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At Apple's WWDC 2020 keynote live stream, Apple revealed new updates for iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac and more… and revealed a huge change coming to Macs in the future: a change to using Apple-made processors instead of Intel's chips.
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• New Macs and macOS: the future is ARM Macs
• watchOS 7: the updates coming to Apple Watch
You can watch the whole event below, or read on for our blow-by-blow of new announcements across the different product types.
Apple WWDC 2020: What was announced
iOS 14 new features
- App Library is a new way of organising your apps beyond the Home screen, making it easier to find those hundreds of apps you downloaded
- Widgets on the iPhone Home screen! It's been a long time coming (we can see you rolling your eyes, Android users) – you can choose specific sizes for widgets, and one space for a widget can change throughout the day
- Picture in Picture mode for watching video over other apps – another long-awaited feature
- Siri no longer takes over your whole screen – it now just pops up at the bottom of the screen, and can show results in a pop-up. Same for phone calls! Woo!
- Siri is also getting smarter about knowledge, and can do more on your phone
- A new app: Translate! You can have natural conversations with people in other languages, all offline and with Apple's trademark privacy
- Messages gets some new features: you can pin favourite conversations, reply in-line in group chats (or create threads), and you can mention someone specifically
- Apple's improved maps in, uh, Maps are coming to the US, Ireland and Canada. The app will also offer better recommendations, and has carbon-friendly direction features, including cycling routing and EV routing with charge planning
- CarPlay is getting new kinds of apps, including food ordering and EV charging
- Keyless cars using your iPhone! Your phone can be your digital car key, and you can share keys with other people
- App Clips are a way to use apps you've never even installed – a small part of an app can be delivered quickly to your phone when needed, such as when renting an electric scooter. They're launched from NFC tags, QR codes or links
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- The Mac is moving to Apple chips! It's official!
- All of Apple's apps are ready to go for the new hardware, and Microsoft has ported its apps. Adobe is working on apps too. Developers can deliver a single app that works on Intel and Apple-powered Macs
- Rosetta 2 is a feature to make apps made for Intel Macs work on Apple-powered Macs – even including games
- iPhone and iPad apps can run directly on the new type of Macs
- Apple is shipping the first hardware this week to developers – but it's not what people at home will buy. It's a Mac Mini running the A12Z of the new iPad Pro
- macOS Big Sur brings a new design for the first time in years! It's a visual refinement more than a rethink, but it looks both cleaner and more colourful than before
- Control Centre has come to the Mac – makes it much easier to get to common controls you might need
- Notification Centre has been redesigned to make it easier to see grouped notifications, and there are new widgets
- The Maps app gets the new features from iOS, plus a big redesign
- Safari is faster, can now tell you how a website may be tracking you, and can check your saved passwords haven't been compromised in a data breach. When you hover of a tab, you get a preview of the page – nice!
iPadOS 14 new features
- Many iPadOS apps now have a sidebar, to make it easier to manage file organisation – it's a little bit more of the desktop coming to iPad
- The redesigned Siri is coming to iPadOS too, and the smaller phone notification is there too
- The search function has been enhanced to help find things on your iPad or online more easily. Mac users who use Spotlight will find it very familiar
- Widgets are coming to iPadOS too
- Scribble is a new feature for Apple Pencil – handwritten text is editable so you can select to copy and paste, move or change the colour. Very slick!
- You can also handwrite into any text field and it will be turned in typed text
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AirPods software update
- AirPods will now automatically switch between devices when you do
- 3D spatial audio is coming to AirPods Pro, to sound like true surround sound for movies, including Dolby Atmos
watchOS 7 new features
- Apps can now display more than one complication per face
- You can now share Watch Faces, and find new Watch Face suggestions from other people, even online. There are a couple of new Face types, too
- Cycling directions are coming to Apple Watch too, including live navigation
- There are new Workout types, including Dance and Core Training. The Activity app is now called the Fitness app too
- Sleep tracking at last! The aim is not just to track, but also to help you get the amount of sleep you want. Wind Down is a new feature that aims to help you chill out, cutting notifications
- The Watch now has a sleep mode, and can wake you up with a noisy or silent alarm
- Automatic handwash detection and coaching! When the Watch detects that you're washing your hands, it'll start a 20-second countdown timer…
HomeKit updates
- Apple has open-sourced HomeKit, and has worked with Amazon and Google on a new standard for smart home devices to all work together! That's pretty huge
- Adaptive Lighting changes the colour temperature of light bulbs over the course of the day
- HomeKit Secure Video now includes face recognition from your Photos app, and and motion zone control
tvOS new features
- Picture in picture at last! Watch TV while playing games or using other apps
- Multi-user support for game saves
Apple WWDC 2020 live stream: what to expect
It's not just about the new operating systems mentioned above; new hardware regularly appears at WWDC – especially productivity tools, including new Mac models. The big rumour this year is that Apple will finally put its own-brand processors into Macs, replacing the Intel chips currently used.
This is getting people excited because Apple's processors are ludicrously fast – the iPhone 11 is as powerful as the average laptop, despite having a smaller, less energy-hungry chip. Just imagine what a bigger, beefier version could do…
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Shapes (itch) (one editor games) mac os. Supposedly, Apple is also looking to launch over-ear headphones with the technology from its AirPods Pro, plus some extra new features.
Even if you're not looking for a new Mac, these events are great for anyone who owns current Apple devices, since they tell you what new features will come to your iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone SE, iPad Air, Apple Watch Series 5, MacBook Air or anything else you own – the software updates usually arrive at the end of September.
iOS 14 is the biggest draw of the event, and all eyes have swivelled towards noted leaker Jon Prosser on that front, after he tweeted just two words: 'iPhone OS.'
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The connotation of the tweet is obvious: it looks like an iOS rebrand is coming, with iOS 14 instead turning into iPhone OS 14. Right now, that would make sense: in September 2019 Apple introduced iPadOS, an operating system for the iPad that has been adding features and diverging from iOS, the operating system both shared.
As a result, iOS now only seems to serve the iPhone (and the same-thing-but-can't-make-phone-calls iPod touch.) Considering the iOS moniker was adopted back in 2010 when iOS went on to support both the iPhone and iPad. Reverting back to the iPhone OS naming convention, in this case, just makes sense.
We don't know much about what iOS 14 will look like, regardless of what it will end up being called. Previous leaks from February have suggested that iOS 14 would have inherited several key iPadOS features like the App Switcher, which was tucked away in iOS 13.
The announcements of new features also gives us a glimpse in the direction Apple might take for the likes of the iPhone 12 or Apple Watch Series 6 – not only can we try to read the tea leaves based on new features or a new look to Apple's software, but once developers dig into the operating systems, they often find hidden references to hardware coming later.