6/17/2023 0 Comments Apple wwdc macbookI’ve written elsewhere about this, but essentially it’s easier for me to create automations for many tasks on iOS than it is on macOS-and it shouldn’t be that way. One feature that the Mac desperately needs from iPadOS is, believe it or not, Shortcuts. (Is this the year Mail and Calendar make the move? Only if they get a major overhaul to make the iPad source app more powerful.) The best way to force those improvements is for Apple to bring its own apps from iOS to macOS, so I’m hoping to see a few more Apple iPad apps arrive on the Mac. I’d like to see Apple continue to expand Control Center and allow third-party apps to access it, as well.Īpple needs to keep improving Mac Catalyst, the technology that developers can use to turn iPad apps into native Mac apps. Last year, Big Sur arrived with Control Center, an iPad- and iPhone-inspired feature that has an awful lot of potential. I’d like to see the next version of macOS continue to pick up features and apps from iPadOS. C’mon, Apple, isn’t it time to sell a display that brings some of the Pro Display XDR style to the masses who won’t spend $6,000 for a monitor? Some more influence from iPadOS Except, perhaps, for a relatively affordable Apple external display to attach to those laptops. I know this for sure: if WWDC was still being held in a convention center, there would be no greater crowd pleaser for thousands of Apple developers than new high-end laptops. How ’bout a display for the rest of us, Apple? Perhaps it’s time for a Mac laptop to get built-in cellular networking, as well? I hear 5G is pretty swell. Rumors about that perhaps the 13-inch model will get a redesign similar to the 16-inch model’s introduction in late 2019, bringing it up to 14 inches. (My guess: an M1X processor, based on the same technology as the A14 and M1 chips, but with even more processor cores.)Īnd what better computers to use that higher-power processor than new versions of the MacBook Pro? Though it seems like asking a lot, both the high-end 13-inch MacBook Pro and the 16-inch MacBook Pro are still on Intel processors–and would benefit greatly from a move to Apple silicon. WWDC might be the perfect time to unveil that second Apple-designed Mac chip. The implication is that there’s another chip yet to come that will provide the level of performances that pro users will desire. While we’re well into the Apple silicon transition, and the M1 processor has been remarkably well-received, it’s being used in Macs not targeted at pro-level users.
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