What's New
OS X 10.11 El Capitan, introduced at the Worldwide Developers Conference on
June 8, is the next iteration of OS X, building on the features and
design changes introduced with OS X Yosemite. OS X El Capitan might seem
like a strange name, but it's meant to highlight the OS's position as
an update that brings under-the-hood improvements and refinements to OS X
Yosemite.
In
real life, El Capitan is one of the most popular rock formations and
landmarks located within Yosemite National Park. The "El Capitan" name
for OS X 10.11 reflects a long-running OS X naming scheme that's used to
denote updates that are refinements to previous updates, following in
the footsteps of Leopard/Snow Leopard and Lion/Mountain Lion.
With
El Capitan, Apple focused on two major areas: user experience and
performance. Improvements to window management, apps, and Spotlight
search enhance the way we use our Macs, while under-the-hood additions
like Metal graphics technology make everyday activities like launching
apps faster.
El
Capitan has the same general look as Yosemite, but it includes a new
systemwide font --- San Francisco. OS X's window management feature,
Mission Control, has also been revamped in the new operating system,
introducing a new Split View feature that mirrors the iOS 9 multitasking
feature on the iPad and allows for two full-screen apps to be used at
the same time side-by-side.
Spotlight
search, along with gaining deeper functionality and more sources,
supports natural language input in El Capitan. Safari has gained Pinned
Sites to let users pin favorite sites on the tab bar, and there's a
handy new mute button that'll mute all sound coming from Safari or
easily identify specific tabs playing audio.
Mail
supports new iOS-style gestures for managing messages, and a Smart
Suggestions addition will recognize names and events, allowing them to
be quickly added to contacts and calendars. When in full screen, there
are also tools to deal with multiple emails at one time.
Photos
is gaining support for third-party photo editing extensions from Mac
App Store apps, and the Notes app is being revamped, much like the Notes
app for iOS 9. It will support checklists, content from other apps like
Safari or Maps, and an Attachments Browser.
Performance-wise,
the addition of Metal improves speeds across the Mac by boosting
system-level graphics rendering. With the graphics improvements and
other enhancements, many standard apps perform better, and games and pro
apps will see significant performance boosts.
OS
X 10.11 El Capitan is available immediately for developers and will be
seeded to public beta testers in July. The software will launch to the
public in the fall as a free update to OS X Yosemite. Thus far, Apple has seeded two El Capitan previews to developers.
Spotlight
In
both OS X El Capitan and iOS 9, search is being improved. Spotlight can
now generate results that access more data sources, displaying weather,
stock, sports scores, and video right in the Spotlight window. A search
for "Weather in Cupertino," for example, will bring up the current
temperature with a weekly forecast, while a search for a stock like
"AAPL" will give you the current stock price.
Web
videos also show up in your results, right alongside existing data
sources like Wikipedia, News, Definitions, and Bing Search. More
importantly, Spotlight is also gaining support for natural language file
queries. In iOS 9, you can type to Spotlight like you would speak to
Siri.
"Documents
I wrote in the last month," brings up the appropriate documents, as
does a command like "Files Eric sent me last week" or "Emails from Bob
last month." That's a huge improvement over Spotlight's search
capabilities in OS X Yosemite, which are limited to specific keywords.
This type of natural language search is also available in Finder and
Mail and even extends to rather complex search commands like
"presentation I worked on yesterday that contains budget."
There's
one other small but significant change available in Spotlight in El
Capitan -- a resizable window. In Yosemite, Spotlight's size is static,
but in El Capitan, you can make the Spotlight window larger or smaller
to display exactly what you want to see.
Window Management
MISSION CONTROL
Mission
Control is OS X's window management feature. Accessible though the
Mission Control app or by hitting F3 on Macs, it displays all open apps
on your Mac and allows them to be organized into different spaces. In El
Capitan, Mission Control has a cleaner, more streamlined design for
quicker window organization.
Instead
of creating a new desktop to organize windows, it's now possible to
drag a window to the top of the screen to automatically create a new
desktop space. It's a small change, but one that makes managing a lot of
apps just a bit quicker.
SPLIT VIEW
With
Split View, it's possible to run two full screen apps side-by-side,
with each one taking up half of a display. This is a useful way to focus
on two apps simultaneously without the distractions of the rest of your
desktop. For example, when taking notes from a website, you might open
Pages and Safari at the same time, scrolling through content on one side
while writing on the other side.
You
can do the same thing in Yosemite by resizing windows, but Split View
in El Capitan makes the process quicker because there's no need to
manually resize apps and change their positions on the screen.
Apps
Building
on the window management features above, Mail has better controls when
it's used in full-screen mode with a new full-screen view. In Yosemite,
if you use Mail in full screen, there's no way to begin a message and
minimize it to do something else in the Mail app, but El Capitan fixes
that problem.
When
composing a message in full screen, you can now swap over to another
conversation or click over to your inbox, sending the message in
progress to the bottom of the screen. This makes it possible to copy
text from another email or transfer attachments from message to message
by dragging them.
If
someone emails you a phone number or invites you to an event, Mail in
El Capitan will show a little toolbar at the top of a message that has
one-click options to add content to apps like Calendar and Contacts. So,
for example, if a friend invites you to a 2 p.m pool party on Saturday
via email, when you view that email you'll see an option to add the
event right to your calendar. Emails with flight information and dinner
reservations will also trigger these suggestions.
Mail's
most important new feature in El Capitan may be the addition of
iOS-style swipe gestures when using a trackpad. In your inbox, if you
swipe on a message, you'll get quick management options. A right swipe
will mark an email as read or unread, while a left swipe will let you
delete messages. Again, a small change, but one that makes it a lot
faster to deal with incoming emails.
NOTES
With
iOS 9 and El Capitan, Apple's made some significant improvements to
Notes to put the app on par with more robust note-taking apps like Evernote. In Evernote, you can add a lot of third-party content like URLs, PDFs, documents, and other files, and the same is now true in Notes.
Notes
is an option in the Share Sheet of many apps in El Capitan, so if
you're in Safari, for example, you can use the Share tool to quickly
send a website to Notes. In Maps, you can send a map or directions to
Notes, and in Photos, you can quickly add a picture or video to Notes.
This change greatly enhances the functionality of Notes, turning it from
an app that's good for little more than text to an app that can serve
as a robust digital workspace and project management tool.
Notes
in El Capitan doesn't have the same sketching features that were
introduced for the iOS 9 version, but it does have the same checklist
abilities, so you can quickly stick in an interactive to-do list or
grocery list, with tasks and items that can be checked off in the app.
With
the addition of support for many types of attachments and files, Notes
now has an included Attachments Browser, where you can view all the
photos, links, documents, and map locations that you've added, organized
by type.
PHOTOS
Photos
in El Capitan is being enhanced with the addition of third-party
editing tools. Photo editing apps from the Mac App Store will be able to
share their tools with Photos, so it will be possible to make edits to
images with these apps without actually leaving the Photos app.
This
is a capability borrowed from iOS. On the iPhone or iPad, when you use
the Photos app to edit a photo, tapping the "More" button brings up
third-party apps that support the direct-in-Photos editing feature. With
the same capabilities in Photos for OS X, you'll be able to use several
filters and extensions from different developers without needing to
import a photo into multiple apps.
Photos
in El Capitan also includes tools to add locations to single images or
complete Moments, and the workflow for naming Faces in photos has been
streamlined. Albums sorting is also improved, with sort options for
organizing albums and images within by date, title, and more.
SAFARI
Safari
may be the app in El Capitan that has the most exciting improvements.
There's a new "Pinned Sites" feature that houses frequently visited
websites on the left side of the tab bar. When a website is pinned, it
stays up to date in the background, so what you're seeing when you click
over to it is always current. Sites like Gmail, Facebook, and Twitter
are particularly good uses of this feature, quietly refreshing in the
background and always displaying the most recent info.
When
watching a web video in Safari, it's now possible to AirPlay the video
to the Apple TV without needing to share your entire desktop. With
Yosemite, to watch a web video on the Apple TV you need to mirror your
entire display, but that's not necessary in El Capitan. Compatible
videos display an AirPlay icon that will stream them automatically to
the Apple TV.
Safari's
also gained a new "Mute All Tabs" button, accessible right in the
address bar of the browser. This is an invaluable tool if you're someone
that often opens a multitude of tabs because a lot of sites use
autoplaying audio or video. Mute All Tabs kills the sound and it'll let
you know exactly which tab is causing a problem. If you only want to
mute a single tab, that's possible too.
MAPS
Maps
in El Capitan has a new Transit view, which displays walking, subway,
train, bus, and ferry routes, for planning out a trip that involves mass
transit routing in advance. You can also choose to incorporate transit
routes when getting directions. Prior to El Capitan, getting transit
directions required using a third-party mapping service.
Transit
directions will only be available in a select number of cities at
launch, including Baltimore, Berlin, Chicago, London, Mexico City, New
York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Toronto, Washington D.C., and several
cities in China.
Under the Hood Improvements
According
to Apple, behind-the-scenes enhancements to OS X in El Capitan have
made a number of apps and processes on the Mac much faster. Apps launch
up to 1.4 times faster and switching between apps is up to two times
faster. Opening Mail and displaying the first messages is said to be two
times faster, and opening a PDF in the Preview app is said to be four
times faster.
One
of the major performance enhancements in El Capitan comes in the form
of the adoption of Apple's core graphics technology, Metal. Metal was
first introduced with iOS 8, and in El Capitan it combines OpenGL and
OpenCL under a single API. With Metal, the amount of work the CPU needs
to do to render graphical effects is reduced, offloading tasks to the
GPU.
With
Metal, Apple says system-level graphics rendering is 40 percent more
efficient and 50 percent faster. This translates to better performance
from graphics-intensive apps and Metal also brings some significant
enhancements to games. It improves draw call performance by up to 10x,
which could lead to more realism and detail in future titles.
Other Changes
SAN FRANCISCO FONT
One
of the biggest visual changes in OS X El Capitan is a new systemwide
font --- San Francisco. Originally designed for the Apple Watch, San
Francisco is a condensed sans serif font that's not unlike Helvetica. It
was created specifically for small displays with extra spacing between
each letter to increase legibility on the wrist, but as it turns out, it
also looks fantastic on the Retina screens of iPhones and Macs.
CURSOR
On
a large screen, it can sometimes be difficult to locate a small cursor,
especially when waking a Mac. In El Capitan, there's a new cursor
feature that causes the cursor to grow larger when you move your finger
back and forth on a trackpad or shake a connected mouse so you can see
right where it is on the screen.
FIND MY FRIENDS
In
El Capitan, there's a new Notification Center widget for the "Find My
Friends" app, allowing people to access the locations of their friends
more quickly.
NEW BEACHBALL
The
iconic rainbow wheel pointer or "beachball" used to indicate when
something is loading on OS X has been updated with El Capitan. It's now
flatter and it has brighter, more defined colors.
DISK UTILITY
Disk
Utility has an entirely new look in El Capitan with a status bar that
shows how much disk space is being used and what it's used by.
FEATURES FOR CHINESE AND JAPANESE USERS
For
Chinese users, there's a new Ping Fang system font that's crisper,
enhanced keyboard input with better language prediction, and improved
trackpad handwriting with a new Trackpad window that provides more room
to write multiple characters in a row.
For
Japanese users, there are four new Japanese fonts and a dramatic
improvement for entering Japanese text. El Capitan includes an enhanced
vocabulary and improved language engine, automatically transforming
Hiragana into written Japanese and eliminating the need to press the
space bar for individual word conversions.
El Capitan for Developers
El
Capitan includes a lot of new tools for developers and by taking a look
at these tools, we can get an idea of the changes the new operating
system will bring to third-party apps. First and foremost, developers
can access the aforementioned Metal APIs, which will result in better
graphics in games and better performance in graphics-intensive apps.
Force
Touch APIs for Safari are included in El Capitan and will let
developers build unique Force Touch gestures into websites. In the
future, we may see websites where a Force Touch does something special,
like saving a photo or sharing a video. Force Touch is available on the
Apple Watch, the new 13- and 15-inch Retina MacBook Pros and the 12-inch
Retina MacBook, but in the future, it may be a staple feature in all
Apple products.
Apple's
already introduced Force Touch APIs for third-party Mac apps, so we'll
also be seeing apps that take advantage of the feature in the near
future.
Along
with Force Touch, there are a lot of new tools for Safari. Some of
these include a Shared Links API for adding link suggestions to Safari's
Shared Links feature, AirPlay for HTML5 video for streaming to the
Apple TV without needing to mirror a display, and Picture-in-Picture
support that will let an HTML 5 video overlay another app.
Developers
are also able to create app extensions for Photos, and as mentioned
above, this will let third-party editing tools be used directly within
the Photos app, much like a plugin.
Discuss OS X 10.11 El Capitan
We have a dedicated OS X 10.11 forum,
where users discuss their thoughts on the new operating system,
showcase new discoveries, and share bugs and issues they're
experiencing.
The OS X 10.11 forum is
a fantastic resource for learning about El Capitan and it's well worth
checking out to get more details on the new OS. Of particular interest
may be an ongoing thread that details all of the smaller changes in El Capitan.
Compatibility
OS
X El Capitan runs on any Mac that is able to run Yosemite, including
some Macs that are more than seven years old. With the included
performance enhancements, El Capitan may even run faster than Yosemite
on some Macs. Here's a full list of Macs that can run El Capitan:
- iMac (Mid 2007 or newer)
- MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer)
- MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer)
- Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer)
- MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer)
- Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer)
- Xserve (Early 2009)
Release Date
El
Capitan is currently available for developers. The first beta was
provided on June 8, just after the Worldwide Developers Conference.
Apple plans to offer a public beta of OS X 10.11 in July, with a public
release following in the fall.
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