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iOS 18.2 makes Apple Photos better with these five changes

Apple’s Photos app got a major redesign in iOS 18, and not all of the changes have been well received. Fortunately, Apple’s listened to feedback and has made five key changes to Photos in iOS 18.2.

#1: Video interface changes

iOS 18.2 Photos app video player
Photos app in iOS 18.1 (left) and iOS 18.2 (right)

One controversial change to videos in iOS 18 is that they would initially play with borders, and you had to tap to make them go full-screen.

Now in iOS 18.2, videos are automatically full-screen by default. There’s no need to tap, and no weird zooming in and out effect.

You can still tap to hide interface elements and get a cleaner view, but it’s essentially a lot more like how videos worked pre-iOS 18.

#2: Disable auto-looping videos

iOS 18.2 Photos setting loop videos

Not a fan of having your videos automatically loop? Apple now provides a choice.

Inside Settings ⇾ Photos there’s a new toggle: Loop Videos.

It’s still on by default, but if you hate the looping behavior, a quick flip of the switch will change that.

#3: Swipe to go back

When navigating the various Collections offered by iOS 18’s Photos app, you previously had to hit the back button in the top-left corner to go back. This was especially a pain on larger iPhones.

In iOS 18.2, a swipe gesture has been added for navigating out of a Collection view. This works just like in every other Apple app, where you swipe right from the left side of the screen to go back to your previous view.

#4: Frame-by-frame video scrubbing

iOS 18.2 Photos scrubbing

Sometimes you want to go super granular with a video, and now you can in iOS 18.2.

Support for frame-by-frame scrubbing has been added, accompanied by a new millisecond reading for the timestamp as you scrub.

#5: Clearing history

The number of Utilities in the Photos app has gotten long in iOS 18, and there are a couple options you might not be aware of:

  • Recently Viewed
  • Recently Shared

Both of these albums provide a recent history of your activity. They let you quickly see what you’ve recently viewed and also items you’ve shared with others.

In iOS 18.2, for the first time you can clear the history in both of these albums.

To remove an individual item, you can long-press it and remove it from the pop-up menu. Or, there’s also a ‘Remove All’ option from the album’s three-dot menu in the top-right corner.

iOS 18.2 Photos changes: wrap-up

iOS 18 was a major redesign for one of Apple’s most popular apps, so it’s unsurprising that users have had trouble adapting to some changes. It’s good to see Apple respond to users’ feedback and implement some quality-of-life upgrades in iOS 18.2 that make Photos work better than before.

What do you think of the Photos changes? Let us know in the comments.

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Author

Avatar for Ryan Christoffel Ryan Christoffel

Ryan got his start in journalism as an Editor at MacStories, where he worked for four years covering Apple news, writing app reviews, and more. For two years he co-hosted the Adapt podcast on Relay FM, which focused entirely on the iPad. As a result, it should come as no surprise that his favorite Apple device is the iPad Pro.

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