Most of those new features have been long overdue, and it’s a relief having them.
With all of those great new additions, however, one has been sticking out like a sore thumb, and for me, this has got to be the most annoying iOS feature.
iOS 16 added many great features
but it forgot to make this one optional
I can imagine quite a few power users enjoying this feature as they swap between various different looks, one for work maybe, another one at home, or who knows what else. All cool with me!
I have anecdotal evidence from a few relatives, but I am certainly not the only one frustrated with this change.
Others seem to hate it too
Here are just a few posts:
“This ios feature has to be able to be disabled, it’s so unnecessary and annoying to accidentally start changing my wallpapers from Lock Screen… needs a patch to turn off ASAP. Very annoying and cluttered design choices, not very Apple,” user Jackston complained.
“I want a patch or update from apple to remedy this issue. I too grab my phone, hold phone, move phone etc. this unnecessary feature is why I wish mr jobs was still here.
stop the insanity.
less is more,” user TracPhone exclaimed.
“This is the worst. I use apple for privacy and consistency. Allow me to disable this crap now. I am happy setting my screens in settings, like normal. Too bad it decides by scanning my face, without asking, moderately unlocking my phone, and then changing by stuff via my pocket fingers. How did this not get alpha tested? Surely we aren’t the beta test. C’mon y’all…” user Snwbrdr191 added.
The frustration is real, and the worst part is that it should not be too hard to find a fix. We just need to be able to disable this feature, as an option, simple as that.
Unfortunately, despite hundreds of complaints about the issue (this one thread alone is eight pages long!), Apple simply does not seem to pay attention to its own Community Forums and has not graced any of the posters with an answer or an explanation.
In such times, I am reminded that sometimes some smaller companies are way better at dealing with such user complaints and actually noticing them. Recently, newcomer Nothing had me impressed with a series of videos where its CEO addresses common problems and complaints in a YouTube video speaking directly to customers. Addressing real concerns, rather than repeating marketing points in carefully staged appearances with influencers (cough, cough).
Of course, the scale is bigger with Apple, but this is hardly an excuse to ignore your own users.
Are you on the same page with me and all those users about this? Have you found yourself accidentally switching wallpapers with “pocket fingers”? Vent your frustration in the comments below or… let me know if it’s all just me and a few people on the Internet.