Apple’s Craig Federighi has spoken about iPadOS and other new features coming to Apple devices in an interview with the AppStories podcast.
On UIKit and AppKit
“UIKit and AppKit always remained these two separate worlds, and depending on what a developer did, they could build an app that was sort of factored in a way that they shared a lot of cross-platform code, but they had to always take that extra step of having people on the team that knew AppKit, people on the team that knew UIKit, and make the decision to specialize for those two. And for many developers, they chose one or the other and not both, because that was a real effort to get the expertise and to make the investment.”
On SwiftUI
“SwiftUI will make development of UI more accessible to many people who maybe weren’t approaching it before, and that’s exciting, because we’re already seeing some of that with Swift and Swift Playgrounds. But even for the most experienced of developers, giving them a tool that is that expressive and that interactive is going to mean they’re going to build better things, they’re going to try out better ideas, and that’s going to result in better apps.”
On forking iOS and iPadOS
“Things like Drag and Drop, Split View, Slide Over, Apple Pencil… these are things that really define a different way of working with the device. When I work on my iPad, I don’t feel like I’m working on a big phone… or like I’m working on a Mac. I feel like I’m working on an iPad. What we mean when we say macOS, or when we say tvOS, which is an iOS-based platform, or when we say watchOS, which at its core is iOS, these things to us are definitions of experiences. There’s a watchOS experience that’s tailored for apps that make sense on your wrist. tvOS, a 10-foot UI that makes sense in that context. iPadOS has become a distinct experience. We’ve been working our way there steadily over time. With the work we did this year, we felt like we were at a place where this truly was a distinct thing.”
On external harddrives on iPad
“External drives. We’re willing to acknowledge the 1990s and go all the way back. You know, people still use them sometimes. I’m an AirDrop fan myself, but I understand there are other uses… we know with photographers, the ability to import their photos directly into an app like Lightroom is so important.”
Listen to the full interview below, and check back soon for more on Apple, as and when we get it.