Apple still does not solve the serious stability and performance problems generated with iOS 13 since mid-September. On Thursday, November 7, the Cupertino firm released version 13.2.2 of the operating system, the latest patch for iOS. The new version corrects, among other bugs, a bug that was affecting applications in the background.
You can download iOS 13.2.2 from your iPhone, iPod touch, or iPad, or you can also update it from Finder (in macOS Catalina) or iTunes (in macOS Mojave or previous versions).
The problem of background apps was related to RAM management. iOS 13 closed some applications in the background, so when a user wanted to return to an app that had recently opened, it was already closed, which completely affected the experience of multitasking.
The release of iOS 13.2.2 is further proof that iOS 13 has been one of the versions of iOS with the most performance issues. Apple has been releasing a new version of iOS 13 almost every week, either public or beta for developers.
To date and with the release of iOS 13.2.2, Apple has released six patches without counting the original availability of iOS 13 in mid-September. Six patches in less than two months is a considerable figure.
Regardless of the number of patches so far, Apple already works on iOS 13.3, which, in addition to correcting more problems that may exist, will bring the option to disable the use of Animoji and Memoji on the keyboard and other functions.