Skip to main content

Apple hobbled the Apple Pencil in iOS beta 3, but will restore full functionality soon

Apple Pencil
Malarie Gokey/Digital Trends
Been using an iPad Pro with the iOS 9.3 beta and notice that your Apple Pencil hasn’t been responding normally? It’s a feature, not a bug. According to The Verge, Apple’s been experimenting with Pencil usage and has, for the time being, disabled some of the stylus’s more familiar navigational elements in order to do so. (In the latest iOS beta, for example, the Pencil’s limited to in-app sketching.)

The tweak is only temporary. Apple says it’ll reintroduce the Pencil’s core features in the next version of iOS. “We believe a finger will always be the primary way users navigate on an iPad, but we understand that some customers like to use Apple Pencil for this as well and we’ve been working on ways to better implement this while maintaining compatibility during this latest beta cycle,” an Apple spokesperson told The Verge. “We will add this functionality back in the next beta of iOS 9.3.”

Apple advertises the Pencil primarily as a drawing accessory, but the $100 iPad Pro add-on can capably replace a finger for basic tasks. It, much like the Surface Pen that ships with Microsoft’s Surface tablets, can launch and switch between tasks, scroll through lists, and emulate touches within apps that lack official stylus support.

The fettered Pencil functionality in iOS 9.3 beta 2 and beta 3 led some to speculate that the change was intentional. Indeed, Apple design chief Jony Ive expressed concern last year in comments to Wallpaper that users might “confuse the role of the Pencil with the role of your finger” in iOS. “We are very clear in our own minds that this will absolutely not replace the finger as a point interface,” he said. “But it is, and I don’t think anybody would argue, a far better tool than your finger when your focus becomes exclusively making marks.”

Despite Ive’s apparent reservations, though, it won’t be long before the Pencil will once again work as expected. That’s a good thing: our intrepid iPad reviewer Malarie Gokey called the Pencil “the fastest, most responsive, and utterly perfect stylus that I have ever used.” It’d be a darn shame if it couldn’t do more than doodle.

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Apple’s new iPad Pro and iPad Air just got delayed
Someone holding an iPad Air against a wooden floor.

It seems like the countdown to the next iPad reveal has been stretched out a bit more, though not by an earth-shattering amount of time. So far, we’ve heard rumors of a late March or early April reveal, but that likely won’t happen, according to a new report from Apple insider Mark Gurman.

In his latest Bloomberg report, Gurman says the next Apple tablets should arrive in early May, and he cited the speeding up of production at Apple’s suppliers. Interestingly, production-related challenges apparently pushed back the launch of the new slates across the Pro and Air lineups.

Read more
iOS 18 could add a customization feature I’ve waited years for
iOS 17 interactive widgets on an iPhone 15 Pro Max.

iOS 18 is coming later this year, and all signs point to it being a dramatic iPhone update. Now, thanks to one new report, it looks like iOS 18 could add a customization feature I've been waiting years and years and years for: better home screen customization.

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, iOS 18 will introduce a "more customizable" home screen. More specifically, iOS 18 will allow you to place app icons and widgets anywhere you want. If you want a space or break between an app icon or your widget, welcome to the future: iOS 18 may finally let you do that. MacRumors corroborated this report with its own sources, too.

Read more
I found 16 new widgets for iOS 17 that you have to try
A selection of widgets on an iPhone home screen.

Widgets have long been a popular feature on iPhones. Since the release of iOS 17, they have become more interactive, providing a more engaging experience. Interactive widgets allow you to perform important actions from your iPhone's home screen. For example, you can complete your to-do lists, play and pause media and podcasts, control your smart home devices, and much more — all without opening any apps.

Interactive widgets are not limited to Apple's built-in apps on iOS 17. Third-party developers are also adopting this new feature. Although not all apps offer interactive widgets, there are plenty that do. Here are a few interactive widgets that are worth exploring.
Calculator 17

Read more