Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

MacOS Ventura is official, with more ways to be productive

Add as a preferred source on Google
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage
Updated less than 15 hours ago

The next major version of Apple’s MacOS operating system is official. MacOS Ventura, the follow-up to last year’s MacOS Monterey, has just been announced at the annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC).

The biggest feature of MacOS Ventura relates to productivity and multitasking. There’s a new way to keep things organized on your Mac in this release called Stage Manager. Also included are updates for the Mail app, Safari, and continuity features designed so you can use your iPhone as a webcam for your Mac.

Recommended Videos

Stage Manager was up first in Apple’s announcement and keynote. It is activated from the Control Center and can arrange other open apps on the side of your Mac. Clicking on a different app will bring that app to the stage, and the last app will also move back to the left. You also can cycle through windows of multiple apps by clicking, and pair multiple apps together in one group. Stage Manager will keep them arranged as you left them.

As for getting to the desktop in MacOS Ventura, Stage Manager provides a new way for that. Just a click on desktop and the stage is cleared and you see files from the desktop. You can drag files from the desktop directly into an app in Stage Manager, too.

Stage manager in macOS Ventura.
Digital Trends

Another big theme of Ventura is the updated Mail app. It comes with scheduled mail send, follow-up suggestions, the ability to unsend an email, and more. Safari is also getting shared tab groups, the ability to see which tabs people are looking at live, and better communications with iMessage.

You can also expect richer information in Spotlight. TV shows, actors, sports, etc., all should look better. There’s even the ability to start timers from Spotlight.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Capping things out in Ventura are Passkeys and new continuity features with iPhones. Passkeys are designed to replace passwords for good. They use cryptographic techniques and biometrics in the device. TouchID or FaceID are used to authenticate, so passkeys can’t be phished since they never leave your device. Passkeys are designed to work in apps and on the web and with iCloud keychain.

Finally, with the new iPhone continuity features, you can expect the ability to use your iPhone as a camera for your Mac and hand off Facetime calls from iPhone. Your Mac will automatically detect your iPhone, and there will be no need to connect with wires. On select iPhones, you’ll be able to enjoy “desk view” which gives you an ultrawide view of your desk. Apple is working with Belkin on accessories to hold the iPhone at the proper angle.

Using an iPhone with a MacBook.
Apple

As usual, this release will be a free update to qualifying Mac models later this fall. The range of supported Macs should be the same as MacOS Monterey, which includes several Intel-based and Apple M1 Mac models from 2015 and later.

MacOS Ventura is available as a developer beta through the Apple developer program today. If you’re eager to try, you’ll need to sign up and pay to access that program, which costs $100 a year.

It will also will hit Apple’s public beta testing program known as the Apple Beta Software Program in July. When it does, you’ll be able to download the profile and enroll your Mac online through the website to try it out.

Outside of the beta, yu can expect a full non-beta release around October. This gives Apple plenty of time to polish the rough edges of the operating system and work out bugs. It also allows developers to optimize and code their apps for the new OS. As a reference point, MacOS Monterey launched on October 25. So you can expect roughly a four or five-month wait for a final release.

Arif Bacchus
Arif Bacchus is a native New Yorker and a fan of all things technology. Arif works as a freelance writer at Digital Trends…
AI’s chip hunger could keep memory prices painfully high for years
Memory shortages may haunt your next phone, laptop, and GPU for years
Crucial Memory and SSD

While recent reports claimed that memory prices may not fall till 2027, it seems like the memory chip crunch isn't a short-term headache. And that's bad news for anyone hoping phone, laptop, and GPU prices will get cheaper again soon.

Reuters reports that SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won said the global chip wafer shortage is likely to last until 2030, with artificial intelligence demand continuing to outpace the supply. Chey said the current shortage could remain above 20%, largely because AI systems require huge amounts of high-bandwidth memory and therefore burn through a lot of wafers.

Read more
One of the most controversial US agencies is reportedly taste-testing Anthropic uber-powerful Mythos AI
The agency's reported use of Mythos highlights a widening split inside the US government over AI risk
Claude AI on an iPhone.

The US government's AI fight just got harder to square. The National Security Agency is reportedly using Anthropic's Mythos Preview even as senior Pentagon officials keep pushing to cut the company off over supply chain concerns. It shows how quickly real security needs can outrun official policy.

Since February, the Defense Department has been trying to block Anthropic and push vendors to do the same. Yet, according to an Axios report, the NSA appears to be moving ahead with one of the company's most powerful models anyway, suggesting cybersecurity demand is carrying more weight than the feud now playing out inside government.

Read more
AI streaming is going mainstream in China, whether audiences want it or not
IQiyi wants AI to make most of its content someday, and it's already starting.
man holding tablet watching iQiyi

China's Netflix, iQiyi, is making one of the biggest bets in streaming history. The company wants AI to create the bulk of its films and shows someday soon, and it's already restructuring its 16-year-old business to make that happen.

At its annual content showcase in Beijing, founder and CEO Gong Yu announced that iQiyi is pivoting its popular streaming platform into a social media destination built around AI-generated content. 

Read more