A week after announcing its iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite operating
systems, users are reporting that Apple
has also introduced conference FaceTime Audio calls on both OSes, and
screen-sharing feature via iMessage for OS X Yosemite.
Apple-focussed
blog 9to5 Mac reports
that the iOS 8 smartphone operating system will now enable users to
make FaceTime Audio conference calls looping in multiple users at a
time. This is a huge improvement over the previous version of FaceTime where only one-to-one calls were
possible.
This means that once a FaceTime Audio call has been
made between the two parties in a conventional manner, the users can
further add other people in the call. This feature is also said to be
free of charge. According to Ubergizmo,
the FaceTime conference call feature comes in both iOS 8 and OS X, eliminating the user's
need to depend on just one device.
An additional new feature in
the OS X 10 Yosemite, that
remained unannounced during WWDC 2014, is the built-in screen-sharing
feature of the Message app that can now be used via iMessage, once
again reported by 9to5Mac. Previously the OS X users would have to rely
on third-party softwares to do the same.
This feature is currently
said to be broken in the first OS X Yosemite beta testing programme
however, it would be available by the time the final version is
officially released this fall.
Some of the other major changes
made in OS X Yosemite include Handover (including voice calls) and
Airdrop along with an improved Spotlight, iCloud Drive, Safari browser
and notification widgets .
iOS 8 comes with
enhanced group messaging, interactive notifications and widgets,
Bing-powered search function on Spotlight and more.