Final Words

By this point I've covered many of the tentpole features of macOS Sierra. Right now it's a bit difficult to test some of the other features announced at WWDC that relate to continuity between macOS, iOS, and watchOS due to the fact that all these platforms are in beta and, in the case of watchOS, a beta that you can't return from. Unfortunately, I feel that those features end up being the most interesting ones, because they're only made possible by Apple controlling the software and hardware stack across all their devices.

macOS Sierra has several tentpole features, with some being more subtle than others. Siri is the big feature for this release, but in my experience so far it certainly hasn't been the best. As the beta cycle moves onward it will be interesting to see how Siri improves. The improvements to Photos and iMessage are also significant, and for Photos it brings the service closer to parity with Google Photos. I think Apple could have tried harder with Messages, as you basically can't use any of the new features and just have support for receiving them. 

The features that I actually found most useful in Sierra are the subtle ones that improve existing functionality or add new features that work on their own in the background. Leveraging iCloud to provide local desktop and document syncing is exactly the kind of feature Apple should be building now that they have a usable cloud service and millions of users using millions of devices. Providing a way to have the system handle the transfer of older and lesser used files to iCloud will do a lot to alleviate storage pressure on Macs with 128GB and 256GB SSDs as well, which I would wager makes up a significant portion of Macs out there given what the starting storage tiers are. 

I think Apple choosing the name Sierra says a lot about this release. While OS X has been rebranded as macOS, Sierra is still an evolution of El Capitan, which was an evolution of the much larger overhaul that came with OS X Yosemite. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but I do wonder why certain parts of macOS like Finder and iTunes remain mostly unchanged with each release. It's possible that Apple doesn't feel there's anything that needs to be fixed there, and it's also possible that it's simply a large undertaking that just isn't ready. In any case, the trend is clearly toward making refinements to the existing system through new features like tab support in all multi-window apps, along with continuity features like Apple Pay and Auto Unlock on macOS that leverage the ability of Apple's many products to work together.

In the end, macOS Sierra seems to be a good improvement on OS X El Capitan. Users will feel right at home after they upgrade, and they'll be greeted with new features and small tweaks throughout the system that help make the experience better. If you've bought into Apple's device ecosystem you also get some features that don't really have any equivalent within Microsoft's or Google's device ecosystem, but that also means if you aren't fully within Apple's ecosystem you're missing out on a good chunk of Sierra's features. Sierra itself is fairly rough around the edges at this point, but it's available now as an open beta for users who want to want to install it and check out the new features for themselves.

Improved Photos and Messages
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  • snowmyr - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    The first four siri photos are excellent for people who read right to left.
  • DPUser - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    Just an FYI, workarounds have already been developed in the Mac community enabling Sierra (beta) to be installed on easier Mac Pros. The simplest is available to owners of 4,1 (2009) Mac Pros; Update EFI to 5,1 (2010) firmware and your 2009 Mac, for all intents and purposes, is now a 2010. The update also allows CPU swaps up to the fastest hex cores available for the era, W3690 and X5690.
  • DPUser - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    That would be "earlier" Mac Pros.
  • marty1980 - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    I'd really like to see Apple break iTunes out into separate apps on macOS and Windows. Like on iOS, have Videos, Music, App Store, and iTunes Store. Each could be improved on its own schedule instead of all of it having to be updated at once the way it is.

    Continuity and iMessage are actually a problem in our house because we share iPads. This means private messages get sent to iPads when we don't want and it's a pain to deal with the way we use our devices. I know there will be suggestions but we have probably already heard them all. Maybe we're outliers.... We just can't use iMessage.
  • Impulses - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    You can't have separate user profiles on iOS? Huh...
  • B3an - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    So typical of this dying site. Apple OS shit but no Win 10 update/anniversary article, even though it's basically complete now and builds have been available for far longer.
  • Impulses - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    Ryan commented it's coming, tho they could probably have written/published it already since (as you say) it's at least as far along as Sierra.
  • ex2bot - Friday, July 15, 2016 - link

    Man, it is so dying for sure. Anand would NEVER allowed this Apple stuff. Who uses Apples?? Amirite?
    /s
  • DonMiguel85 - Wednesday, July 13, 2016 - link

    Funny the 2009 MacBook Airs didn't make the cut since they still have the GeForce 320M and Core 2 Duo like the 2010 model.
  • tipoo - Monday, July 18, 2016 - link

    Yeah, makes no sense because the Macbook sans-moniker with a Core 2 Duo and 320M does get it. Some of the cutoffs are really strange in this one.

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