Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
Three-fingers up swipe will show ‘Mission Control’ and ALL open windows, again regardless of stage… how does that help you compartmentalize your freaking workflow?

Right now I’m doing a two-fingers up gesture at Ventura until they sort out Stage Manager. What a disaster. Sticking with Monterey for now.
 
  • Like
Reactions: golfstud


Apple today released macOS Ventura, the latest version of the company's Mac operating system. macOS Ventura is a significant update that introduces a new multitasking experience in the form of Stage Manager, overhauls multiple stock apps like Mail and Messages, and adds updated capabilities across the platform.

macOS-Ventura-50-New-Features-and-Changes-Worth-Checking-Out-Feature-1.jpg

Below, we've selected 50 new features and lesser-known changes that are worth checking out if you're upgrading, and we've put together a video highlighting 25 of them. Note that macOS 13 is compatible with 2017 and later Macs.


Have you seen any other improvements not listed here? Let us know in the comments.

1. Undo Send Email

In Apple Mail, if for whatever reason you regret sending a message immediately after you pressed Send, you can now unsend the email – as long as you act quickly.

1-undo-send.jpg

After sending the email, an Undo Send option will appear at the bottom of the sidebar (if you don't have the sidebar showing, select View -> Show Sidebar in the menu bar). By default, you have 10 seconds to click it before the option disappears, after which the message cannot be unsent, but the interval can also be set to 20 or 30 seconds or turned off entirely for immediate sending.

2. Use Nearby iPhone as Microphone Input

Ventura's new Continuity Camera feature lets you use your iPhone's camera as a webcam for your Mac, but it also allows you to choose your nearby iPhone as a microphone input, sans video.

2-use-iphone-mic-output.jpg

To enable it, go to System Settings -> Sound, then click the Input tab under "Output & Input," and you should be able to see and select the name of your iPhone, listed as type "Continuity Camera."

3. Mail Follow-up

If you send an email querying something with someone and you haven't received a reply for a while, Mail will intelligently surface the message in your inbox and ask if you want to "Follow Up" the email.

3-Follow-up.jpg

If you don't need a response to the email in question, swipe left on the trackpad to dismiss it, or right-click the message and select Ignore Follow-Up in the contextual menu.

4. Remind Me to Respond to Email

If you receive an email that you would rather respond to at a later time, Mail can remind you so you don't forget.

4-Remind-Me.jpg

Simply right-click on the message in your inbox, then select Remind Me from the dropdown menu. You'll see options including Remind Me in 1 Hour, Remind Me Tonight, Remind Me Tomorrow, and Remind Me Later.... The last option will bring up a clock and calendar for you to set a specific time and date. Once you've done that, click Schedule.

5. Scheduled Send Email

Now you can compose messages in Mail whenever it suits you and schedule them to be sent at a future time and date.

5-Schedule-Send.jpg

In the compose window, click the chevron next to the send icon. From the dropdown, select Send Now, Send Tonight/Tomorrow, or Send Later.... Clicking the last option will bring up a clock and calendar for you to set a specific time and date. Once you've done that, click Schedule.

6. Spotlight Quick Look

In Ventura, you can preview recognized files with Quick Look, just like you can in Finder.

6-spotlight-quick-look.jpg

Simply press the Space bar on a result to open a preview window. Text-based documents also include full Copy selection support.

7. Spotlight Quick Actions

In another turbo-charging enhancement to Spotlight, you can now perform quick actions from the search field without opening the corresponding app.

7-spotlight-quick-actions.jpg

For example, you can create a timer by typing "start a timer," and the Clock app will show a dialog box asking "For how long?" Other quick actions include set an alarm, turn on a Focus, run a shortcut, find the name of a song with Shazam, and more.

8. Pinned Tabs in Tab Groups

When Apple first introduced the Tab Groups feature for Safari, one disadvantage of using them was that you couldn't pin tabs to the left side of the tab bar. In Ventura, however, you can now drag the tab of a website in a Tab Group to the leftmost side of the tab bar, and it will stick.

8-pin-tabs-tab-groups.jpg

Pinned tabs are particularly useful if you like to have certain websites open that you tend to visit frequently throughout the day.

9. Wi-Fi Passwords in Network Settings

Oddly enough, in previous versions of macOS, if you were connected to a Wi-Fi network but couldn't remember the password you used to connect to it, there was no way to access it in network preferences, which meant you had to locate it in Keychain Access.

9-Wi-Fi-passwords.jpg

Thankfully, Apple has corrected this problem in Ventura by adding a convenient new Copy Password option in System Settings -> Wi-Fi.

10. Strong Password Editing

Safari browser's built-in password suggestion feature just got more convenient, as there's now an option to edit a strong password that is suggested by Apple, which allows it to be tailored to site-specific requirements.

10-Edit-Strong-Password.jpg

Websites sometimes have password creation requirements that include special characters, don't allow for special characters, need a specific length, or ask for other customizations not met by the strong password requirements, which can now be fixed with the edit option.

Click a suggested password, then choose Other Options to access the Edit Strong Password dropdown. From here, you can change the characters that have been suggested. You can also opt for a quick-access Easy to Type or No Special Characters option.

11. Share Safari Tab Groups

In a Tab Group, you can easily collect and save related tabs, whether the webpages are being used to help you plan a trip or to work on a project. And in macOS Ventura, you can share those tabs with colleagues, friends and family, allowing multiple people to contribute links and work together.

11-Share-Tab-Groups.jpg

To share a Tab Group, open Safari's sidebar, then click the ellipsis button (three encircled dots) next to a Tab Group in the list and select Share Tab Group. A Share Sheet menu will be displayed for you to choose the desired sharing method.

12. Edit Sent Messages

The Messages app has inherited the option seen in iOS 16 to edit sent messages. You can edit a message up to a maximum of 15 minutes after it was sent. Simply right-click on the message in question, then select Edit from the contextual menu.

12-edit-sent-message.jpg

The feature only works with iMessages, not SMS messages, so both people need to have an Apple device running the latest software for it to work effectively. People on earlier versions of macOS or iOS (and those on Android) will see text that says "Edited to [text]" when receiving an edited iMessage.

Note that when you edit a message, the edit history is sent to the recipient along with the edit, so the original content is still visible.

13. Mark Messages as Unread

Email programs have long given users the ability to mark messages as unread. The feature is useful because it means if you get a message and don't have time to read it or address its contents, you can mark it as unread so that it appears as a new message again.

13-Mark-message-as-unread.jpg

In ‌Ventura and iOS 16, Apple has finally brought the same feature to its Messages app, so you can mark an SMS message or iMessage as new, thereby returning the blue dot to the message to remind you to return to it.

14. Missing Email Attachment?

Most people have experienced the embarrassment of sending an email that refers to an attachment, only to realize when it's too late that they've completely forgotten to include it.

14-Missing-email-attachment.jpg

Thankfully that's unlikely to happen anymore, because Mail is now intelligent enough to notify you if you forget to include an attachment before the message is sent. Mail will also alert you if it thinks you've missed recipients from the To field.

15. Undo Send Message

In Ventura, like in ‌iOS 16‌, it's now possible to unsend an iMessage for up to two minutes after it's been delivered. If more than two minutes have elapsed since you sent the message, you can no longer unsend it (although you may still be able to edit the iMessage).

15-unsend-message.jpg

To use the feature in Messages, simply right-click on the message bubble and select Undo Send. Note that if you try to use the undo send feature on a message sent to someone running an earlier version of macOS or iOS 15 or earlier, it will not work and the message will not be unsent.

16. Add Stage Manager Icon to Menu Bar

If you like to be selective in your use of the new Stage Manager app window management feature in Ventura, you can enable a menu bar item that gives you quick access to an on/off toggle.

16-stage-manager-to-menu-bar.jpg

Go to System Settings -> Control Center, find the Stage Manager entry, then select Show in Menu Bar in the dropdown menu beside it.

17. App Sets in Stage Manager

When using Stage Manager with multiple sets of apps, you can bring individual apps from inactive sets into the active set that's front and center.

17-move-apps-between-stage-manager-sets.jpg

Either drag app windows from parked sets, or better, shift-click them to bring them into the active set.

18. Continuity Camera

In Ventura, Continuity Camera lets you use your iPhone (XR and later models) as your webcam in FaceTime, Photo Booth, Zoom, and any other app that can use a camera, including web browsers.

18-continuity-camera.jpeg

It works wired or wirelessly, and your Mac will automatically switch to using iPhone as a camera input when you bring it close to your Mac. Just make sure both devices have Wi-Fi and Bluetooth enabled, and that they are both signed in using the same Apple ID.

19. Continuity Camera Video Effects

As if Continuity Camera wasn't impressive enough, it also brings the gamut of video effects to Macs, including Portrait mode (iPhone XR and later), Studio Light (iPhone 12 and later), Desk View that mimics an overhead camera (iPhone 11 and later), and Center Stage (iPhone 11 and later), which adjusts the framing as you move to keep you centered in the frame.

19-continuity-camera-video-effects.jpg

With Continuity Camera active, open Control Center from the menu bar, then click Video Effects to switch between the different modes.

20. Lock Hidden and Recently Deleted Albums in Photos

In previous versions of macOS, the Hidden album in your photo library can easily be made visible via a menu bar option in the Photos app, while any recently deleted photos are available for anyone to peruse while your Mac is unlocked.

20-Locked-photo-albums.jpg

In Ventura, however, the Hidden and Recently Deleted albums in the Photos app are locked by default and can only be unlocked using your login password or Touch ID.

21. Rapid Security Response Updates

In the past, some of Apple's most important point releases of macOS have been linked to critical security updates that are designed to keep you and your private data safe and secure online.

21-rapid-security-response.jpg

In Ventura, however, the new Rapid Security Response feature allows you to get important security updates without having to update the entire operating system, and you can opt to get them automatically between standard software updates. You can control the associated toggle in System Settings -> General -> Software Update. Tap the circled "i" icon to toggle the requisite switch.

22. Background Sounds

In iOS 15 and iPadOS 15, one of several new accessibility features that Apple introduced was Background Sounds, which is designed to help you stay focused, stay calm, and minimize distractions. You can now access the same Background Sounds in Ventura's System Settings, under Accessibility -> Audio.

22-background-sounds.jpg

The sounds on offer include balanced, bright, and dark noise, as well as natural sounds like ocean, rain, and stream. All of the sounds can be set to play in the background to mask unwanted environmental or external noise, and the sounds mix into or duck under other audio and system sounds. Once you've downloaded a background sound, you can also add the Hearing item to Control Center or the menu bar for quicker access to them (System Settings -> Control Center).

23. Clock App on Mac

Finally, the Clock app on iPad and iPhone is now available on the Mac. It shows the current time when placed in the Dock.

23-Clock-app.jpg

As you'd expect, it includes not only time zone options but also alarm, stopwatch, and timer, all accessible via four tabs in the Clock app interface.

24. Live Text Selection in Video

In Ventura, Apple's Live Text feature can be used in paused video frames, so you can use functions like copy and paste, Look Up, and translate.

24-Live-Text-Video.jpg

Live Text works in Photos, Quick Look, Safari, and other apps that support video. Apple has also added language recognition of Japanese, Korean, and Ukrainian text.

25. Multi-stop Routing in Maps

In Ventura, the Maps app allows you to plan a route that has multiple stops instead of just a single destination. While Google Maps has had this feature for some time, this is the first version of Apple's Maps app to include support for it.

25-Multi-stop-routing-maps.jpg

When entering a destination, ‌Apple Maps‌ allows you to add up to 15 locations to stop at en route, and the app will show you the route to each stop in turn.

26. Photos Duplicate Detection

Apple has added a new Duplicates album as a sidebar item in the ‌Photos‌ app, which will automatically detect any duplicates in your library and collate them together for your inspection. (Bear in mind that the album only appears if you have duplicate images on your ‌library.)

26-duplicate-photos.jpg

Inside the Duplicates album, you'll see duplicates listed in chronological order, with a Merge button beside each set. You can tap this button to merge duplicate sets into an individual photo. Even if you take two photos together that are very similar, Apple's merging feature will intelligently keep the highest detail and the most metadata, creating the best possible image.

27. Copy and Paste Photo Edits

If you have multiple photos that you want to edit in the same way, or if you've made changes to one photo that you want to replicate in another photo, you can use the new copy and paste edits tools in the Photos app.

27-copy-edits.jpg

To use the new option, first open an image, click Edit, then make your changes. When you're done, choose Image -> Copy Edits from the menu bar, then select the image (or images) you want to paste them to. Finally, choose Image -> Paste Edits from the menu bar.

28. Pin Lists in Reminders

In Reminders, you can now pin your favorite list to get to them quickly. Pinned lists appear as panels below your Today, Scheduled, All, Flagged, and Completed lists.

28-pin-reminders.jpg

To pin a list, right-click it in the sidebar and select Pin List from the contextual menu.

29. Multiple Watchlists in Stocks

In the Stocks app, you can now create multiple custom watchlists, allowing you to better organize the tickers you follow.

29-stocks.jpg

You can also group symbols using the criteria of your choice, such as sector, asset type, ownership status, and more. Stocks will even provide the date for a company's upcoming earnings report, which you can add to your calendar at the click of a button.

30. Lift Image Subject From Background

Like in iOS 16, you can lift the subject from an image or isolate the subject by removing the background.

30-isolate-subject.jpg

The feature works in Photos, Screenshot, Quick Look, Safari, and more. Just right-click on the image and select Copy Subject from the contextual menu. You can now paste the isolated subject from the clipboard into any app with an input field, such as Messages.

31. Weather App

Previous versions of macOS included a Weather widget, but that's as far as it went, which is why the new dedicated Weather app in Ventura is worth checking out.

31-weather-app.jpg

If you're coming from an iPhone or iPad, the Mac app will look familiar. It has all of the features of the iOS app, including animated weather backgrounds that change based on the weather at your location, severe weather notifications, air quality monitoring, weather maps, and forecasts.

32 Mail Rich Links

Previously in Mail, if you pasted a URL into a message, it would only display the web address. In Ventura, however, rich link previews display a preview of the website being linked to, offering recipients an idea of the content they can be expected to see if they visit the webpage.

32-rich-links.jpg

If you don't want to use a rich link when you're composing a message, click the down arrow in the corner of the preview and select Convert to Plain Link.

33. Preview Form Filler

In Preview, there is a new Form Filler toolbox that makes inserting text into forms much easier.

33-form-filling-preview.jpg

You could previously do this using Markup's text insertion functionality, but that was clunky, and it involved several more clicks to get to and always positioned the text insertion in the middle of whatever page you were on, necessitating a drag of the text to the desired location.

34. Time Machine Backup Frequency

When enabling Time Machine backups, a perpetual little niggle in previous versions of macOS is that you can't change the frequency of backups from the hourly default.

34-time-machine-frequency.jpg

Thankfully, Ventura's Time Machine options now include Manually, Once every hour, Once every day, and Once every week, giving you more flexibility and control over your backups.

35. Favorite Music Artists

In the Music app, you can now add artists to a "Favorite Artists" list by navigating to their artist profile‌ and clicking a new star button on their page.

35-favorite-artists.jpg

Apple says that you'll get better recommendations and notifications about new releases from that artist. Apple Music‌ originally had a similar feature where you could follow artists and receive updates about their music and updates about upcoming releases, but the new Favorite Artists feature is more streamlined and focused on improving push notifications and recommendations surrounding your favorite artists.

36. My Sports Section in Apple News

Apple News includes a new "My Sports" section that can be customized to aggregate news and developments related to your favorite teams, leagues, and athletes.

36-news-sports-section.jpg

You can find it below For You in the Today section. Click Get Started to set it up.

37. Lock Notes With Login Password or Touch ID

In the Notes app, locking a note required you to come up with a separate password for your notes and remember it if you wanted to access them again.

37-locked-notes.jpg

In Ventura, you no longer have to remember a password for your locked notes. They can now be encrypted with your Mac's login password or Touch ID. Simply right-click the note in question and click Lock Note, and you'll be give the option to Use Login Password.

You can also access locked notes on any device with your iCloud account by using the passcode or password for that device.

38. FaceTime Handoff

FaceTime in macOS Ventura works with Handoff, so a FaceTime call can be accepted on the iPhone and then transferred over to the Mac, or vice versa.

38-factime-handoff.jpg

FaceTime Handoff works seamlessly between your devices, and when a call is handed off, if you have a Bluetooth headset connected, it will also transition to the new device.

39. AirPods Settings Menu

Previously in macOS, whenever you connected AirPods to your Mac, you could control Transparency, Noise Cancelation, and Spatial Stereo from the Sound menu bar item, but that was it.

39-airpods.jpg

In Ventura, connecting AirPods gets you a complete menu of options in System Settings, where you can control everything from Ear Detection to charging case sounds.

40. USB-C Accessory Security

Ventura includes a new USB-C security feature designed for Apple silicon Macs. Now, new USB and Thunderbolt accessories require user approval before the accessory can communicate with macOS for connections wired directly to the USB-C port.

40-usb-c-security.jpg

You can change the security configuration in System Settings -> Security and Privacy -> Security. The default configuration is "Ask for new accessories." Configuring an accessibility Switch Control sets the policy to always allow accessory use. Approved devices can connect to a locked Mac for up to three days.

41. Complete Smart List in Reminders

In the Reminders app, there's a new Completed Smart List pane where you can view all of your completed reminders over the previous seven days, previous month, and over the years.

41-completed-reminders.jpg

The list includes the time of completion and any other details that were originally filled in for each completed reminder.

42. Game Controller Menu in Settings

In System Settings, there is a new game controller menu in the app for managing game controllers connected to a Mac. The menu allows macOS Ventura users to map a controller's buttons and thumbsticks to a Mac's keyboard, adjust haptic feedback levels, create profiles with presets for multiple controllers, and more.

42-game-controller-menu.jpg

macOS Ventura features newly added support for some of the most popular racing wheels, pedals, and shifters for use in racing games on the Mac, including Logitech's G920 and G29 racing wheels, according to Apple's developer website. Apple also says that macOS Ventura supports many additional Bluetooth and USB game controllers, with users discovering that this includes the Nintendo Switch's Joy-Cons and Pro Controller.

43. Lockdown Mode

A new macOS security feature in System Settings -> Privacy & Security is Lockdown Mode, which is aimed at protecting a small number of high-profile users who are at risk of targeted cyberattacks from state-sponsored spyware, such as journalists, activists, and government employees.

43-lockdown-mode.jpg

It is not for the everyday user, and it restricts many iPhone features. In Messages, for example, attachments other than images are blocked, and in FaceTime, calls from people you have not previously contacted are blocked. Complex web technologies and browsing features are blocked in web browsers, shared albums are removed from the Photos app, wired connections are blocked, and configuration profiles cannot be installed. Use wisely.

44. Safari Tab Group Start Pages

In Safari, individual Tab Groups can now include dedicated Start Pages containing select favorites from your bookmarks, as well as a specific background wallpaper.

44-tab-group-start-page.jpg

With a Tab Group open, open a new Start Page tab, then scroll to down and click the Settings button in the bottom-right corner. Check the box next to Tab Group Favorites. This will create a space at the top of the Start Page for adding your favorites. Click the Open Bookmarks in Sidebar button to start adding them.

45. Turn Off Featured Content in Photos

A notable change to the Photos app is that you can now disable featured content like Memories. It's a handy option to have if you don't appreciate what the feature digs up from your past.

45-featured-memories.jpg

Click Photos -> Settings in the menu bar, select the General tab, then in the "Memories" section, uncheck the box next to Show Featured Content. The Memories option in the sidebar will disappear.

46. Multi-Window Support in Stage Manager

In early beta versions of macOS Ventura, Stage Manager would only let you view a single app window, even if multiple windows from the same app were open.

46-stage-manager-windows.jpg

In the final version, however, you can opt to display two or more windows from the one app overlapping or side by side. Go to System Settings -> Desktop & Dock, switch on the toggle for Stage Manager if it's not already active, then click Customize.... Finally, click the dropdown menu next to Show windows from an application and select All at Once.

47. Focus Schedules

Apple has improved the Focus feature in macOS Ventura with an easier setup mechanism and the addition of Focus schedules, which allow a Focus to turn on automatically at a set time or location while using a certain app.

47-focus-schedules.jpg

Apple has also added filter options, so apps like Calendar, Mail, Messages, and Safari can have boundaries that allow only parts of the app to show. In Calendar, for example, a Focus can be set to only show a work calendar, or in Safari, you can set a certain Tab Group to be visible.

48. Enhanced Smart Folders in Notes

Notes in Smart Folders can be automatically organized based on new filters in macOS Ventura. Rules are available for Date Created, Date Modified, Shared, Mentions, Checklists, Attachments, Quick Notes, Folder, and more.

48-notes-smart-folders.jpg

Apple has also made it so notes are grouped by chronological categories like Today and Yesterday for quick reference, plus there are filter options for Smart Folders and the Tag Browser.

49. Web Page Image Translation

Next time you're browsing in Safari and you come across an image containing a language that you'd like to translate, try selecting the text with your mouse pointer.

49-web-image-translate.jpg

Then right-click and select Translate from the contextual menu to get a translation in the supported language of your choice.

50. Recover Recently Deleted Messages

In the Messages app, you can now recover recently deleted messages for up to 30 days after deleting them.

50-recently-deleted-messages.jpg

Select View -> Recently Deleted from the Messages menu bar, select the message conversation you'd like to recover in the sidebar, then click Recover.

Article Link: macOS Ventura: 50 New Features and Changes Worth Checking Out
I typically wouldn’t jump onto a new OS immediately, but

a) I’m not in the middle of any big projects right now

b) there are an awful lot of little features here which I’ll use regularly, and imo should have been there all along! Some great improvements here in terms of little day to day efficiencies.
 
50? That’s a lot of things worth “checking out”.

“Every new feature in the new OS and you should check them all out because this time every single one is worth checking out.”

There, I think I said it better.
 
Last edited:
Passkeys and the upcoming HomeKit underlying changes are the only two I'm most curious about. Stage Manager seems like a 20-year-old intern played around with a OS X beta from 2005 and felt it was necessary to bring it up. It's terrible, and looks like garbage.
 
Alright, the tl;dr:

If you don't use Safari and the native mail "app," or you don't get thrilled by the "oh look neat, my laptop and phone are merging into one being!" then it's not for you.

The direction apple is going man. The only thing they've done that has impressed me in the Tim era is M1. That's it. The rest has been "whatever" at best, and most of the time negative change.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Pskordilis
I think it will come with Monterey. Which model did you order BTW?
Right, it will probably take a bit more time for the factories to start loading Ventura on new Macs. I got an additional M2 Air. I am also patiently waiting for an M2 Mac Mini (to be announced) - as are many others, I am sure!
 
  • Love
Reactions: macos9rules
Ok I'm an hour in now and I can't find anything buggy or obtuse. Yet. Seems pretty solid.

It's not like a Microsoft product.
Looks like they removed the ability to personally prioritize known networks in System Settings > Wi-Fi > Advanced. Anyone know a work around for this?
 
Not sure if this has been mentioned elsewhere, but I have had my dock pinned to the left of the screen for many, many years in MacOS. I have wondered how stage manager would work in this situation. I found that when stage manager is activated, the stage manager apps will minimize to the RIGHT side of the screen in that situation, as opposed to the standard left side.
 
  • Like
Reactions: MetaBunny
26. Photos Duplicate Detection

Does this include duplicates of different file types? ie, HEIC vs JPEG?
 
I was excited by this but your review terrifies me. I also read you cannot use hotkeys (just like the new Notification Center). Why can’t Apple figure out task and window switching on macOS? It’s a disaster and always has been.
I'm sure Stage Manager is much less of a total disaster on the iPad 😵‍💫
 
  • Like
Reactions: Idec50
Control panel is a F’ing mess. This is a MacBook, Apple, not an iPhone. I can’t find any of my settings without using the search function so that’s fun. I also can no longer prioritize my Wi-Fi networks either so my laptop is constantly trying to connect to my N network instead of the much faster AC network, which is also fun.
Control Panel was reimagined by the Stage Manager team when they said F it and needed something else to work on.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CasualFanboy
If only Monterey had the ability to set a custom background.

You can not change the background on the screen immediately after starting the Mac, where you enter the FileVault password or on the screen shown when switching users. IMHO a bug but probably not one Apple will fix.


I tried out Stage Manager for 15 minutes on my iMac, than disabled it again. I see no use case for me, where this would be useful.

From all the new features the "routes with more than one stop" will probably be the feature I will use most often. But you may ask, why Apple does not update the map app separately from the OS.

All in all I see Ventura as a step back.
 
Control Panel was reimagined by the Stage Manager team when they said F it and needed something else to work on.

Pretty much every software and design decision Apple has made since the passing of Jobs (PBUH) has been either useless, obnoxious, ugly, annoying, or all of those. Usually all. The UI gets objectively uglier and more "simplified" (meaning anyone could design it). Of course not _every_ single aspect I guess - I don't really care one way or the other about the rounded dock corners - but overall, it's a downgrade.

The settings thing is really pointless too, unless you concede that making everything look more like iphone is a "point."
 
What it is saying is that desktop operating systems are a mature technology that, for most people, have been getting the job done for the last decade or two. That doesn’t mean that there will never be worthwhile innovations, but they will be few and far between compared to the early days when the tech was still maturing. Apple are determined to produce a major OS update every year but simply can’t produce enough good new ideas to make every one a show-stopper. So we get a lot of change for change‘s sake, added complexity and bloat.
You’re exactly right. There’s exactly nothing I will use in this release but hey, at least I have to use totally butchered settings app. Disaster is a soft word for it.
 
I honestly created a MacRumors account to post this. Stage Manager is the worst piece of UX I've ever seen.

It’s honestly like they let someone completely high take over the UX. It’s insane.
  1. Clicking the representation of an app in the dock or vertical dock does the exact same thing.
  2. Creating groups of apps to switch between (as ‘stages’?) is so unintuitive I still have no idea how to do it. You can’t drag apps onto a ‘stage’ icon, or out of them… you seem to have to have the ‘destination’ stage open, AND the desired target app top of stack in the stage icon, then drag that into the desired (open) stage. If it’s not top of stack, you have to go into that stage and somehow make it top of stage, then go back to the destination stage and try again (brain explode).
  3. Doing a three-finger down swipe to reveal all windows of an app shows ALL windows of that app, not respecting the stages you set up. So ALL your browser windows will show, regardless of whether you have set up stages for photography, development, work, etc., with browser windows in each.
  4. Three-fingers up swipe will show ‘Mission Control’ and ALL open windows, again regardless of stage… how does that help you compartmentalize your freaking workflow?
  5. You can only have five stages open at a time.. uh… what?
  6. The stages stay behind any open windows that overlap them.. wtf?!
  7. You can’t label stages to keep track of which is meant to be which
  8. The background behind the stage manager remains clickable, so if you miss a stage icon cluster you’re liable to toggle a figma layer or such
  9. Super glitchy behavior, e.g. closing an import window in Capture One briefly causes the whole collapse/expand animation to happen again while the ‘manager’ gets confused about whether you just close the whole app
  10. The main Dock is now fairly redundant and loses muscle memory, adding cognitive load when you do need to think about where/how to do something.
  11. It’s super jarring to have everything constantly move away and only one window open at a time. There’s no physical metaphor behind it, like switching desktop (in the proper way that Windows does that, with localized ‘Mission Control’ per desktop, localized taskbar, etc., unlike Mac multiple desktop). It’s more like kiosk design, with one giant thing looming in your view while everything else is swept away to you-know-not-where.
  12. If not for breaking up apps into groups of related apps to allow for focused workflows, what exactly what this point of this feature? It's literally not doing what it seems to be trying to do, and instead we just have random UI animation that hinders rather than helps anything.
OMG. This makes the Touch Bar look like disciplined and enlightened UX. It's the worst design I've ever seen from Apple; the upside-down mouse charging at least is easy to understand and results in a charged mouse. This is dysfunctional, incomprehensible, and can't be mastered.

This should never have been released. Steve Jobs is not only rolling in his grave, he’s probably digging to find a wormhole to another universe.

I’m done. My takeaway is they’ve successfully simulated what it feels like to have dementia. I can’t find anything, can’t get anything done, and I don’t understand the rules of the cosmos anymore.
You know it is bad, when almost all of the Apple fawning press is saying it is not very good. Like no support at all. Have to blame some engineers that left(talent drain) pandemic and remote work?, or just not enough time to get it right. Probably worst feature intro since...Mobile Me, Antenna Gate, or dare I say, Apple Maps.
 
  • Like
Reactions: CasualFanboy
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.