Apple prepares iOS 19, macOS 16 'Solarium' UI overhaul for WWDC

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Apple is preparing to modernize the appearance of iOS 19, macOS 16, and its other operating systems, with a new "Solarium" interface set to be introduced at WWDC.

Three smartphone screens displaying app store, a conversation with a text about lockdown mode, and a contact profile with icons. A photo of a dog under a chair is shown.
iOS 19 could receive a massive UI overhaul at WWDC 2025



Apple's keynote address at WWDC is a few short weeks away, and speculation about what it will launch is gathering pace. When it comes to how the operating systems appear, users could be greeted by an overhauled UI.

According to Sunday's "Power On" newsletter from Bloomberg, Apple will be introducing a UI interface known internally as "Solarium." The name, which refers to rooms that let in lots of sunlight through glass windows, is reportedly going to be a slicker and modern reinvention of the interfaces in iOS, iPadOS, and macOS.

Previous rumors claimed that iOS 19, iPadOS 19, and macOS 16 would get some of the design cues from visionOS. This seems to fit in with the "Solarium" UI name.

Visual Consistency



An apparent theme for WWDC 2025 will be consistency and unification. This should mean that users will experience similar interfaces, UI elements, and maybe even features, when they use the same functions across different devices and operating systems.

This theme apparently means that it won't just be a change limited to iOS, iPadOS, and macOS. Allegedly, tvOS and watchOS will have their own redesigns to match the other updates, while visionOS will get its own adjustments to fit.

In April, a leaker offered what the updates to iOS 19 could look like, based on it incorporating visionOS elements. In a video, frosted glass elements, rounder squircle icons in the Home Screen, and more floating UI elements were considered the main features of the new UI.

There has been some intense discussion between leakers over the UI updates and what to actually expect. Regardless of who is closer to the truth, an update to the appearance of Apple's operating systems is expected, and long overdue.

Rumor Score: Possible

Read on AppleInsider

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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 24
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    muthuk_vanalingamdewmewilliamlondonnapoleon_phoneapartnarwhaljeffharristiredskills
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  • Reply 2 of 24
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 3,476member
    Windows vista ui on iPhone, here we come. 
    Xedunbeliever2
     1Like 1Dislike 0Informatives
  • Reply 3 of 24
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 3,476member
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    In Apple’s defense, they e kind of perfected everything except their nascent ai. Hard to make massive shifts when you’re already doing it right. 

    How Google has stayed afloat is a mystery considering its constant throwaway projects and throw things against the wall to see if they stick approach. It makes sense they fully bore in on what stuck. Bevause they do t have much in the way of great things outside of the search engine snd the entrenched Gmail. 

    Open ai HAS to do something. Competitors are getting way better and closing in. They need a differentiator. Hiring Ive is a Hail Mary shot. The amount of money going into that move is quite insane. Will see how it turns out. So far the only guarantee is jony just got rven more filthy rich. Lol. 

    Apple is in refining mode as they figure out revolutions. 
    neoncatelijahgXedpaisleydiscorezwitsjeffharris
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  • Reply 4 of 24
    jeff fieldsjeff fields Posts: 170member
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    This is kind of a hilarious joke. OpenAI and Jony Ive don't even have a product yet, of any kind. Let alone a viable one. There is no "revolutionary step" here.

    What do you want Apple to "respond" with? Buying a one-year-old startup for billions of dollars and leaking vague rumors of a product?

    As for what Apple can "afford", "afford" is an English word with a clear meaning. Have you looked it up? Apple can manifestly "afford" to do whatever the fuck it wants, and its financials remain quite solid. As does the product line.
    unbeliever2williamlondonpaisleydisconarwhallukeirezwitsjeffharrismacxpressAlex1N
     9Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 5 of 24
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    This is kind of a hilarious joke. OpenAI and Jony Ive don't even have a product yet, of any kind. Let alone a viable one. There is no "revolutionary step" here.

    What do you want Apple to "respond" with? Buying a one-year-old startup for billions of dollars and leaking vague rumors of a product?

    As for what Apple can "afford", "afford" is an English word with a clear meaning. Have you looked it up? Apple can manifestly "afford" to do whatever the fuck it wants, and its financials remain quite solid. As does the product line.
    Wow... Apple can manifestly afford to do whatever the fuck it wants..... 

    Explain to me why Apple can't afford to do with Siri whatever the fuck Apple wants.... LMAO!!! 
    williamlondonappleinsiderusermuthuk_vanalingamunbeliever2rezwitstiredskills
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  • Reply 6 of 24
    dewmedewme Posts: 6,034member
    I wouldn't go as far as @Massiveattack has has gone, but I too feel a sense that Apple hasn't finished with iOS 18 and macOS 15 yet. I don't want Apple pushing out anything that's half-baked, but this past year since WWDC has felt more trickle-out than any other year post-WWDC. Of course there is a lot turmoil outside of the technical realm at Apple, but that's just the way things are now. When it comes to Apple Intelligence/Siri things I feel like Apple has been chasing their own tail for lack of clarity on where they were trying to go with the AI stuff. This ended up causing additional churn, hot spin, and a certain degree of fuzziness around what their endpoint would look like.

    So here we are again, queuing up for another WWDC but now dragging a non-empty bag of backlog of stuff that never got finished last year along with us. I'm realistic and worked in product development long enough to understand that Apple's current position is not at all unusual. Backlogs are never empty and work that was targeted for previous cycles very often gets bow-waved into the next cycle. This is not unusual and Apple is under tremendous scrutiny. Even though I feel that iOS 18 and macOS 15 didn't check all of the boxes, Apple must keep the pedal down and keep setting goals that will advance it to higher ground and bigger and better things.

    Apple is not perfect and they have to deal with moving targets as much as anyone else. In the past Apple has had much more control over setting their own targets because they were so far out in front of the herd. This past year the herd started catching up, but the "virtual herd" of expectations from investors, analysts, and prognosticators were able to get out ahead of Apple and pummel them for things that other companies were only delivering in a half-baked way, for the most part, but with a few exceptions. This is new ground for Apple and they'll learn how to navigate through it. Hopefully WWDC 2025 will show us the path that they intend to take.
    Alex1N
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  • Reply 7 of 24
    dewme said:
    I wouldn't go as far as @Massiveattack has has gone, but I too feel a sense that Apple hasn't finished with iOS 18 and macOS 15 yet. I don't want Apple pushing out anything that's half-baked, but this past year since WWDC has felt more trickle-out than any other year post-WWDC. Of course there is a lot turmoil outside of the technical realm at Apple, but that's just the way things are now. When it comes to Apple Intelligence/Siri things I feel like Apple has been chasing their own tail for lack of clarity on where they were trying to go with the AI stuff. This ended up causing additional churn, hot spin, and a certain degree of fuzziness around what their endpoint would look like.

    So here we are again, queuing up for another WWDC but now dragging a non-empty bag of backlog of stuff that never got finished last year along with us. I'm realistic and worked in product development long enough to understand that Apple's current position is not at all unusual. Backlogs are never empty and work that was targeted for previous cycles very often gets bow-waved into the next cycle. This is not unusual and Apple is under tremendous scrutiny. Even though I feel that iOS 18 and macOS 15 didn't check all of the boxes, Apple must keep the pedal down and keep setting goals that will advance it to higher ground and bigger and better things.

    Apple is not perfect and they have to deal with moving targets as much as anyone else. In the past Apple has had much more control over setting their own targets because they were so far out in front of the herd. This past year the herd started catching up, but the "virtual herd" of expectations from investors, analysts, and prognosticators were able to get out ahead of Apple and pummel them for things that other companies were only delivering in a half-baked way, for the most part, but with a few exceptions. This is new ground for Apple and they'll learn how to navigate through it. Hopefully WWDC 2025 will show us the path that they intend to take.
    The reason why Apple has been so successful so far is because Steve Jobs clearly defined his road maps before his death (Vision Pro is also not Tim´s vision. AppleWatch was also Steve´s vision). Tim Cook executed it well (Even if I don´t like Tim Cook, I must admit his excellent execution. I just don´t like him as all upgrades could have been more transparent and more to show under a product guy). 

    As you said, AI is a new ground for Apple. Steve Jobs did not show a road map for AI before his death.. Poor Tim. I hope he has some strategists with vision how to navigate the future of Apple. 

    Let´s see.

    williamlondon9secondkox2decoderringrezwitsthttiredskills
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  • Reply 8 of 24
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 



    Google IO was just Google AI.   meh.
    williamlondon9secondkox2rezwitsAlex1N
     4Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 9 of 24
    brianusbrianus Posts: 191member
    Windows vista ui on iPhone, here we come. 
     :D hate to say it but I came here for this comment. First thing I thought. What’s disturbing is all the other parallels to that era of MS history too. Apple is now the aging behemoth that’s run out of ideas while its competitors build innovative products that define the zeitgeist. I remember all the leaks about internal dissension and dysfunction at Microsoft leading to the delays and then debacle that was Vista… sounds a lot like Apple’s AI push today. Slapping a glassy coat of paint on everything just like MS did back then is just a great comedic touch on top of everything else. 
    9secondkox2unbeliever2thtjeffharriswilliamlondon
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  • Reply 10 of 24
    Do most users want these kind of UI updates? I mostly prefer not changing unless there is a problem. Both in operating systems and applications companies just seem to move things around for the hell of it.
    jeffharriswilliamlondonAlex1Njroy
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  • Reply 11 of 24
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 3,476member
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 



    Google IO was just Google AI.   meh.
    yep. Some try to hype it up but that’s all it was. Meh. 
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 12 of 24
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 3,476member

    brianus said:
    Windows vista ui on iPhone, here we come. 
     :D hate to say it but I came here for this comment. First thing I thought. What’s disturbing is all the other parallels to that era of MS history too. Apple is now the aging behemoth that’s run out of ideas while its competitors build innovative products that define the zeitgeist. I remember all the leaks about internal dissension and dysfunction at Microsoft leading to the delays and then debacle that was Vista… sounds a lot like Apple’s AI push today. Slapping a glassy coat of paint on everything just like MS did back then is just a great comedic touch on top of everything else. 
    sad. But here we are. Cook needs an Ive or a Jobs to cast vidion while he makes it a successful reality. 

    The grrat thing about currrnt apple is that they are really up on quality and supply chain mastery. They can make lots of great quality products at somewhat reachable prices. 

    But where they falter is I’m seeing what people want/need ahead of time. 

    The car should not have been abandoned. And apple should be s huge leader in online technology these days (analytics, web development, email, servers, login APIs , etc. 

    an ecosystem of products that can standalone, but are smart enough to work together in a modular msn er would be great. Imagine glasses thst do sn impressive visual job with just enough audio to get by but that part turns off when you wear AirPods, which take over. The glasses cameras capture hand gestures, but not having every angle covered due to cost, so an Apple Watch takes over from there when worn. The glasses become an iPad/iphone/MacBook screen upon being selected when said devices are nearby, becomes a heads up display for vehicles with CarPlay ultra, etc. 

    instead we got a big ol’ piece of scuba gear that doesn’t do much with the rest of the products we already have. 

    We have the epitome of the notebook computer. We have the ultimate phone and tablet. The ultimate watch (outside of glucose and BO, which really must be rectified), the ultimate in witeless earbuds, etc. but we need glasses. And we need Apple TV tech in every mainstream tv  and we need apple tech to interact with st the foundations of the internet (extending to internet hardware). A full body exoskeleton is lame. We have the best in each category. Now to mdd add me them all work together in a modular comprehensive way beyond sharing music snd trsnsferrinh files via WiFi and Bluetooth. 

    The IoT died because there was no headmaster. This may be the next thing that’s in plain sight but no one is pulling it together snd are instead focusing on things like giant do it all headgear or server based ai, or other bodywear. Meh. 

    Either a disruptir rises from within at apple or recognized from without and brought in. But apple must recognize true genius from just plain weirdness or risk taking attitudes. It doesn’t necessarily need to be a young person either. Someone with skin in the game. 

    What cook has done, only he could do. He got so well post-Jobs and was the perfect follow up in a massive one-two lunch that birthed and refined the computing landscape as we know it today. These things must be cyclical. You can’t have another cook follow cook. It’s time for a visionary soon. 

    tht
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  • Reply 13 of 24
    brianusbrianus Posts: 191member
    Do most users want these kind of UI updates? I mostly prefer not changing unless there is a problem. Both in operating systems and applications companies just seem to move things around for the hell of it.
    Absolutely not. Something useful is always lost in the transition, and frequently a new UI comes with new "system requirements" that either require a hardware upgrade outright, or result in degraded performance on older devices. Not to mention the bugs, I want Apple to improve and to innovate - "skating to where the puck is going to bell as they used to say --  not change things to change them (or to distract from the lack of innovation).

    Plus the glass UI makes no sense. On Vision Pro it does, because these floating windows obscure the real world, and transparency minimizes that as much as possible. But full-screen devices like the iPhone and watch don't have any "background" to bleed through. I suppose the folding phone's supposed Stage Manager like UI would "benefit" from this transparency when opened; maybe that's part of it, but if so that again just sounds like a Windows Vista gimmick from 20 years ago.

    A radical guess - though not likely, due to the battery implications - might be that this is related to the rumored no-bezel/all-screen 20th anniversary iPhone. What if their plan is to actually make their devices appear translucent using a video feed from the back camera? A lot of near-future sci fi depicts implausible tablet and phone sized devices which look like a literal sheet of glass, with a neon UI on top of the real world. 
    unbeliever2williamlondon9secondkox2
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  • Reply 14 of 24
    abridenabriden Posts: 37member
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    In Apple’s defense, they e kind of perfected everything except their nascent ai. Hard to make massive shifts when you’re already doing it right. 

    How Google has stayed afloat is a mystery considering its constant throwaway projects and throw things against the wall to see if they stick approach. It makes sense they fully bore in on what stuck. Bevause they do t have much in the way of great things outside of the search engine snd the entrenched Gmail. 

    Open ai HAS to do something. Competitors are getting way better and closing in. They need a differentiator. Hiring Ive is a Hail Mary shot. The amount of money going into that move is quite insane. Will see how it turns out. So far the only guarantee is jony just got rven more filthy rich. Lol. 

    Apple is in refining mode as they figure out revolutions. 
    "kind of perfected everything" ...Apple have perfected nothing.

    There are bugs in Finder that have existed as long as I can remember. The fundamentals such as font management go unresolved whilst they focus on fluff such as animojis. Their core apps progress at a glacial pace whilst they fiddle with distractions like Stage Manager.

    I no longer look forward to WWDC announcements as I have no faith in them fixing the basics.
    sphericwilliamlondon9secondkox2
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  • Reply 15 of 24
    mattinozmattinoz Posts: 2,637member
    abriden said:
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    In Apple’s defense, they e kind of perfected everything except their nascent ai. Hard to make massive shifts when you’re already doing it right. 

    How Google has stayed afloat is a mystery considering its constant throwaway projects and throw things against the wall to see if they stick approach. It makes sense they fully bore in on what stuck. Bevause they do t have much in the way of great things outside of the search engine snd the entrenched Gmail. 

    Open ai HAS to do something. Competitors are getting way better and closing in. They need a differentiator. Hiring Ive is a Hail Mary shot. The amount of money going into that move is quite insane. Will see how it turns out. So far the only guarantee is jony just got rven more filthy rich. Lol. 

    Apple is in refining mode as they figure out revolutions. 
    "kind of perfected everything" ...Apple have perfected nothing.

    There are bugs in Finder that have existed as long as I can remember. The fundamentals such as font management go unresolved whilst they focus on fluff such as animojis. Their core apps progress at a glacial pace whilst they fiddle with distractions like Stage Manager.

    I no longer look forward to WWDC announcements as I have no faith in them fixing the basics.
    I assume new UI is a sign the SwiftUI has reached a place where it can replace a lot of old systems that needed the overhaul. Getting ride of all the old bugs…

    for all new ones. 
    williamlondonAlex1N
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  • Reply 16 of 24
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 8,279member
    Apple can´t afford to continue with their tiny uprades from WWDC to WWDC. 

    WWDC 2024 was a disaster after Apple has failed to deliver what Apple promised. 

    Google I/O was an "All or nothing" event with survival instinct to overcome risk of their existence. Google made a great job with I/O. 
    Open AI steps up with Jony Ive to open a new chapter. 

    After those revolutionary steps from others, people clearly expect from Apple to responde with similar steps. 


    In Apple’s defense, they e kind of perfected everything except their nascent ai. Hard to make massive shifts when you’re already doing it right. 

    How Google has stayed afloat is a mystery considering its constant throwaway projects and throw things against the wall to see if they stick approach. It makes sense they fully bore in on what stuck. Bevause they do t have much in the way of great things outside of the search engine snd the entrenched Gmail. 

    Open ai HAS to do something. Competitors are getting way better and closing in. They need a differentiator. Hiring Ive is a Hail Mary shot. The amount of money going into that move is quite insane. Will see how it turns out. So far the only guarantee is jony just got rven more filthy rich. Lol. 

    Apple is in refining mode as they figure out revolutions. 
    It's far from perfected. MacOS is not iPad OS (or vice versa) even though some (myself included) think iPad OS should already have far more power and cross-OS functionality. 

    This part of the article is spookily reminiscent of HarmonyOS (which debuted in 2019).

    "An apparent theme for WWDC 2025 will be consistency and unification. This should mean that users will experience similar interfaces, UI elements, and maybe even features, when they use the same functions across different devices and operating systems."

    A surprise? Not really, as basically every year for the last few years, Apple has introduced features that are core conceptual ideas of HarmonyOS.

    The missing part was a HarmonyOS native desktop OS but that shipped last week on the Matebook Fold and MateBook X and the initial results are spectacular from a cross device perspective.

    Prior to that HarmonyOS cross-Pc device services were an addition to Windows. Windows is now gone and HarmonyOS is running from the (formally verified) kernel up. 

    Everything melds into one look and feel running across multiple devices, including cars. And all under just one name: HarmonyOS. 

    It will need polish for sure because the desktop version only launched this week but under the hood, the system was designed to run seamlessly on multiple devices and share hardware from all those devices. 

    Back in 2019, Huawei pulled up a screen of Apple's device systems and made a statement about them being 'siloed' and about that being a problem whereas HarmonyOS, through its core design had no siloes. Everything would interconnect to everything else. Security, filesystems, authentication... 

    A simplistic overview from 2019:

    https://www.huaweicentral.com/harmonyos-here-are-the-four-technical-features-that-defines-this-operating-system/

    Last week they pulled up the same slide but this time there was another column for the desktop version. Again it was compared to Apple's 'siloed' arrangement. 

    The question now therefore must be is the similarity to HarmonyOS design goals only 'skin deep'?: an OS-spread with a more 'harmonised' UI or is it a complete re-working of the underlying frameworks that bleed up into the user interface?

    One would think that WWDC might answer that question. 
    9secondkox2
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  • Reply 17 of 24
    dutchlorddutchlord Posts: 312member
    No need for Solarium UI. Bring on the 27 inch M4 iMac please.
    williamlondon
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  • Reply 18 of 24
    sunman42sunman42 Posts: 340member
    Do most users want these kind of UI updates? I mostly prefer not changing unless there is a problem. Both in operating systems and applications companies just seem to move things around for the hell of it.
    I wonder if it’s just my age driving my resistance to change for the sake of change, but for quite a few years now, I’ve found the UI changes to Apple’s OSes to almost uniformly veer off into the chasm of less usability for the sake of changing appearances. Maybe the’ve done focus groups with the all-important 12-to-25 demographic that drive those decisions, I don’t know. But every time a new set of “features” like this is released, I start looking for whether Apple has in included Settings options to turn them off or simply revert them. That said, I have no idea  what fraction of the user base feels the same way. I’d only mention that Western Electric made only one significant interface change (rotary dial to push button) in its phones, and that was driven by a technology change (to tones). Obviously smartphones do a lot more than the dumb phones of that era, but we still use at least the simulacrum (on a screen) of that interface to dial a number that we don’t have in our address book or an on-screen link.
    williamlondon
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  • Reply 19 of 24
    sunman42sunman42 Posts: 340member

    dutchlord said:
    No need for Solarium UI. Bring on the 27 inch M4 iMac please.

    ——

    ….which would necessitate the design and production of the M4 Amateur CPU to conform with the heat exchange limitations of the enclosure. And I owned a series of 27-inch iMacs and loved all but one of them (that had a faulty graphics card out of the box), but that time is past.

    williamlondon
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  • Reply 20 of 24
    thttht Posts: 5,945member
    I'm looking forward to GUI changes. Always do. Like in the other threads asking about what software features wanted, different people can think of a lot of different things they'd like to see, and, it would amount to years of work to do them all.

    Both the look of the GUI (how it looks) and the design of the GUI (how it works) needs to be continuously refined, in big and small steps, every year or every few years to keep the platform fresh and "new" to users and buyers. Not doing it typically means customers will drift away to competitors.

    No idea what Apple is planning to do, but it's exciting to hear that GUI changes could be coming. More exciting to me than AI or chatbots.
    Alex1N
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