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by machello13
2093 days ago
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Big Sur has some rough edges right now that I hope will get ironed out (fortunately, they're mostly UI issues and not performance/stability), but using it for the past couple months has made me a little more optimistic about the Mac's future. They've brought over a lot of common-sense features and design ideas from iOS, but in a way that embraces the Mac's unique features, rather than feeling like a refresh-for-the-sake-of-a-refresh. My favorite is a much clearer contrast between active and inactive windows. |
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In the past few years we've had anything from the new native AppStore that doesn't have a single consistent behaviour [1] to the plethora of half-baked barely functioning app stubs in Swift UI/Catalyst [2]. These are first-party apps by Apple themselves, and they are perfectly fine with the state they are in, and they had no qualms whatsoever when releasing them. That's what "obsessive attention to details"[3] has been on the Mac for the past many years.
The very few examples/exceptions (Big Sur's Messages) are exactly that: very few.
[1] https://grumpy.website/post/0RsaxCu3P and https://grumpy.website/post/0RsafwyK8 and https://grumpy.website/post/0SpwtkNB_
[2] Home, News, Podcasts, Developer App...
[3] That's from BigSur's marketing video