A transfer that begins close will now finish over the internet.
In the quiet rhythm of software refinement, Apple has issued a second release candidate for iOS 17.1 — this one reserved solely for iPhone 15 devices, a rare narrowing of scope that hints at something particular to its newest hardware. The update carries with it a meaningful set of additions: a richer relationship with music, more resilient file sharing, and a long list of fixes for the small frustrations that accumulate in daily use. When the public release arrives next week, these changes will reach all eligible users at once, closing the gap between the tested and the trusted.
- Apple's decision to restrict the second iOS 17.1 RC to iPhone 15 models signals an unresolved issue specific to its newest hardware — something targeted enough to require a separate build.
- Users have been living with real annoyances: keyboards lagging, caller names vanishing mid-call, ringtones disappearing, and Screen Time settings refusing to stay put across devices.
- AirDrop transfers that once stalled the moment two people walked apart will now finish over the internet — a small change that removes a genuinely common point of friction.
- Music is being reshaped around the idea of favorites, letting the app learn what you love and surface it more readily, from the Lock Screen widget to playlist suggestions.
- A privacy-related bug — the Significant Locations setting resetting silently during Apple Watch pairing — is among the quieter but more consequential fixes in the build.
- The full public release is expected next week, at which point every eligible iPhone will receive these features and fixes simultaneously.
Apple released a second iOS 17.1 release candidate on Friday with an unusual constraint attached: only iPhone 15 devices can install it. The first RC had gone out to a wider range of hardware just days before, making this follow-up a targeted move — likely addressing something specific to the newest lineup's hardware or sensors. A public launch is expected next week.
The features arriving in 17.1 are substantial. Music gains a favorites system, letting users mark songs, albums, artists, and playlists for preferential treatment in their Library and in future recommendations. The Lock Screen's Now Playing widget will support favoriting directly, and playlists will begin suggesting songs that match the mood of what's already playing. AirDrop, meanwhile, gets a practical upgrade: transfers started nearby can now complete over the internet if the two devices drift out of range — solving a frustration familiar to anyone who has watched a large file stall mid-transfer.
Apple Watch users on watchOS 10.1 will gain NameDrop when paired with an iPhone running iOS 17.1. iPhone 15 Pro owners get a fix for accidental Camera and Flashlight activations from pocket presses, while other models gain a flashlight indicator in the Dynamic Island. U.S. Discover cardholders and UK users will be able to link bank accounts through Apple Wallet.
The bug fix list is long and addresses genuinely irritating problems — keyboard lag, missing caller names during active calls, vanished ringtone options, and unreliable Screen Time syncing. A privacy issue involving the Significant Locations setting resetting during Apple Watch pairing is also resolved. Display image persistence and crash detection are improved across iPhone 14 and 15 models, and StandBy mode gains new screen-off controls for Pro models. iPad users receive support for the new USB-C Apple Pencil. When the public release lands next week, all of it arrives at once.
Apple sent out a second release candidate for iOS 17.1 on Friday, and this one came with an unusual restriction: it's available only on iPhone 15 models. The first RC had landed just a few days earlier for a broader range of devices, making this follow-up build a targeted refinement rather than a general update. A public release is expected sometime next week.
The narrow distribution of the second RC suggests Apple is working through something specific to the iPhone 15 lineup — whether a hardware interaction, a sensor calibration, or a last-minute fix that only surfaces on the newest hardware. Developers with a registered Apple ID can access it through the Software Update section of the Settings app, under Beta Updates.
The feature set coming in iOS 17.1 is fairly substantial. Music gets one of the more noticeable changes: users will be able to mark songs, albums, playlists, and artists as favorites, with that favorited content folding into the Library and shaping future suggestions. The Now Playing widget on the Lock Screen will support favoriting directly, and playlists will now surface song suggestions at the bottom — a nudge toward music that fits the mood of whatever you're already listening to. A new cover art collection will shift colors to reflect the playlist's content.
AirDrop is getting a meaningful upgrade. Transfers that begin in close proximity will now be able to finish over the internet if the two devices move out of range of each other — a practical fix for anyone who has watched a large file stall the moment they walked away. Apple Watch users running watchOS 10.1 will also gain NameDrop functionality when paired with an iPhone running iOS 17.1, extending the feature that lets people share contact information by bringing devices close together.
For iPhone 15 Pro owners specifically, iOS 17.1 addresses an accidental activation problem — the update is designed to prevent the Camera or Flashlight from triggering while the phone is in a pocket. Other iPhone models get a flashlight indicator in the Dynamic Island, a small but useful visual cue. On the financial side, U.S. Discover card holders and users in the United Kingdom will be able to link their bank accounts through Apple Wallet to view balances and recent transactions.
The bug fix list is long and covers some genuinely irritating problems. A keyboard responsiveness issue is being addressed, as is a bug that prevented incoming caller names from appearing when the user was already on another call. Custom and purchased ringtones that had gone missing as text tone options should reappear. Screen Time settings, which have had a reputation for unreliable syncing across devices, are getting a reliability improvement. There's also a fix for a privacy-related issue: the Significant Location setting was resetting unexpectedly when an Apple Watch was transferred or paired for the first time.
Additional fixes cover display image persistence — a form of screen burn-in — and crash detection optimizations across all iPhone 14 and iPhone 15 models. StandBy mode, the always-on display feature introduced with iOS 17, gains new controls for when the screen turns off, though that option is limited to the Pro models from both the iPhone 14 and iPhone 15 generations.
For iPad users, the update adds support for the new USB-C Apple Pencil. The full public release, when it arrives next week, will bring all of this to every eligible device at once.
Citações Notáveis
Content continues to transfer over the internet when you step out of AirDrop range.— Apple iOS 17.1 release notes
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why would Apple release a second RC that only works on the iPhone 15? That seems like an unusual move.
It signals something specific to that hardware — maybe a sensor behavior, maybe a camera pipeline issue. Apple doesn't narrow distribution like that without a reason tied to the device itself.
Is a second RC unusual in general, or does Apple do this often?
It happens, but it's not routine. A second RC usually means something surfaced in testing that needed another pass before they felt comfortable shipping to everyone.
The AirDrop internet continuation feature — how significant is that practically?
More than it sounds. Anyone who's tried to send a large video and had to stand awkwardly close to someone for two minutes knows the friction. Finishing over the internet removes that entirely.
The Music favorites feature — is that genuinely new, or is Apple just surfacing something that already existed?
It's a meaningful expansion. Favoriting existed for stations before, but extending it to songs, albums, playlists, and artists — and having it actually influence suggestions — is a different level of integration.
The caller ID bug sounds like it should have been caught much earlier. How does something like that slip through?
These edge cases often only appear under specific conditions — being on an active call when a second one comes in isn't something every tester hits regularly. It's the kind of thing that gets reported in volume once it's in the wild.
What does the Significant Location privacy reset bug actually mean for users?
Significant Location is a setting that tracks places you visit frequently to improve Maps and other features. If it resets without the user knowing, their privacy preferences aren't being honored — which is a more serious problem than it might appear.
What should people actually be watching for when the public release drops next week?
Whether the keyboard fix holds up at scale, and whether the Screen Time syncing improvement actually sticks — that one has been broken in various forms for a long time.