iPhone 3.0 might allow background apps to run

Something significant has obviously delayed the original September launch of push notifications, Apple’s solution to not allowing apps to run in the background.

iPhone 3G

Several blogs have heard that Apple is considering allowing real background processes instead. This would be huge for many users and developers that have been clamoring for the feature to be added.

Android and especially the Pre have made background apps and the true multitasking they allow look a lot sexier, and the iPhone’s one-app-at-a-time paradigm more restrictive, even with the compromise of push notifications.

Push notifications allow apps like AIM to send you notifications (through Apple) of say, new IMs via an SMS-like prompt, even while the application isn’t running. So you could kind of think of the app as running in a cloud, essentially. Not multitasking by any means, but for some an acceptable compromise on battery-draining background apps.

Many say that if what they’re hearing is true, and Apple allows apps to run in the background, it would happen with the iPhone 3.0 software. On the current iPhones, it would likely be restricted to one or two processes at a time, but with the beefier hardware (with a multi-core CPU and such) of the next-gen iPhone, it’d be less restricted.

Having apps run in the background might actually be worth the longer wait until the next generation of iPhone gets released.

Related posts:

  1. iPhone OS 4.0 event: Multitasking
  2. Apple having a change of heart regarding background apps on the iPhone?
  3. New iPhone AIM version supports push notifications

2 Comments to “iPhone 3.0 might allow background apps to run”

  1. on 06 Feb 2009 at 4:23 amiPhone App Reviews

    I agree with the last sentence.

  2. on 15 Mar 2009 at 3:41 amjohnny

    what they really need to do and it should be the first thing they need to worry about is having the text keyboard go sideways for sms n not for googlemail get real guys come on even the BB storm has that