I'm never upgrading my iPhone again, and you may not want to either
By Monica Chin, Dec 22, 2017
 
In the past few months, Apple has released frequent updates to iOS 11.
Should you upgrade? For most people, it's a personal preference, but there
are some people who should definitely steer clear. 
I've owned an iPhone 6 for the past two years. When Apple released iOS 11 in
early September, I was still using iOS 9, and my phone was still running
like new. 

I held off on upgrading to iOS 11 for as long as I could, worried about
rumors I'd heard that it would decrease my outdated phone's performance.
Eventually, however, I gave in to pressure from friends and colleagues,
plugged my phone in, and upgraded. 
My phone's performance and battery life were immediately reduced to shells
of their former selves. I now need to charge my phone about three times a
day, it shuts down without warning, and it crashes when I have too many apps
running.  

So it goes without saying that it might not be the best decision to upgrade
to the newest version of iOS for everyone, security risks be damned. The
first group who shouldn't upgrade: Jailbreakers. 
I've never jailbroken my phone, mostly because it sounds like a lot of work,
but a number of my friends are incredibly loyal to the procedure. It's not
yet possible to jailbreak a device running iOS 11, though that's in the
works. 

The second and much larger group is people like me who have an older device
(two more more models behind the current flagship) who are happy with its
current performance. 
Updating your phone is a gamble, and the odds aren't even. Decreased battery
life, keyboard bugs, and general performance glitches are always a risk. But
the reward stays the same, while the risk gets higher, the older your phone
is. If you're happy with the way your phone is running, there's little need
to take that risk. 

It is worth noting one major point here: iOS updates do carry important
security features, and fix vulnerabilities that could compromise your
device. It's worth reading up on these fixes, and factoring them into your
decision. In some cases, it will be worth the risk of avoiding the update.

For example, iOS 11 fixed the KRACK vulnerability, but that was already very
difficult for hackers to exploit. And given the speed at which Apple has
been rolling out iOS updates lately, and then more rushed updates to fix the
bugs in those updates, it's not unthinkable that an update could bring new
vulnerabilities too, as we saw with macOS High Sierra. 

If you're happy with your older iPhone, it's fine to leave it be. Forbes
reports that the happiest users of older phones still use some variation of
iOS 10, or even iOS 9. 
At the very least, don't update immediately after the rollout. Sit back for
a few weeks, keep an eye on the news, and see what vulnerabilities and bugs
arise. Once you have all the facts, you can decide whether to take the leap.


Topics: big-tech-companies, ios 10, ios 10.1, ios 10.2, ios 10.3, ios 11,
ios-11.1, ios-11.2, iOS 7, iOS 9, ios 9.3.2, ios 9.3.5, ios10, ios11,
iPhone, iPhone 5, iPhone 6, iPhone 6S, iPhone 7, iphone 7 plus, iPhone 7s,
iphone-8-plus, iPhone X, Tech, tech-column 
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Original Article at:
http://mashable.com/2017/12/21/when-not-to-upgrade-your-iphone/#lPu8nm69siqX


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