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Apple Formally Announces OS X El Capitan Release For September 30, by Joseph Keller, iMore
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Should you update to El Capitan? Unreservedly yes-I’ve found it to be stable, it’s free, it’ll download and install itself on your Mac with nearly no intervention, and it’ll bring with it improved security, speed, and functionality. There was a time, only a few years ago, when OS X updates were fraught with should-I-or-shouldn’t-I peril, along with a real price tag.
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OS X El Capitan Review: Mac Upgrade That's As Solid As A Rock, by Jason Snell, Macworld They may all work well together, but individually, the user-interaction will remain different and the branding will remain separate.
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Mac OS X, iOS, watchOS and tvOS may all (perhaps, one day) share many of the same internals that we may thus not be willing to call them different operating systems. Names won’t matter, really all your stuff will exist everywhere, and you’ll interact with it in whatever way feels comfortable.
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What’s going to happen instead-in fact, what’s already happening-is that everything will just blur together. Neither of those devices will obviate the other, either. There’s probably not going to be an iOS-powered MacBook in the next couple of years, and the iPad Pro 2 won’t be running OS X. This isn’t going to happen the way we think, at least not anytime soon. It’s a big step toward an inevitable unification, when OS X and iOS combine their powers to become the Captain Planet of mobile operating systems. In a broader, more hold-hands-and-think-about-the-world sort of way, though, El Capitan is important. El Capitan Is The Future Of Your Mac-And Your iPhone, David Pierce, Wired Some of the things I learnt from reading this review: the spinning pizza of death is now flat (Thin Crust!), mDNSResponder is present and discoveryd has not made a return, and the menu bar - one of consistent things since the original Mac System Software 1.0 - can now be hidden all the time. Yosemite’s big statement was “This is what OS X looks like now.” El Capitan’s is a relatively meek “Hey, I have a couple neat tricks to show you.” Like iOS 9 (and Mountain Lion, and Snow Leopard), El Capitan is about refinement. Really, this is the first time in several years that iOS and OS X have felt like they’ve gotten (and needed) the same amount of attention from Apple-both get to spend a release in the slow lane as Apple puts its marketing muscle behind newer platforms like the Apple Watch and the new Apple TV. Others, like System Integrity Protection, are merely iOS-inspired. The new Split Screen multitasking mode, tweaks to multitouch gestures, changes to services like Spotlight, and overhauled apps like Notes all fall into this category. Many of the biggest, most noticeable changes here are the same ones you saw in iOS 9 two weeks ago.
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The subtle difference in El Capitan is that we’re actually seeing new features come to both iOS and OS X at the same time rather than existing on iOS first and then trickling down to the Mac later. MyAppleMenu - Sep 2015 Wed, Sep 30, 2015The Neat-Tricks Edition OS X 10.11 El Capitan: The Ars Technica Review, by Andrew Cunningham and Lee Hutchinson, Ars Technica