The new OS for Mac. called "OS X Yosemite"
OS 10.10 Yosemite for Mac
OS X 10.10, codenamed Syrah and officially named Yosemite,
is the 2014 version of the Mac operating system currently in development by
Apple. OS X 10.10 was shown off at WWDC 2014 on June 2 and will be released
sometime in the fall. In addition to new features, OS X brings interface and
experience refinements to Apple's desktop operating system, similar in spirit
if not exact execution to the iOS 7 makeover of 2013 — interface depth and
translucency effects, textual clarity and other elements to improve the overall
user experience.
But that's just scratching the surface. There are a ton of
new features under the hood.
OS X 10.10 Yosemite design language
Last year Jony Ive and Apple's design team spent so much
time working on iOS 7's new look, OS X mostly got the linen and the leather —
if not the felt — stripped out but not much else. The intent was always to go
back and give OS X the design attention it deserved as well.
Yosemite employs clearer, smarter and easier-to-understand
controls, with streamline toolbars, translucent elements and clean, consistent
icon design. An updated system font also improves readability. Depth, deference
and clarity are the design guidelines Apple first employed in iOS 7, and now
we're seeing that work continue over to Yosemite.
Continuity
Apple doesn't seem compelled to blur the lines between iOS 8
and OS X 10.10 as much as obliterate them, at least where it makes sense to.
Continuity is what Apple's calling that — design that enables one device to
complement the other. Handoff, for example, lets you start an activity on your
iPad or iPhone and continue it on your Mac. And Instant Hotspot lets your Mac
use your phone more easily. SMS and MMS messages sent to your phone will
automatically appear in Messages on all your devices; you can even make and
receive phone calls on your Mac when your iPhone is on the same network.
OS X 10.10 and AirDrop
AirDrop debuted on the Mac but after several initial
attempts to bring it to iOS were shot down as overly complex, the version that
finally shipped in iOS 7 wasn't even compatible with the Mac.
That changes with OS X 10.10 as the teams at Apple get their
protocols back in sync and their cross-platform beaming fully in order.
OS X 10.10 Notification Center
Notification Center gets a rework with the new Today view —
a quick look at everything you need to know. Apple's also introducing
Notification Center Widgets to help you view your calendar, weather, stocks,
reminders and a World Clock, and the API is open for developers to use to
create custom Widgets that can be downloaded from the Mac App Store.
OS X 10.10 Spotlight
Spotlight's now in the Spotlight. Apple's search feature in
OS X has been taken out of the realm of just file search; now it can find
applications (making it a potential replacement for Apple's Launchpad app) and
content on the Internet (putting it toe to toe with the popular third-party
tool Alfred). It will view search results from Wikipedia, the App Store, iTunes
Store, iBooks Store and more.
iCloud Drive
Apple's integration with cloud-based storage and services
continues with 10.10 and iOS 8 thanks to iCloud, which lets you store any kind
of file online. It also works with a Windows PC.
OS X 10.10 bottom line
The Mac's operating system is beyond mature, but there's
huge room for improvement. Apple's moving iOS 8 and OS X 10.10 together,
forward, for a new era of interdevice and intersystem communication. It's going
to be very exciting to watch. Stay with us as we provide you with more details.
Anyway, the release of the OS X Yosemite is on October 21th this year.
Amazingly expensive !
ReplyDeleteIt is so cool but it is worth lots of cash
ReplyDeleteMac OS. Cool but not affordable. Hope I got tons of cash to buy all these stuffs.
ReplyDeleteIt's only in the techno world that I've come to realize how expensive apples are. XD
ReplyDeleteI already know that it was expensive, so I don't have any idea to buy this
ReplyDelete