pay for something and then it suddenly becomes unavailable. I could careless if they fork and add new features to a newer version but to make the current version unobtainium for their legacy users is ridiculous.
The point remains Kent that they could give a **** a little bit more, provide more warning then this which is essentially none, and provide a smoother path to continue to support the existing users until their subscription runs out. They chose to do this in the least graceful way possible, IMO.
You could just upgrade devices, I'm sure they would honor your new subscription on the new device, I'd also bet they will refund you if you get ****ed. When I decided to cancel and keep WingX, they refunded me.
You'd better understand how I feel if you did what I do for a living. I view their way of handling this as just plain lazy. I hate when people lazy their way out of developing software properly.
You'd better understand how I feel if you did what I do for a living. I view their way of handling this as just plain lazy. I hate when people lazy their way out of developing software properly.
You mean $233/yr. But, you're also making the assumption that the device isn't useful for anything else. This isn't a Garmin device, it's good for a lot of other things too, and my iPad 1 saved me money in other ways as well.
Yeah, I meant $233.
Actually, it costs me more money in other ways, with limited usefulness as a result of Apple's decisions to prevent the device from doing certain things. I've already documented how the limitations on the photo port & inability to write to outside memory make it un-useful for my photo work. No Flash has limited some web functionality on sites I use. And by impeding reload of the version of the software that works on the 1 (which can only be reinstalled if you have backed it up with iTunes), you lose one feature that makes the iPad useful: ability to reload software from the store if your device fails.
All in all, the iPad really adds little or nothing compared to what I get on phones & my netbook/desktop computers. Were it not for FF, I could not justfy the cost of owning it. And this decision puts even that justification on the edge.
I probably would not mind as much if this were on Android as those devices are much less expensive. But when it involves the premium-priced iPad, the proposition becomes very expensive, very quickly.
Yeah, I meant $233.
Actually, it costs me more money in other ways, with limited usefulness as a result of Apple's decisions to prevent the device from doing certain things. I've already documented how the limitations on the photo port & inability to write to outside memory make it un-useful for my photo work. No Flash has limited some web functionality on sites I use. And by impeding reload of the version of the software that works on the 1 (which can only be reinstalled if you have backed it up with iTunes), you lose one feature that makes the iPad useful: ability to reload software from the store if your device fails.
All in all, the iPad really adds little or nothing compared to what I get on phones & my netbook/desktop computers. Were it not for FF, I could not justfy the cost of owning it. And this decision puts even that justification on the edge.
I probably would not mind as much if this were on Android as those devices are much less expensive. But when it involves the premium-priced iPad, the proposition becomes very expensive, very quickly.
I can understand not supporting old devices on the new OS after a certain point, but I don't see how the issues you raise justify making the old OS unavailable for those with old devices.
I could be wrong, but I think the Apple Store is designed to prevent application developers from offering an old and current version of the same product.