Update: OS X 10.11 El Capitan is out now! Simply
head on over to the Mac App store to download it to your Mac. To find
out whether it's for you, check out our OS X 10.11 El Capitan review.
It's been some time now since Apple's iOS-inspired OS X 10.10 Yosemite
leapt onto the Mac. Attention has now turned to the next major release
of OS X, which is expected to be named - you guessed it - OS X 10.11 El
Capitan.
Like iOS 7,
Yosemite's bold colours and flattened icons divided opinion, but the
stats paint a positive picture: more than half (58%) of Mac owners were
running the latest version of OS X in April, according to data by
NetApplications. It's hard to deny that Yosemite looks fantastic on Apple's newer computers with Retina displays - such as the iMac with Retina 5K and the new MacBook - but users on older hardware have reported sluggish performance since upgrading.
As such, OS X 10.11 will focus on "under-the-hood" performance improvements, rather than new features, as OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
did back in 2009. Snow Leopard famously launched with "0 new features",
instead focusing on improving performance and service support.
This
includes 1.4 times faster app launching than its predecessor, two times
faster app switching and email opening, as well as four times faster
PDF previews. While Apple hasn't quite gone with the stringent strategy
of no new features, it has aimed to please developers with a better
optimized OS complete with Metal pulled from iOS 8.
OS X 10.11 release date
OS X 10.11 El Capitan is out now. You can grab it by heading over to the Mac App store, clicking Updates, and then Download.
All will likely be revealed at WWDC
OS X 10.11 price
The last two versions of OS X, Yosemite and OS X 10.9 Mavericks,
were both free and El Capitan also costs the princely sum of nothing.
It would have been especially hard to see Apple going back to paid
annual updates in light of Microsoft's decision to offer Windows 10 as a free update to Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 users for one year.
OS X 10.11 name
Releases
of OS X were named after big cats prior to OS X 10.9 Mavericks, with
the last being OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion. Apple indicated that future
versions would be named after California locations from that point
onwards, starting with OS X 10.09 Mavericks.
So what's next?
Apple has trademarked a number of names that could be used for OS X
10.11, including: Redwood, Mammoth, California, Big Sur, Pacific,
Diablo, Miramar, Rincon, El Cap, Redtail, Condor, Grizzly, Farallon,
Tiburon, Monterey, Skyline, Shasta, Sierra, Mojave, Sequola, Ventura and
Sonoma. Of course, there can only be one and the Cupertino company
decided to go with El Capitan.
OS X 10.11: features
Split View
Windows
7 introduced the ability to "snap" windows to the sides of the desktop
to easily position apps and other content on the display, something that
has been missing from OS X for almost six years. Now El Capitan will
finally introduced something Apple is calling Split View, which as the
name suggests allows users to easily orient two windows side by side.
Sure, there are third-party apps that can do it, but they're not free
or run as smoothly as the native behaviour on Microsoft's snap-happy OS.
Windows 10 has introduced a way to snap four Windows of equal size to
each corner of the screen, which would be a boon for anyone using
Apple's larger iMacs or a large monitor.
Spaces Bar
OS
X El Capitan also brings a slightly revamped multi-desktop management
system called Spaces Bar. Users can launch the new expansive view of
their desktops by dragging a window to the top of the screen. For a
split-screen view, simply drag one window on top of the other.
In
a few other tweaks, Mission Control said to be smoother, simpler,
faster. Meanwhile, full screen apps including Mail are smarter with
multitasking features similar to iOS 8's enhancements.
Metal
One
of the biggest improvements El Capitan will bring with it is Metal, a
low-level, low-overhead hardware-accelerated graphics API. Apple
promises this iOS 8 feature coming to its desktop OS will introduce a
50% improvement in performance with up to 40% greater rendering
efficiency.
The melding of Metal with El Capitan should make Macs a
much more capable platform for gaming. Thus far, Epic games has demoed a
build of Fortnight built on Metal.
Aside from gaming, Adobe also
presented Metal has enabled After Effects to render effects with eight
times the efficiency. The software maker also announced it is adopting
Metal in its OS X apps, which has resulted in a 10x improvement in draw
call performance.
OS X 10.11 El Capitan: news, release date and features
Reviewed by Unknown
on
20:20
Rating: 5
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