iOS, Apple and iPhone
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Apple surprises users with unexpected update, quietly reviving older iPhones and iPads.
When Apple stops supporting older iPhones and iPads with the latest version of iOS or iPadOS, it usually isn’t the end of the line—Apple keeps releasing new security-only patches for those devices for another year or two, keeping them usable while their hardware is still reasonably capable.
Apple's latest software update might be frustratingly inconvenient but unfortunately, it’s also necessary.
Apple released a new update for the iPhone 5S, iPhone 6, and iPhone 6 Plus, but don't expect any new features.
That’s not as cataclysmic a dropoff as Statcounter’s data suggests, even before considering other mitigating factors—iOS 26 dropped support for 2018’s iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR, for example, while iOS 18 ran on every iPhone that could run iOS 17.
Potentially impacted devices included the iPhone 8, 8 Plus, and X, when updated to Apple's iOS 16.7.13 software, according to Telstra.
Apple releases security updates for all iPhones released in the past 12 years.