I'd bet money there will be a Reduce Transparency option in Accessibility, as there has been for many years now -- and I assume how you're disabling it now. They're very good about accessibility features.I hope there is a feature to disable transparency!
I already have what passes for transparency today disabled everywhere, and I wouldn't be able to use my devices without that ability.
We did! I missed those when I made the leap from 8.6 to 10.2.Also, didn't we have colored folders in mac classic? I'm not complaining because I always thought they were useful, but not exactly a big innovation.
Hopefully, the mds Spotlight daemon won't randomly start reindexing the whole storage after every tiny OS update, borking the whole Spotlight for hours… oh wait, who am I kidding!!!Spotlight is also getting a fairly major overhaul, with some specific search views for recent and contextually useful files. It will be able to search through and launch iPhone apps using iPhone Mirroring, and there's a new view that will show your system clipboard history.
Any idea if this could work with Crossover, Wine or the Game Porting Toolkit? That could actually be interesting.Finally, macOS Tahoe introduces Metal 4, the next-generation version of Apple's proprietary graphics API. The big new feature in Metal 4 is "frame interpolation," a feature similar to Nvidia's DLSS Frame Generation that will attempt to smooth frame rates by using AI to generate frames that it can insert between frames that the GPU actually renders.
It definitely opens up a whole new vista to the MacOS experience!I wonder if the windows will be aero dynamic
There was also a period of OS X where you could apply a label to a folder and, in list view, the entire row of the list would take on the color of the label. It got pretty intense looking but definitely hard to miss! Now labels just have a very subtle dot that's quite easy to lose IMO.We did! I missed those when I made the leap from 8.6 to 10.2.
I used this feature a lot in Classic MacOS. Labels were cool, but color-coded folders is where its atFor the Finder, folders can be customized with colors and emoji labels to help them stand out from a big list of folders.
I know most people will not use or care about this but for those few weirdos like myself that need to be able to make fast calls on their laptop for work purposes this increased integration is going to save us significant time and energy.One is a Mac version of the Phone app, which supports most of the same features as the Phone app on iOS, allowing you to initiate phone calls more easily from your Mac.
That should read version 15 (Sequoia) to version 26jumping directly from version 14 to version 26
Just what I was thinking, mid to late 2000's all over again.Liquid glass? Gee that sure sounds a lot like Aqua making a comeback
I'll take Windows Aero design and this new liquid glass style any day over the lazy uninspired flat design that's common today.Getting Windows Vista PTSD looking at this gross UI.
Surprised it's taken them this long to do it. You've been able to initiate a phone call through the Mac for quite a few years now but it's always been very unintuitive.I know most people will not use or care about this but for those few weirdos like myself that need to be able to make fast calls on their laptop for work purposes this increased integration is going to save us significant time and energy.
Actually, it’s an amorphous solid, but “amorphous solid glass” would be a horrible name from a marketing perspective.Glass is a liquid.
Transparent Dock?This is embarrassing. The “redesign” is barely a tweak to opacity and the other features are decades old or shit no one will notice or care about (who has ever given a shit about metal?). Whatever made Apple good in the past has been deprecated in favour of mediocrity.
there will be be under accessibilityI hope there is a feature to disable transparency!
I already have what passes for transparency today disabled everywhere, and I wouldn't be able to use my devices without that ability.
The menu bar will be invisible? Uhh. How will you know which menus an app has and where to click to access them... ?