iOS 17 now available with StandBy, NameDrop, and interactive widgets

By Wesley Hilliard

Apple has released iOS 17 to the public with more customization options, social features like NameDrop, and intelligence upgrades like a transformer language model for autocorrect.

iOS 17 is here

After a summer filled with betas, the final public version of iOS 17 is now available for compatible devices. It adds new features to the iPhone that focus on health, social, and customization.

A handful of features aren't ready at launch, like the new Apple Journal app. But there is plenty here at launch that users and developers alike will be able to take advantage of.

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Interactive Widgets

Widgets placed on the Home Screen no longer have to be static objects. Widgets can have interactive elements that start songs, set timers, or perform various other tasks without launching an app.

Third-party apps can utilize this feature to introduce new ways to control their apps and data. It isn't so complex that a calculator will work from the Home Screen, but advanced enough to reduce the number of times an app needs to launch to perform a task.

Apple's first party apps provided limited examples of this feature. Control smart home accessories, check off lists, or play a playlist with interactive widgets.

StandBy

StandBy is an iPhone-exclusive feature that provides new abilities to an iPhone that's just sitting around on a charger. When mounted in landscape, usually via MagSafe but wired charging works too, the iPhone will display information.

StandBy makes stationary iPhones more useful

This feature appears to be designed with always-on displays in mind, but works on any iPhone running iOS 17. Official MagSafe chargers even get to set custom StandBy modes per charger, so users don't have to configure the widgets every time.

At night, the information showed on StandBy will be dimmed and showed in red. This makes for an excellent nightstand companion, especially since the display turns off after no motion is detected for a time.

Widgets and photo slideshows aren't the only things available for StandBy. Live Activities can take over the entire display as well, providing a large at-a-glance view of any needed information, like timers.

Phone, Contacts, Messages

The trend of introducing multiple new social features continues with iOS 17. FaceTime, iMessage, Contacts, and even voicemails received some much-needed attention.

Contact Posters fill up the display when someone calls

Device customization has spread to one of the most unlikely place -- the Contacts app. Now users can set up Contact Posters that act as whole-display images when someone calls.

Speaking of calls, if someone is sent to voicemail, the message being left will be transcribed on screen below the Contact Poster. That way it's clear who is leaving the message while providing details about if the call needs to be answered right away or not.

Leaving voicemails has also gotten an upgrade with FaceTime video messages. Apple expects that most people making a FaceTime call have something to show, like a child or pet in the moment, so when that call is missed that moment is lost. Now, users can leave a FaceTime video message when a FaceTime call is missed.

Create custom iMessage stickers from photos

The Messages app was redesigned, moving the app toolbar into a drawer, emphasizing stickers. Users can still get stickers from the Messages App Store, but can now also create their own using the Lift Subject from Background Photos feature. Live Photos can even be used to make Live Stickers.

AirDrop got several new features, but the primary one is called NameDrop. It allows users to easily share pertinent contact information along with their Contact Poster with an NFC tap.

Roadside Assistance via satellite

Introduced for the iPhone 15 generation but also available for newly-activated iPhone 14 models as well, Roadside Assistance via satellite follows the same core concept as Emergency SOS via satellite. In areas of the U.S. where cellular and WiFi coverage is unavailable, users can instead get vehicular assistance via satellite.

The system works in the same way as Emergency SOS via satellite, in that they make a number of selections on their iPhone to detail what the issue is, and then they are prompted to point the iPhone into the sky to send the low-bandwidth message. That message is received by AAA in the U.S., and help is then sent to the user's location.

Access to Roadside Assistance via satellite is free for two years. While the service is covered by AAA membership, it will also be available to nonmembers.

Other features

Apple packs its big updates with dozens of new features. The following updates are also available alongside the ones listed above.

Arriving later

A handful of features revealed during WWDC are not available with the iOS 17 launch. These will come with a later point update once Apple deems the features ready for prime time.

Apple's new Journal app won't arrive until later in the fall

How to install iOS 17 and compatibility

The following devices can run iOS 17:

Install iOS 17 by navigating to the iPhone Settings app, select General, then select Software Update. Ensure beta updates are turned off and the final release version should appear if not already installed.

The iPhone 15 range will have iOS 17 installed from launch.