macOS features announced at this conference

thumbnail

This Apple World Developers Conference also brought us an update of macOS. What are the contents of this update? Let's go see it together.

When it comes to macOS, we must start with the name. After Craig's marketing team traveled around the United States for free, they settled on a new name: Ventura.

macOS Ventura brings a feature called Front Scheduling to users who are keen to have multiple windows open at once on the desktop.

In the past, a large number of windows tiled on the screen always looked disorganized. The front-end scheduling of the dispatch center can help you organize complex programs.

The front-end scheduling can focus on displaying the app windows you need to use at present, and automatically organize other redundant windows to the left of the screen, which is convenient for quick task switching.

When you need to deal with tasks that use different apps at the same time (such as browsers and sticky notes), you can group windows, and when you switch back and forth between different tasks, you can quickly call different app groups to focus on work.

The slogan of macOS Chinese is: more efficient, more enjoyable, and more cross-border.

This final focus is more cross-border, not so much for the Mac as it is for the iPad. After all, in order to make the pre-stage scheduling of iPadOS look more reasonable, macOS even has a pre-stage scheduling that is completely consistent with the logic.

Quite a bit, I'm just stubborn and don't want to let the iPad have free desktop windows, so I even let the Mac's desktop not be free first.

Another major update to macOS Ventura is the continuous camera feature that uses the iPhone as a webcam for the Mac (available from iPhone XR onwards).

The process of pairing the two is simple, the Mac can automatically recognize and use the camera of a nearby iPhone, and you don't need to do another waking or selecting operation.

Are you looking forward to these features?

蘋果幫-Apple知識相關問答

Related Posts