From Relay, this is Upgrade, episode 567. Today's show is brought to you by OpenCase, FitBod, and Sentry. My name is Mike Hurley. I'm joined by Jason Snow. Hi, Jason. Hi, Mike. Hello, Papa. How are you doing? I'm good. I have a snow talk question for you. Yes. Where are you? I am at Apple Park in the ring. with a lot of people around. And I am in one of their podcast studios here with a WWDC logo behind me. And people watching the YouTube version will enjoy a man sitting in a white chair.
That's me. We love it. We love to see it. We love a white chair here at the Upgrade program. We got a lot to cover today. So much. I want to get into like an opening thoughts. Okay. Just because the WWC keynote just ended. Like, I don't know, an hour ago. Hour ago, yeah, exactly. This is the WWDC I want. Like, I reflect how I felt this year and last year. This is what I want.
I felt like we got meaningful, big updates to the platforms, let alone the new design. Even if you take the design part away, which obviously is an important part, but even if you remove that part, just the things they put into the systems, like fantastic. I love it. Apple intelligence now just there's like stuff, but I'm not like mad at it. You know, it's like this is kind of what I'm looking for. To me, this felt like a more complete.
more enjoyable, more what I want WWDC. How do you feel kind of in that vein? Yeah, I agree. I think it's very funny that I am most excited about things from the Mac and iPad segments. You know, the iPhone is so dominant and we've spent so much time talking about Apple intelligence features and all of that. And yet the huge iPad stuff and some really unexpectedly nice Mac stuff. So, yeah, I agree. It was nice to be reminded. And I'm sure, you know.
We're going to be reminded of all the things that didn't happen and all the things they didn't do and all the things they didn't address. And we're going to have people saying all the places that they're behind, that they didn't talk about. Okay. That is something to be considered, but I would say that I'm with you in saying...
I'm impressed with the, it felt kind of old school of like, oh, look at a bunch of iPad features and a bunch of Mac features that excite me. And that's kind of a nice feeling to have. Speaking of iPad, I currently have... a 13-inch iPad Pro preparing update. So I'll give you some updates throughout the episode today as to what happens to this iPad. Good luck, iPad. Let's very quickly as well talk about the draft results.
This one was an interesting one. I feel like we came down to the wire on it. You were doing some crowdsourcing in the Discord. I was asking our official adjudicator. This one was close. Yeah, I think you win regardless. Oh, God. But I think I'm inclined to say 7-7, and then you went on the tiebreak. Yeah, that is more where I lean.
Let's give a very quick breakdown of each person here, shall we? All right. So I said differently shaped icons didn't happen. I said AI-based power management or battery management features didn't happen. Vision OS scrolling controlled by your eyes. There's a little square in a slide that says I look to scroll. I was convinced you hadn't got that one, but you did because, yeah, it was an event. I pulled Dan Moore and pointed it out and said, look.
Look to scroll. New Apple Pencil related feature announced at the very end of the read calligraphy. AirPods Live Translate. Didn't happen. There's a lot of translation that happened. There was translate everywhere except AirPods. Except AirPods. Yeah, exactly.
Exactly. Oh, well, maybe there are new AirPods coming that they'll talk about that feature instead. Apple explicitly acknowledges falling short in its AI promises. There was a whole thing about it. I know we promised this last year and we're still working on it. It didn't meet our bar. It's all the stuff. they've said before, but they did say it in the video. So I get that one. Mark Gurman's favorite feature, captive Wi-Fi sync, not mentioned.
Image playgrounds updated to create much improved images. Well, we don't know if Apple's models improved, but they improved it by putting ChatGPT in there. So it counts. That's one way to do it, you know? That is one way to do it. At least one new first-party Vision OS app shown that was previously just an iPad app. I didn't see any. I didn't see any evidence that there's something that got promoted there. So that's an X.
App Intense mentioned, boy, were they. Tim plugs Apple TV. Now, this Apple TV Plus, this is funny because he did plug Apple TV Plus in passing to say, look, people like our stuff. And then there was the TV Plus trailer that was not produced. promoted by Tim, but he did plug Apple TV. Oh, he absolutely did. I mean, it was like, oh, look at this movie and Apple TV. It was like the first thing they spoke about. There was F1 and then separate.
There was like that thing that they've done where it's like a Metacritic or something of like the top screaming service in terms of stuff people like or something. I don't know. It was credit to some... analysis firm it's like all right yeah okay whatever but it's like you found the firm that said it i mean i agree but it's like you found the firm that also agrees they should have just had us like upgrade podcast says yeah sure
Tim likes customer sat. You're right. That was a good point. A game developer is heard from. No, no game developers were heard from. A new app focused on games is called Apple Games. Now people say what they call the games. The thing is that Apple, the Apple is always implied if it's just a generic.
term and somebody pointed out that in the press release they specifically call it apple games i think i get this we could litigate it but like there are lots of apps that are called apple notes but it's called notes but it's apple notes too They didn't call it arcade. Well, Apple TV is called what? Yeah. All right. It's fine. It's fine. We don't need to argue. It is. I think the point was that I picked the name games and not arcade or something else like that. It was called games.
And an AI company representative has heard from didn't happen. So that's seven for me. Do you want to go through yours? Yeah. Apple renames OSS to the calendar year. I got that. Yeah. New design sees floating tab bars in iPhone apps. Oh, there's lots of them. Developers get to use Apple's AI models in their apps. Ding. Got that. iPad desktop mode with menu bar, a more Mac-like design. I thought the menu bar part was going to screw me. Yes, and I...
Again, in a more litigious climate, I could say, is that a mode? But it's fine. They have it. You got it. You got it. Apple announced his partnership with Google. That did not happen. AI coaching feature touted in health or fitness app.
I don't think I got this. You didn't get this because it's in the workout app. And you still don't know what I was talking about anyway. It's not what you were talking about. I was going to give it to you because they said it was AI, even though it wasn't what you meant, but it wasn't in the workout app.
but like it's just not what I'm it's just not what I was talking about even if it's in the workout it's just not what I was talking about I know I know new features for Jemmoji there were lots of them yes New ways to customize your lock screen. While there are lock screen changes, they are not user customizable, it seems. Right, it seems. Apple announces partnership with AI provider other than Google or OpenAI. No, none of them. New hand gestures for controlling Vision OS. We didn't see any.
New design takes color cues from your wallpaper while in apps. That does not seem to be the case. Doesn't seem to be the case, no. Shortcuts can be created of AI assistance. Also doesn't seem to be the case. No, it's the reverse instead, but that's okay. Yes. We'll talk about it later.
iPad windows can be moved around freely, which they can. And Vision OS supports VR hand controllers, which it now does. So that would bring us to 7.7. The event was 90 minutes, basically. 90 minutes, yeah. That song at the end, which took it over a tad. So I went on the tiebreak. You went on the tiebreak. So I thought you would win by more than that. But in the end, because I whiffed on a bunch early on. But in the end, yeah. So congratulations to you. Thank you.
Then we also need to adjudicate the California bear trophy. Oh no, that will be an upgrade plus. Oh, you're right. So, so people should, that's my promotion. Stay tuned to upgrade plus and join upgrade plus. If you want to hear who wins the California bear trophy.
which is a different game that we play and can't guess the name of the OS because we already had it spoiled that it was Tahoe. So anyway, that'll come later. I want to start by talking about the design. I think that that might be just like talk about that. Top level. Let's do it. Universal design is what Apple called it. And I think there are many ways in which you could imagine that they would say such a thing and wouldn't do it.
You could say, oh, it's coming to all of our platforms, but maybe it's questionable here or there. I think this feels pretty universal. I think the UI that seems the least changed is tvOS, but I just don't really think as much they could do there. Yeah. Little hints here and there. But yeah, overall, it's everywhere. Yeah, the first time this was rumored, what I tried to say at the time was...
Apple hasn't done a collective redesign of its operating system since it's had all of these operating systems. So that's the real issue here is they were able to... do this design and roll it out everywhere, as opposed to sort of like making tweaks here and there. They rolled it out on all the devices, which means they also got to think about how it would be presented on all the devices. And again, we'll see how it is in practice. But the idea here is...
the implementation on the Mac is something they consider for the Mac and on the iPad is something they consider for the iPad. And it's not, we designed something for the iPhone and then we shoved it everywhere else. That's not the idea here.
very much focuses on liquid glass. That's the phrase that they're using and they're going to use everywhere. Liquid glass is essentially... glass things to see through you can see through them and the liquid part kind of riffs on like the dynamic island of it in that like UI
moves and pops and flows and things like that. Yeah, ripples and things like that. So yeah, those are the two concepts. One is they showed in the video a lot of people moving pieces of glass, colored glass, all of that. The idea of what happens... How does something get distorted when glass is on top of it? So they've added these kind of effects so that there's...
or hints of what's behind in the content moving through, but they're also moving through in a very particular kind of distorted way based on, you know, as if they're being distorted through a glass object. And they can do that now with... They mentioned it, and I think it's true. They have so much GPU now. Apple Silicon allows them to do these dynamic effects and lighting effects on the glass edges and all of these things that give the impression that it's a physical object.
So I'm not going to, you know, I am going to say the word skeuomorphism, but I'm just saying it to say, is that what this is? I don't think it is, but it's kind of like that where it's kind of blending reality.
and physical objects with software in a different kind of way. And then the liquid part is, yes, it's these kind of... animations that suggest something that goes beyond what would happen in regular physics with glass, which is that it flows and ripples and bubbles in ways like how the dynamic island has some of those whimsical animations.
I think to think of it skeuomorphically, I liked seeing the design elements that they were working with, their physical pieces of glass with app icons on them and stuff in the design lab. Yeah, that was cute. I think this looks fantastic. What I like about this design, and I've been thinking about this in the last few days, of what was I looking for with a new OS design, is I don't want...
I don't want to be left to feel like they're doing it for the sake of doing it. And I don't want to be left with a feeling that they decided that they were just going to completely... make ios look completely different because i just don't think that would be helpful and i think it would cause more problems than it's worth and i think what we're left with is a modern refined design
that doesn't look like things that anybody else is doing. Like Google has a new material design in the new version of Android. And it... While also is like leaning on material and texture, physical elements. It's very colorful and vibrant and like in your face and squiggly. And like they also have animations, but they have completely different. They're like adding more tactility in ways.
Where this is like, we are making whatever you're doing the center of the thing, right? Because we're trying to keep our UI.
out of the way by letting you see through. And that works to varying degrees. Like I found it kind of funny when they're like, look at tvOS, you can... see through it where you can't you can't see through it because it's like by design you can't see through it so it's not there's nothing getting in the way there's nothing behind there it's still in the way yeah but I I think that it looks fantastic I think and I'm really keen to try the clear
icons and widgets. I think that looks really cool. Tinting looks like it actually makes sense now, I think. And the way that they showed some of the tinting looks good. And they have new icons and that kind of stuff. I think in general... Just from looking at imagery, my iPad is currently in the update process. You'll be excited to know. I'm very enthused about this design. I think that this is a really good... evolution of iOS, where iOS 7 felt, I think, more shocking.
Yeah, this does feel less shocking than that did. I did not get the sensory overload that I got from iOS 7. I don't know if you noticed, when they threw the presentation over to... alan dye to talk about this in detail he was preceded by a montage of shots of apple park and yeah yeah i thought the message there was clear which is hey We know glass and live in glass all the time. Everything Apple does is in these kind of like giant curved glass buildings, right? This is...
Part of the sort of thought process of Apple is thinking about things in this way. It actually fits with where they're physically building these. the and designing these products so i thought that was really interesting um and we'll see you know it's all going to be in the details but i like at the top level what they're trying to do here and uh right down to the fact that
They're taking some things that they've had in some form for a while and kind of applying them to this. So not only is it the graphics power.
of the chips that they've got but it's all those sensors that allow them to do they're really leaning in on the effects of if you move your physical device things move and react and it's not taking the camera off the back and lifting the image in your room or anything like that but it is like if you turn it the little light highlights move and maybe your image moves because they're they have
applied what I think is one of the unsung brilliant features of Vision OS, which is that ability to turn a 2D image into a 3D image and taking it to a whole new level. where they're processing all these things and then using them in wallpapers and lock screens and things like that so there you know a lot of a lot of it tied to the movement of your device because unlike
Honestly, you know, unlike a Mac that's just sitting somewhere, an iPad and iPhone especially are being held and moving and you get this extra bit of tactile feedback by doing that. The only part of the design that... I'm unsure about in the stuff that I've seen, like in the images on Apple's website.
iOS 26, while I like it, that number still just looks weird, like it's going to take some time to get used to. Sure. There's like a hero shot of a lock screen with some notifications on them. And like the notification... is completely see-through. It's like slightly blurred. And I'm not sure that you can really read the text. And so I think maybe a little bit more frosting.
would be great there. And these are the kinds of tweaks that I expect will occur over the next few months. I think it is very much worth pointing out for all of the people that are upset by this design for some reason or another. It is going to go through a lot of revision, I expect, between now and whenever it ships. I've also seen people comment on, they question the accessibility of this design because you know a lot of people turn off.
a lot of things in order to make things readable because of, you know, different ways that they process information. I'll just say Apple is going to show you the most extreme. um beautiful crowd-pleasing stuff when they roll out a new design what they're not going to do is show you what it looks like when you turn it all off but i think i have enough respect for Apple's track record and accessibility.
to believe that that has been thought of and if not being thought of now will also continue to be thought of over the summer. But they're just not going to show it to you now because they don't want to show you what it's like when it's turned off. That's not the point of this. The point is to show you and the mass audience what it looks like when it's at its fullest. So my iPad is updated. And I'll let you know right now. Good luck. Don't install it. Okay.
It's fine. I wasn't going to. I will sacrifice an iPad to the cause. It's understandably, I can already see. There's some jank going on here. There's a bunch of video bitches. Developer Beta 1. is not something that, like, I do not encourage anybody to install developer beta one. I mean, I'm doing it on an iPad that is not like my daily iPad. And I'm doing it purely for the sense of what I'm attempting to do right now, which is see how it runs.
I have not seen this many visual glitches in an OS for a while. But it has just updated, so who knows? Maybe it will settle down. Maybe it's just going to get the bugs out. It's going to shake them outside. Mm-hmm. This episode of Upgrade is brought to you by OpenCase.
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the engineers in charge of the phone app were like, come on, just give us some time. We're always here, we're always doing stuff, and we've got some things to show you. So we have a unified design. So there's kind of like you open the app now and you don't have to go between pages if you don't want to show you all your missed calls or your incomings, outgoings, and your favorites. Call screening. So if an unknown number calls you, it will...
you have the ability for basically your phone to answer it for you, get information from the person. It will show you that on the screen so you can decide whether you want to answer or not. And then my favorite feature was the ability for the iPhone to just wait on hold for you. And it will let you know when your time in the queue has come up. That just sounds fantastic. Yeah. And then the agent answers and your phone says, please wait. We'll be with you shortly. Please hold for the president.
Turns on the other way. I'm a little skeptical about the unified layout only because some of that information is not information that I find valuable in the current phone app. So I don't really know about that. Um, but I like the simplicity of it, but I, I I'm, I'm skeptical. Cause like.
I get a lot of junk calls that I don't need to see, and I really mostly am just dialing out to one of my favorites at that point, but I guess if I pin my favorites at the top, it doesn't matter about the rest of it. Call screening seems very clever because it's basically taking live voice mail and applying it to another set of calls, which are these calls from contacts that...
That it doesn't know because one of the problems with sending everything to voicemail is then the person who's coming to. Fix the glass in your windshield calls you. And you're like, oh, I should have taken that one. And then you turn off, send unknowns to voicemail, and then all the junk calls start. Like, you can't win. So they're trying to find a little slot.
in here to take those things and not completely ignore them and send them to voicemail, but instead prompt and say, what's your message? And we're screening. And I'll be curious to see how that works. for the person calling like what do they hear and if this rolls out across all iphones everywhere what how does the phone calling culture change based on that do they
I don't know, but I like that they're picking it up and they're picking based on the transcript. They can actually choose to push a notification that says that this person... This is an important one. There's a lot of really interesting stuff that's building on existing technology that they've stuck in there. So the lock screen got some new features, I guess. And it seems like...
at least from the way the app was showing, they kind of don't want you to use the widgets anymore because they have this really cool new clock that expands to the image that you have. And they want that to happen. And it does look. really fun i think that i think i could see myself maybe moving to a different type of wallpaper here
and maybe having one of the Photoshop wallpapers. I mean, I love the Photoshop wall on my watch, or maybe I'll pick some images that it could scroll through that maybe will do some fun stuff to the clock. But I think that looks very dynamic, very fun. And you mentioned the spatial scenes, as they're calling them, where it takes like an image and 3Difies it. That I don't know about. That I'm a little bit like, well, it freaks me out, I think. I don't know how that one will make me feel.
Yeah, I like my lock screen widgets, and I'm not sure a really tall clock. Big clock means you know the time, you know? Yeah, there's more time. We all need more time. And now... With a very tall clock, you can get more time. But I do like my – we'll just have to see the details of how they've chosen that because I like lock screen widgets. I think they're nice.
I think a lot of people don't care and don't know. And this will just, you know, a lot of design on the iPhone, it has to be for like defaults and default users because people don't change a lot. So if you can make that kind of delightful and then say, yeah, and then you can add a widget if you want to, that's fine. One of my least favorite features of WhatsApp is the backgrounds for messages.
This is in part because I don't think WhatsApp provide any good-looking message backgrounds from what they provide. And then I'm not ever really sure what I would want to put there, but that's coming to the Messages app. we can have backgrounds in our messages. And if you're in a group chat, it will change it and so here we go for troll town we're back in troll town everyone and we're gonna be trolling each other uh constantly which maybe is part of the fun you know
generate your own backgrounds and image playground, which I think maybe was also a feature of the invites app. Maybe. Well, you could make like a poster image for the event. right in image playgrounds and then open up and would kind of i guess blend into it but this is like full on the background and you've got the texts like popping up on top of it We'll see. I mean, I don't know if that's...
I mean, why not, right? I mean, why not do it? But to me, I'm just like, I don't know that's the thing that we need, but it's a thing that we'll have. But I do like group chat. Typing indicators. Yeah, that's a big one. Typing indicators. That frustrates me. I want to see that. And I like, you know, they're doing their own. Several people are typing there, really. It's just like the little bubble of everybody. And I think that's a...
fun feature, and polls too, because you know why not, I suppose. And then, oh, what do you think about the Photos app? They made a tweak to the Photos app, as the guy who wrote the book on Photos. What did they tweak, Mike? They now have library and collections. Oh, right. Whatever. I mean, we'll have to see it. They put a tab.
a couple of tabs back so that people can toggle because they were trying to get different. It's, I have no opinion about it because first off, I didn't dislike the new change as much as a lot of people did. I'm in the club of I enjoy it. I think it looks good. And I understand why they did it. And so now it's going to come down to how does this work? And what does that look like? And I'm unclear on what's going to be in those two different.
things and what appears by default and like i'm just unclear on that so i never got the games app which for me is a bit of a letdown um i was hoping that this would usher in something a little bit more significant um You know, like where I ended up landing is what I want them to do is split the app store and the game store, essentially. That's what I was hoping that this could be.
But essentially, it's just beefed up Game Center with Apple Arcade and all of the games that you've downloaded in your kind of game library. But it doesn't seem, it seems like you'll still get your games through the App Store and, you know. There wasn't any kind of like, there's no streaming apps in here or integrations of any kind. I don't understand it. I don't know if I understand.
the reason for this existing with what they've shown right now? Well, I think the answer is it gives them a place to point people to and say, here's where all your games are. And here's where all of your, they've clearly, they seem to have enhanced the friends. They're adding essentially activity challenges to what we have thought of as Game Center up to now.
And they put that in the center here and they've made it, you know, it gives them a place to iterate from now and say, look, you can see your games, you can see your friends, you can see your friends' games. You can see your games, friends. These are things you can see. And then, you know, they'll have to go from there. But I think it has value just in...
being an app again, because Game Center was an app for a while, but this is more than that because it's also listing all your games that you've got and gives you a place to go. Because I think it's weird to have...
game like friend features and challenges and stuff like that that are in a pop-up that can appear outside of your app but only from your like that's not the way you should do it it should be its own place that you could go and they pointed out you can control it with a controller which is i think
interesting right the idea that you're popping around and then they also have that uh on the mac the overlay that'll come down that has a bunch of sort of game related things in it so it seems like there's at least to a certain degree they're trying to think of ways to make this more game friendly
I don't think it's bad. I just wanted more from it, personally. Like, I was hoping for more from this. Because, you know, I don't think people need an app which is the library of games on their devices. Because, what, people can't find their games? Like, everyone knows where their games are. But I agree with you in the sense of like, oh, okay, if we're going to have challenges and leaderboards and achievements, we should put them somewhere, right?
that you could actually like, you haven't got to go to each individual game to see your updates with your friends if that's the thing that you do, right? Right. If games are, and if they're literally nowhere in the system, that's silly. right? They should be somewhere. They should have a place to go that is the place you can find all that stuff. Imagine if Steam didn't have its own app and like...
And you would have to look around. There's a point in having a central place to go. It makes sense for it to be there. It may not have all the features that you want in it, but it does make sense for it to be there, I think, as a start. Yeah, for sure.
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I really appreciate the tone that Craig Federighi had where he's like, look, everybody, all these things, they're blowing our minds. And it's very much the implication there is where do we get these ideas? It's like, oh, yeah. Because you can do it on the Mac and now you can do it on the iPad too, which is great. And what I didn't have in my bingo list was the idea that...
They have reconceptualized windowing to the point where everybody gets windows now. It's not like, I'm sorry, you don't have an M1. You don't get any windows. You only get two windows or whatever it is, right? They're like, oh no, we rewrote the whole thing. And it even works on the iPad mini, which I can't wait to see what that's all about. Right?
Now, Jason, let me tell you, all right? I've been saying, you know, I've been popping in and saying, oh, I don't know, this looks a bit janky. Let me tell you what's incredible and works immediately. I've got like eight apps open right now and I'm moving them around. I'm resizing them. And the resizing is really, it's basically vision OS like in that you can just do whatever you want. Like it's not snapping to certain sizes.
I'm making them whatever size I want to make them. And apps not from Apple seem to be just dealing with this. No problem. Any size. I'm looking forward to hearing more about it. Obviously, we're recording this right after the keynote. I'm going to be talking to people from Apple later this week about this. And so I don't have anything to say about technical details behind the scenes now because I don't know. But I will say...
The fact that it's re-architected, the fact that it runs everywhere, the fact that there are many windows that can be opened now and not four. I'd say a little bit surprising and kind of huge, the idea that they've embraced the Mac OS-style traffic lights for window management.
We know how that works. Let's just use it. That expose is there. That there is a sort of double swipe gesture to get... uh you know to basically say no i need you all to kind of go away because i want to focus that they're doing these very familiar from the Mac side things that work pretty well and that you put them in the iPad and then they probably are going to work pretty well because that's, you know, they've been tested and they work pretty well.
you know flick to tile have the tile things like on the mac underneath if you tap and hold like it's a lot of really um flick to tile is pretty cool but like some things that are very familiar but done in um You know, they're new to iPad. And yeah, I'm looking forward to trying it out too. I'm very excited by it. Jason, it's incredible. I can't believe how well this works. Like it works really well. This is really, really encouraging.
Yeah, I'm very excited about this. I'm very excited about this. So I'll come back around with that beta that you installed. Yeah, I mean, we're on a roller coaster here together. So the menu bar happened. I wrote a, why is there not a menu bar like three years ago? I was like, you got all that. They've had all the pieces in place and they finally did it where.
If you mouse up to the top of the screen, you get a menu bar that's got all the features in it, which is, you know, sometimes it's really nice to just be able to find a feature in the menu bar on an iPad. And don't forget the pointier pointier that they have now. Yes, triangular now. Yeah, so here's the thing. I really appreciated the way they did the pointer, the little animated circular pointer on the iPad.
because they were trying to show you that the iPad software is sort of expecting a finger. And so they got a little circle. And what this triangular pointer suggests is that now they're suggesting that... you can be a lot more precise with your click. That's what it is. It's like the reason it's triangular is it's going to a point that is a specific point, not a general.
circular area and uh it's more mac like in that way but it's also that's that's one of the things that's going on there is it's the implied precision of the pointer that wasn't implied before so interesting The menu bar is a fascinating addition. It really just acts like the Mac menu items. I've got Safari open here. And I go to file and I've got like 20 things. It really is. It's quite full.
And I don't know if they've done more to add in here, like if this is more than what was in the previous versions, like when you'd press the command key and get all the shortcuts. I don't know. But it looks and feels very much like a Mac menu bar.
And also in the menu bar, you get the little traffic lights when you have an app in full screen. So you can then pop it down to a different size and do that whole thing. And you can start doing your window management. Yeah, I'm really excited about this. That isn't all. I'm going to jump ahead to audio and video because I kind of can't believe it. Okay. So, okay. This is one of these things where it's like...
Every WWDC is the thing that happens and you hear it and you're like, oh my God, this is the thing we've been asking for. And then you use it and then you realize... It's the limitations of it. It still does what you want, but maybe not in the way you're expecting. There's always that kind of thing. So from what I can see here, there is new...
like specific tools to change your input, your audio input, so you can choose different microphones, which is great. And then on those microphones, no matter what they are, you can use things like voice isolation and stuff like that, which is really interesting. But there's also a new local capture.
where you can have high-quality recordings of your audio and your video captured locally. They have echo cancellation, which I think is very cool if you're not using... I mean, if you're using any kind of professional setting and you're not using earbuds... I'm happy Apple's here to protect you, but you should be wearing earphones, headphones, whatever. And then once the recording's done, it will create a folder that everybody can upload their audio to.
And I don't know if that's automatic in any way or whatever, but like that does that. I don't, I think it's a, see, I just took that as being, it offers your file to you and then you can choose to put it somewhere. Yeah. Yeah. All of that is like, okay, fantastic. It now feels like you could record podcasts on an iPad. Completely. Yeah, I think so. I think so. This is the thing.
Or anything anybody's doing where they're using an iPad to do audio and video, one of the problems has been that I can use Zoom. to talk to people on a podcast. But part of the workflow is that I also want to record my audio locally on my device. And that hasn't been possible unless the app specifically adds that feature, which they don't.
So now the system, one of the solutions is the system just does it. So that's what's happening here is that you can specify the microphone and then you choose local recording and Zoom doesn't care. It's doing whatever it's doing, but your iPad is recording locally to you. And that unlocks that whole thing about, can I do a podcast on my iPad? So I had Jeremy Burge, friend of the show.
previous video consultant, social media manager of Upgrade, as well as the founder of Emojipedia. And he was saying to me, like... what could they, this was before, we had lunch before, or early dinner, I guess we'll call it, before the keynote. And he was like, what could they do to iPadOS where you would leave your Mac when you travel?
I didn't even bother saying this. This is the thing. But I didn't even bother saying it because it's like, well, they're not going to do it. They're never going to do this. It's too niche. And not only did they do it, they specifically said, For you podcasters. Yes, all 12 of us. We got what we wanted. It was funny because this presentation was Stephen Tana, who I have talked to a million times, and I don't know if I've ever seen him. We had Stephen on Connected once years ago. Yeah.
Yeah, so now next time I see him, I'm going to be like, dude, you did it. You got to be the one who rolled that feature out. Yeah, it is. It's a big deal because it does mean that, especially for us podcasters, if we wanted to travel with just a microphone and an iPad, it's fine.
You could do it. This is the sort of thing where Federico and I were always like, well, you bring a microphone and a compact flash recorder, and then you wire them all around, and then, no, you don't have to do any of that anymore. So that's, I'm very excited about that. Good one. It's a winner. I'm enthused. I'm enthused.
It won't be. I'm using my menu bar. I'm using my pointer. I'm moving windows around and I'm recording a podcast and it's all just happening. I'm really, really excited about this. Like my next, my next and only trip this year will not be probably in time for this. It will be going to Memphis.
to the podcast. It's like just before it ships. We'll see. We'll see how the betas are. You know what I mean? Maybe. You know what this is probably also going to do? I'm going to end up with a magic keyboard. I don't have one for the iPad. Yeah. And now I'm like, ooh. Bring it on. Maybe now I'll do it.
What do you think about the background tasks thing? So I got this from Apple's website because I'm a little bit confused about this. Export or download large files and run other computationally heavy processes in the background while you do other things. This is one of the really rough criticisms that a lot of us had to give when they brought Final Cut to the iPad. It's like, thank you. We're very glad to see Final Cut on the iPad.
but literally you couldn't export a video and then leave the app because the video export would fail. And that's like real System 7 level.
I can't remember the last time on the Mac that I couldn't move away from an app because it would... fail to do its job if it was in the background i cannot remember that that but that used to happen and it still happened when they rolled out final cut and that was their example was you start an export in final cut and then you switch away and there's a live activity that comes up that says i'm exporting
in the background, which gives you the, as the user, information that something, the reason your iPad is behaving the way it is, draining the battery, getting hot, whatever it is, is because something is happening in the background. But it means that it'll still... do it in the background, which prior, what would happen is a runaway process, a process that's using so much
storage and CPU and GPU or whatever, the system just kills it, right? Because it's just like, I'm sorry, I'm a mobile device. I'm an iPhone, essentially. I'm going to kill it. And now on the iPad, Those apps can basically use an API to say, we're going to do this in the background. And they said that for like rendering is another example where you're starting a render going and then you want to switch and check your email while it's rendering. That's a perfectly.
reasonable thing to do, you will now be able to do that. That app says, please let me run the background. The live activity comes up and you are checking your email while your video exports or your frame renders or whatever. And that's great because that's a thing that computers can do and that the iPad couldn't do.
We also got some potential improvements to the Files app. At least it looks different. And there's some more UI going on in the Files app. I mean, we'll see what that ends up being like in... Practice. I like that we finally have it open in as an option. So you can choose what you want a file to open in and set defaults for that. And set defaults. That's a huge, huge deal. It's one of those things where you're like, oh yeah, I mean, really, that...
That should be there, right? That should be there. Yeah, that really should be there. There's customization options available for your folders. You can make them look colorful. You put emojis on them. That's nice. And you can also put folders in the dock like stacks.
And there's also a preview app now, like full-on preview app where you can open PDFs, you can sign them, you can export images and PDFs into different formats. It's like, yeah, I want that. I want that. I use this. Oh, man, you know. Jason, are we back? Are we so back? I think we might be back. We might be back. I don't want to tell tales out of school, but I'll just say that...
I walked past Federico afterward. I think probably everyone walked past Federico. And he said, so I'm using the iPad again? With a question mark. I'm like, I think you are, buddy. I think that's what's happening now. We are so back. I'm really excited. I'm really excited. I feel like I'm going to be putting a lot of time.
into iPadOS 26 over the next few months and going forward. Let's talk about macOS 26 Tahoe. I think that's the way you say it. Yep, I think so. When they started out with continuity... I love what they do with continuity, especially with the Mac. But there was a thought of like, what's left? What else? How can you keep coming? We've got two new features. I'm like, what have you got now? And we have live activities. and the phone app. Yeah, so this is the live activities. I think it's unclear.
The way they were suggesting it is you have live activities on your iPhone that can appear in the menu bar and then you click and you can bring up the iPhone mirroring. I don't know. I would kind of... hope that mac os apps could also spawn live activities but this is a this is like the live activities that are on your phone so like i have a live activity for when the giants are playing and it shows the score
And I don't have anything like that on my Mac. But I think this means that if I wanted to...
When the Giants are playing, a little score thing would just pop up into my menu bar. That's kind of cool. Like, if that's my choice, I kind of like that. That's kind of fun. And there's other interesting stuff that happens in the... in in the live activities on the iphone and i'm not looking at my iphone i'm looking at my mac and i could see it that's great now the phone app is this is the biggest year for the phone app since um alexander graham bell basically uh because there's a phone app
on the Mac, which is funny because there was already the FaceTime app, which was kind of the phone app, which is kind of weird. And you could take phone calls on the Mac, but it wasn't quite the same. And it feels like this is like a... an acceptance of the fact that it's a feature that probably should exist everywhere and not in this weird space where, like, you could use the phone on the Mac, but not quite. And so...
I don't anticipate, you know, placing or, you know, or receiving a lot of phone calls on my Mac. But I think it's a good thing to have. And they said that it'll pick up all of those iOS features. So, you know, call screening. things like that. You'll be able to actually see those call screening things on your Mac and then you can choose what to do. Great. Jason, I'm very pleased to let you know the phone app is also on the iPad.
Yes, it is. That flew by in the iPad thing. But yes, it's phones for everyone. So it's a big year for phone app. Big year for phone app. Yeah, that's right. That's right. The biggest phone app. The phone app is so back, Mike. It is actually. It's so, so bad. And then they got onto Spotlight, which was, I think, the most dizzying part of the keynote. I feel like I need to watch that back in full.
I will write. Allow me to read to you what I wrote down. Let's see if it does what we need. So I'm just going to read verbatim. Put relevant files a click away. Apps are there too. can search and launch iPhone apps, launch actions, parentheses, app intents powered. You can even add parameters like sending messages, adding tasks.
Quick keys, which are customizable shortcut actions, can serve as menu items when in apps and clipboard history. Yeah. I guess they just decided, you know what? There are a lot of these launches, and you know what? Let's kill him. Let's kill him. Let's kill him. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. A little text that came in from Stephen Hackett saying. Oh, boy. That's the end for Alfred. And I said, RIP launch bar, too. Look, Apple...
All those launches exist because Spotlight wasn't very good back in the day, and Spotlight has gotten a lot better. It is a lot better. I never use Spotlight, but when I do, I'm like, yeah, okay. They solve the problems. It used to be, the reason I use LaunchBar is because I can type a couple of letters and hit return.
app launches. And it used to be you'd type a couple of letters in Spotlight and then it would go spin, spin, spin, spin, give you a list of irrelevant things. Maybe the app would come up and you could launch it. So it's come... a long way but this is the kill shot it really is right like this is um like
Like LaunchBar has the concept of actions. I know a lot of different apps have this, of these launcher apps, but using the app intents, the idea that you could literally send an email from Spotlight. um, with the body and who it's to and the subject line, and then you hit return and it just does it. Um, the idea that, that, um, I wrote a piece, I don't know if you remember this last year or it was like, what's left.
of like the table stakes for mac os and i said it's the clipboard the clipboard they've gone all this time without doing a clipboard manager it's like the one thing that i feel like should just be in there well apparently Mac OS has a clipboard manager now and it's spotlight, I guess, which is, it seems weird on one level, but on another level, my clipboard manager is. LaunchBar, it is my launcher that is also a clipboard manager. So...
We'll have to see the details, but that's wild. The other thing that LaunchBar really made its name for and all these other apps used was the shortcut things where you assign a couple of keystrokes to that app or that action, and shortcuts will let you do that. Now, too. It's just there's yeah, it's it's a lot and it's going to take some time for us to figure out what, you know, what all its limitations are and what its capabilities are. But.
When they said it's the biggest update to Spotlight ever, they're not wrong. It looks huge because of AppIntense and QuickKeys and clipboard history. We're talking about... We're talking about, yeah, filling in kind of like the gaps and making it extensible in a way that makes it incredibly powerful. You know, Federico just did that preview of Sky.
Yeah. The app from the previous workflow team. And there are some things in here that Sky is doing, but obviously the difference that Sky is underpinned by LLMs. And it kind of feels like you take... one more two more steps from this and you end up there um which is intriguing and i i mean you know with the moment that they showed it off there was a lot of conversation of like is apple just gonna buy them and now i've seen this i'm like
Is Apple just going to buy them? Yeah. Because it feels like Apple's gotten to the point of like... all of these types of apps. And Sky is like, yeah, but what if we did all that stuff, which it does, and then also a bunch of other really powerful and incredible things on top. And I don't know. I mean, I also see of like... You know, one of the things that Sky does is integrates quite heavily with shortcuts. So like these new shortcuts actions.
will make that even more powerful and apps like that they use. Because that's the other thing that we have to talk about is huge upgrade to shortcuts. And while, you know, those of us use the app.
are wondering if the app is better because the app has been a real pain point the big deal here first off on the mac you couldn't really automate shortcuts and now you'll be able to and they said it's like you could do it by time you could do it by when connecting to a device, when you take certain actions, which reminds me of like folder actions, AppleScript, the idea that you put a file in a folder and then...
a shortcut happens. That's all really great. But then the really big one here is intelligent actions where not only are they adding...
summarize text and create image, all these things from Apple intelligence, which they should do. And if app developers... can do it social shortcuts and and that's great app developers will be able to do it but shortcuts users will be able to do it too but um at least on the mac i don't i don't know if anything is changing on ipad or iphone but at least on the mac You will also be able to feed queries in a shortcuts action into a model of your choosing that could be an Apple on-device model.
It could be private cloud compute, which I don't think even app developers get the ability to do. The app developer stuff is local only. It's device only. Yeah, we didn't talk about that. We didn't talk about that. I guess we might talk about that in a bit. But yeah, so on shortcuts, though, you can do on-device or private cloud compute or chat GPT. And my understanding is like...
you know, you can pass like a dictionary of items to chat GPT and say, I want you to do this with it and get me this thing back. And then your short can continue. And one of the things that. that Federico was talking about with Sky that was really interesting is the idea of having a sort of non-deterministic portion of an automation. So this is that. This is that same idea, which is you can...
pass data from a shortcut onto an LLM and say, give me a response. And then the shortcut takes the response back. and then acts upon it. And that opens up huge additional capabilities for automation because now you don't know what you're going to get. It could be anything. And you get that prompt and then... LLMs are really good at giving you back a little JSON blob that becomes a dictionary and shortcuts or an answer that you use somewhere. I mean, that demo using Spotlight was like, hey,
I need some blurbs, and it suggests some blurbs, and then you pick one. That's a good use of this kind of technology. So that really could potentially empower... shortcuts all the more. And the fact that you have access to ChatGPT or private cloud compute models or on-device models, and you can just pick what you want to use when you build your shortcut, that has huge potential. This episode is brought to you by Sentry. Alright founders, it's time to be honest. How much time...
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Developers are back to building the product. I think this is fantastic because you can get people to focus on the things that they want to do, not just chasing down the things that they don't. People like to build features and advance things further rather than getting stuck in bugs, right? That's what all the... the developers I know talk about. So I think this is fantastic if it really truly helps them get there and it will because it's tracking down these bugs and helping them squash them.
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All righty. Let's actually kind of like dovetail it from what we were just talking about. So one of the things that developers can do is, I mean, this is pretty heavily rumored, right, is to be able to access. the models so again this is one of these things that i'm sure by the time this episode comes out there'll be a lot more information about the state of the union of course because it's not entirely clear what a developer can actually do with them
Is it restricted to certain actions, certain types of actions, etc., etc.? But this, to me, is a very, very good use of Apple's work. Because you are enabling developers to be able to use some form of LLM without them needing to do the immense amount of work or pay the cost for it. It's a classic thing. It's a thing we've seen before and it's happened again, which is year one, Apple basically just got it out. And in fact, in some cases didn't even get it out. Year two, it's...
time to sort of spread it out. And it's like the app store. It's the same thing, right? The iPhone comes out, everybody says, we want to do this. And they're like, no, not yet. We don't even know how to make apps for this thing yet. Wait. And then the next year, like, hey, we got an app store. Well, that's kind of what's happening here. I don't want to draw that parallel too far, but the idea here is they've got it at the point now where they can have a strategy to hand the keys to these models.
at least some of these models to developers. And the beauty of that is, instead of it being this technology that Apple is kind of hoarding for itself or building very specific features that other apps can use, like writing tools, but it's like... a feature as envisioned by apple this seems broader this seems like i mean we literally we can't wait to see what you do with it kind of a thing yeah in a good way of like hey app developers we built these models
And now we want to let you use them. And this is a value of being on our platform as you get access to these models. I think it's interesting that they're only on device and not private cloud compute. I would imagine that that will come at some point.
there was a lot of speculation. I think we talked about it that maybe at that point it becomes like weather kit where, you know, After you get above several thousand queries, you know, Apple does charge you for using private cloud compute, and you build it into your business model because there is an actual cost.
to doing that stuff in the cloud, but it's a great start. I could imagine 90% of developers don't need that. Because if they needed that, they would have already had a solution, right? If their thing needed that. Yeah, it may be, although maybe they would feel more comfortable having it be an Apple-based solution that is private and all of those things too and doesn't require like an API key.
Because it just happens. It's a great example, right, from Apple's press release on this. They have a quote from Paul Main of Day One Automatic, the journaling app. And for them, they're able to use this. system with the on device models to be able to take a look at your journaling entries and give you prompts based on things that you've put in.
to encourage you to journal more. So like, how did the pizza night go, right? It's like a journaling prompt. And for them, which makes perfect sense, they don't want and they can't have their journal content leave the device. Right. Because their customers would never accept it for good reason. Right. So like these are the kinds of things where I would expect that day one wondered about this ages ago. I'm like, well, there's nothing we can do here. Like we can't.
We can't do this. We have to build our own LLM. How on earth are we going to do that? Or, you know, we're going to integrate DeepSeek, the local DeepSeek. But if we say that, will our customers trust us? It's just not worth it. It's just not worth it. But now Apple just provides that service. It's fine. Don't worry about it. Because Apple has that, right? That is the thing that they have in the corner. I think this is fantastic. When I read an example like that, I'm like, oh.
I, as you said, genuinely can't wait to see what people do with it. Got to see the details, got to know the terms, lots of questions for this summer. What are the limitations here? And there may be some legitimate criticism of that, but what I would say is...
this is what Apple should be doing with this stuff and in general. And I did notice, I don't know if you noticed this, at several points, they're like, hey, here's this new feature that's great and there's an API for developers, which I think...
I saw more of that than I've seen in some previous years where it's not even we're waiting a year. It's like we did this thing and you get to do it too. And this is for the AI stuff. This is one of the ways that Apple... helps their platform and makes their models relevant, which is, look, even if the on-device model isn't the cutting edge of all models or even on all device.
on device models right now the advantage is it's from apple it's in the system and it's essentially free for the app developers to use as they see fit and that like more like that and and continue in that direction as the models evolve because that um that enables better apps smarter apps because apple apple ship it
Apple shipping an LLM that only Apple can use for very specific things, and maybe you can use writing tools, but that's about it, is okay, but that doesn't make the platform that much better. Letting any app on the platform. use that tool makes the platform a lot better. Absolutely, it does. Absolutely, it does. Going back into kind of the more user-focused features of Apple Intelligence, they've kind of...
I think they're rebranding visual intelligence. Like they're using that brand and it's a different thing now. And it's now a tool in the screenshot UI. So when you screenshot something, you can ask questions about what you're seeing. You can... If it has information in it, you could add that to a calendar, a reminder, that kind of stuff. I thought this looked pretty cool.
Something I have been doing since ChatGPT got added to Siri is sometimes I will take a screenshot and I'm like, ask ChatGPT, what am I looking at? Like say somebody posts something on Instagram. like an event and i don't know what it is right it's like they're at some kind of like carnival i was like what what is this and i'm like what is this and it will upload it and tell me
Well, this is that, but like a proper good UI for it. In the system. Yeah. So I think this is clever. And by the way, the presenter of this part had the best vibe. His vibe was so chill. This guy, I would like him to do the whole thing in future. Okay, cool. Noted. So I'll read here from the website. It says it builds an Apple intelligence so you can search across your most used apps at an event.
to your calendar and ask questions, letting you do more with what's on your screen. And apparently there's some kind of APIs for this, so you can tie your app into visual intelligence somehow. Again, I don't understand that. And I don't have the information, but they said it. And so there's something going on there, which could be interesting. Live translation looked really cool, right? So there was...
Tons of features in messages, in phone, in FaceTime, everywhere to do live translation. I thought that looked good. Live translation is always a part of every presentation for every company now and has been for a long time. But these look like a set of shipping things. To me, the most compelling...
look like messages. And I think that was really cool. But to do live translation and messages as someone in a bilingual family, I'm going to really enjoy this feature. I will be able to talk to my mother-in-law in Romanian. via messages. And that will be really helpful for me. So I think that's fantastic. It's great. There were emoji mixing and a bunch of emoji stuff.
there was kind of mixing of two emoji. So you could give to Genmoji, your prompts could be two emoji and it would put them together. Sure. Obviously, right? It's like, yeah, okay, you should do that. And a bunch of other customization options to change expressions and stuff like that. and image playgrounds uses chat gpt now as a chat gpt styles and it just uses chat gpt yeah yeah yeah i think it's i think it's really telling that genmoji which is the better of those two features got
Feature upgrades and Image Playground's got sort of a let's punt that to ChatGPT. It's fine. It's fine. And let's finish up by talking about Vision OS 26. Okay. It got widgets and it got widgets in the way that we imagined it could have widgets when we first spoke about it. Like their widgets exist, like, you know, there's widget kit in the system. They're persistent.
You can put little frames around them. You can add depth to them to make them look like windows. This looks fantastic. I think this looks wonderful. Really good. Yeah, it looks really good. Yeah, I agree. Looks really good. I was ticking off all the different little... Vision OS apps that are made obsolete by this.
There's one called Windora that's literally like you put a picture in a window and then it looks like there's a window there. And they literally said, you put a picture in a window and it looks like a window. Okay. All right. Got it. The fact that they're spatial and persistent and that all windows, this is a thing we talked about.
when vision os first came out which is they need to make it so that if you shut it down or a battery runs out or you restart or whatever it is that when you come back all the stuff is where it was when you left it and
That is finally here in year three. They got there, including the widgets, which is really fun because, yeah, you can stick those widgets wherever you want in your house and they'll... be there which for all of the widgets and other utilities and vision os that did stuff like this they were cute but then they just are gone the next time you you know you
bring the thing out and you put it on and like everything is back to zero, which is a kind of a bummer and makes you not want to do that stuff. So that was really good. Let's see what else was in there. Oh, the, the, the personas look really good, right? This is one of these things where it's like, huh, okay. But also, can it work with beards? Well, that is a lot of people asking that question in my audience row, I will say. People asking about the beards.
I think it's funny. Think about this, Mike. Think of what they showed us for Personas two years ago. What I love is in the presentation, they did show those too, right? Like this was the original and this is now.
Because they made the Personas better. They did much better. Over time. Much better. But this looks... much better than that which is incredible because i think they currently look really really good they do they look really good and so to take another leap in that i am very very keen i am not install vision os 26 beta 1 on my vision os
My Vision Pro kind of keen, but I am keen. We'll see. If you have two people wearing a Vision Pro in the same place, they can now share experiences. They show this. In a private context, which didn't make any sense, but they very quickly moved to an enterprise context where it does make more sense. Yeah. All the jokes about $7,000 so that you and a friend can watch a movie together. But...
This was on our list. Like one of the things that Vision OS needs to do ultimately as prices come down, as these devices are in more places, you do need to have the ability to share. share experiences contextually in the same place. If two people are using Vision OS in the same place, they should have the ability to see the same things. And it's just, it had to happen.
There are not a lot of... I mean, yes, Enterprise is actually a good example of this because, you know, yeah, you can play a board game. You can play Battleship together in the same room on your two $3,500 Vision Pros or you could just get... battleship and play it um but there are over time having your you know virtual reality hallucinations be consensual or contextual and shared so that everybody is like yes i also see the thing on the wall
In the long run, you got to have that. You got to have the ability to do that. And then, you know, for watching video, I mean, they're kind of just using SharePlay there. But like, sure, it's a thing that needed to happen. I don't know if it needed to happen now, but it did need to happen. So it's good to see. Big, big one. I know there was the rumor about PSVR controllers. Marco reported that a long time ago. It happened today. It's an OS feature, but hand controllers.
And I know there's a Logitech. There were all those rumors about the Apple Pencil working in Vision OS. And it turns out there's a Logitech pen for the Vision Pro. So you can sketch in. space and stuff and yeah it's cool it's a cool idea it's a it's a cool idea but i'm very excited about the controllers because that is that they actually literally showed it was a paddle ball app and not a ping pong app but it's the same idea as like
For some things, you really do need precision hand control. And so having the ability to support precision hand controllers will allow games to come to Vision OS that can't currently come to Vision OS and be playable. No, it's great.
I'm really, really, really happy about this because there are experiences that will be improved. Like, undoubtedly, there are experiences that will be improved by them adding the support. It was very funny to me, the pen, because I want that product to exist, but it's like, oh. the Apple Pencil as advanced as that is.
It ain't not enough. You need a lot more going on in something like this. I thought of you when they showed the 360 cameras to have that content work better in Vision Pro. They've partnered with a bunch of companies that do this, like GoPro. I think it's the 360 and Canon. It's like, yeah, this makes a lot of sense. That content should be viewable in a good way here. If you are a snowboarder or a bike, a mountain biker or something, and you've got a 360 camera or a 180 camera on the...
and you're taking these spectacular things, it would be nice to be able to watch that stuff in Vision Pro straight up, and it would be very exciting to do that. I also have a 360 camera. I use it for people sitting in a room and talking to each other or playing Dungeons & Dragons. But it is, as somebody who had to do that, it's hard to get...
to work on Vision Pro right now. You can do it, but it's hard and it needs to be easier because it is kind of amazing to be in that situation. And are you excited to sit on one of the moons of Jupiter and look at Jupiter? Sure. I wish there were more environments and there were more announcements about environments. One new environment is cool. I think I was most intrigued by the fact that you can control the time.
going on in the environment which means that there's now an interface to control aspects of environments and i wonder if that will be reflected on other environments feels like if you're going to make that environment you've got to kind of have a feature like that right like right right You've got to put on the show. You're not going to sit there for 20 hours watching Jupiter, so you've got to speed it up. Make a move. But yeah, that's good. It's a...
Again, they're pushing the ball forward in a bunch of places. With Vision OS, that's what you've got to see. Are you advancing things? You can put things in folders now in the home screen. Great. It's stuff like that. The fact that you're... um your data is tied to you and so if you use a vision pro and then you're in a guest mode on a vision pro it will be able to get your specs from the that you know from your your information like
Just stuff to make. It's all about like making this process better and this product better because when it shipped, it was missing a bunch of pieces and they're kind of... I look at this list and I think they're addressing a bunch of the big holes in, in vision OS and the biggest challenges with vision OS.
are not vision os they're the hardware and the cost of the hardware and third-party apps and things like that um it was already a pretty interesting and and uh good operating system but you know with just like the ipad in the early days it's like And then there's things where you go, oh, it should probably do this. And then you wait. And a couple of years later, it does that. You need to keep pushing the ball forward. And so they did.
What I was hoping for from WWDC this year was a bunch of stuff that was really interesting that we'd be able to talk about for months. to have some fun and talk about some fun stuff. And I just think that's what we've got here. And I'm super excited to spend more time with this, to be digging into this. There's more stuff than we even have time to cover today.
But as always, we will be back next week and we'll be talking about everything we found out in the week between you on the ground, me reading documentation and poking around at this beta one iPad a little bit more. It's exciting times over a day than this iPad's doing some while.
stuff. Good stuff. If you have any questions that you would like us to answer on next week's episode, just go to upgradefeedback.com and you can send those in. We'll try and do a big ask upgrade with your questions for as much as we're able to answer them. Or if there's anything you want. want to hear us talk about in more detail, go to upgradefeedback.com. Thank you to our members who support us of Upgrade Plus. Go to getupgradeplus.com to find out who won the second California Bear Trophy.
You can find this show on YouTube by searching for Upgrade Podcast. I would like to thank our sponsors of this week's episode. That is Sentry, FitBod, and OpenCase. If you want to find Jason online, you can go to sixcolors.com and you can find his work there.
find him on social media. You can find me online too. I'll soft launch here and say you can go to theenthusiast.net, Jason. That's right. You're a blogger now. Papa is a blogger. Papa blogger. So people can go check that out if they want to. I'll talk about that more in the future. Yes, and also thank you to everybody at Apple who provided a place for me to sit and talk to you right from Apple Park right after the keynote. Absolutely. Yes, if you're listening to this episode.
and you're like, oh man, I'm so happy they got it out quick, then you should be sending your thanks to the team who provide the Apple Podcast Studio. Because otherwise, this probably would have come out on Wednesday or something. I don't even know. So we'll be back next week. Thanks so much for listening. Say goodbye, Jason Snell. Goodbye, Papa.