


Should something go wrong, you could lose every byte of data on your iOS device. We strongly recommend you complete an archived backup of your iPhone before jumping on the beta.

It was renamed to iOS 13.6 when the second betas came out on June 9.Īpple invites beta testers to download and use pre-release iOS versions ahead of time, to find any bugs or issues that may be present. The iOS 13.6 beta first appeared as an iOS 13.5.5 developer and public beta on June 1. If you want to try out new features on your iPhone before the masses, install either the developer or public beta. That currently costs $99 per year, of course.Apple's already gone through iOS 13.0, 13.1, 13.2, 13.3, 13.4, and 13.5 betas, and now it's time for iOS 13.6.

With Apple expected to announce iOS 17 at WWDC in June and immediately begin releasing developer betas, it looks like the only way to get in on day one will be to register as an Apple developer. "In future iOS releases, Apple says this menu will be the only way to enable developer betas, as profiles will stop working."ĭeveloper beta profiles have historically been trivially easy to download from the internet, although Apple has shown signs of trying to crack down on such websites in the past. "The menu will only appear if a user's iPhone is signed into the same Apple ID they used to enroll in Apple's Developer Program," the report notes. But the change ensures that the new menu will only appear on iPhones that are signed into Apple ID accounts that are registered with Apple. MacRumors reports that the very first iOS 16.4 developer beta has changed how things work by adding a new menu that allows people to choose whether they want to download the public or developer betas onto their device.
