WWDC wish list: Predicting the next version of OS X
New features add convenience and speed up tasks we do all the time, and developers can get new tools to delight us with their own apps too. This year’s WWDC keynote is bound to hold some surprises, and here’s what we could see in the next OS X—er, excuse me, MacOS. Or whatever it’s called.
Siri is on our iPhones, iPads, Apple Watches, and even the Apple TV—hopefully this is the year Apple’s personal assistant makes the jump to the Mac. We’ve been jealous of Cortana (and its third-party integrations) on the Windows 10 desktop since it launched, and talking to a computer feels more natural than hollering across the room at an always-listening connected speaker, a la the Amazon Echo.
According to 9to5Mac, Mac users will be able to summon Siri with a button or a keyboard shortcut, or say “Hey Siri” when the Mac is plugged into power. The Mac has had dictation and voice commands for a while, but Siri should be able to do more—it would be cool to run natural-language Spotlight searches like “find that Excel spreadsheet Roman emailed me yesterday,” or jet off quick replies when you notice an important notification pop up: “Reply to Jon’s last email: I’m on it.” Siri support for Apple Music on the desktop will go a long way too.
Each iteration of OS X has brought an extra layer of polish to Apple’s big apps, like Safari, Mail, Messages, Maps, and Calendar. This year, MacRumors predicts that Photos will get upgrades (which is good, because questions about how Photos and iCloud Photo Library continue to flood the Mac 911 inbox every week). And iTunes should get yet another coat of lipstick—maybe Siri support will make Apple Music easier to use. Couldn’t hurt, right
Thanks to Bluetooth, the next version of OS X could let you unlock your Mac with your iPhone’s or iPad’s Touch ID. If that sounds like a much clunkier way to log in than just typing your account password, well, it is—but it still sounds cool. (We’ve tried a similar app called Knock, which even has an Apple Watch version.)
But what’s even cooler is that once you can authenticate your Mac securely with your iPhone, this could lead the way to Apple Pay in the Safari browser, assuming your phone supports Apple Pay too. (Apple Pay is also rumored to be coming to Safari in iOS.)
Our colleague Jonny Evans at Computerworld wonders if Apple will expand its Continuity and Handoff tools to third-party developers, to let you quickly pass off tasks from one device to another. Another possibility is a MapKit API to open up Apple’s Maps to developers too.
A Siri SDK has been rumored too, and is long overdue—Amazon’s Alexa, Google Assistant, and Cortana all have third-party integrations, letting you accomplish tasks from searching for a Netflix movie to ordering an Uber.
Well, the name’s a thing, anyway. OS X may be getting a little long in the tooth as a moniker, and 9to5Mac uncovered clues that Apple might be renaming its desktop operating system MacOS. That could lead to a totally new naming pattern: Apple OS, anyone Or dare we say MacOS 11
And what about the California place names We’ve had Mavericks, Yosemite, and El Capitan, but there are plenty of gorgeous locations left. Lake Tahoe, Joshua Tree, Shasta, Point Reyes, Catalina, Mendocino, the list goes on and on. Of course, none of Apple’s other OSes ship with public code names, just the OS name and a number: watchOS 2, iOS 9. It’d be a bummer to see the California trend come to an end so soon, but we wouldn’t be surprised to see Apple move toward more consistent monikers.
What do you think What should Apple call its next Mac OS, and what features are must-haves Let us know your thoughts in the comments, and then join us on Monday June 13 at 10am Pacific, as Apple reveals all in the WWDC 2016 keynote.