
And I don't feel like that's gonna change any time soon. We should have been able to do this the whole time, uh, because frankly we're all on a lot of video meetings these days. Speaker 1: Now that sounds like it makes a lot of sense. And that means at long last, you can take your iPhone and use it as a wireless webcam with your Mac.
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The other really big thing is going to be more about using your Mac with another device you probably have, and that is continuity camera. Uh, and I think that can kind of get confusing and we should probably figure out a better way to make these two work together. Well, now we've got kind of a secondary dock along this left side, this left rail dock. Now, there is one thing that kind of bothers me about stage manager and that is, we already have a doc along the bottom of the Mac right here. And I think it's pretty useful for keeping track of what you have and switching between things quickly. Speaker 1: Is this gonna change the way computers work forever? No, but it's, it's an interesting way to rearrange the information on a MacBook.
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If you just have a full screen, uh, you know, window going give a ton of things running in the background that you've totally forgotten about. But at the same time, you have a visual reference here on the left side of what apps you have open, which you could forget about. So it's really easy to switch back and forth between them. So every time I click on an app that goes center stage, uh, and then the other apps move back to that right rail. Or if I go to a different app, it's gonna replace it and I can go through things there. And if I keep clicking on the little stack here, it'll switch between all the pages I have open in that. Uh, and if I click on any of these, then I go to that app. Speaker 1: So if you have multiple Chrome or safari windows open, they're stacked up. Now we've got a rail on the left side that shows you all the apps you have open, and it has all the windows from that app stacked up. Instead of using command tab to go through apps like we used to do, we're using the four fingers, swipe up and swipe down, uh, move. That is a new way of grouping together, windows from different apps that you're using and letting you jump between them easily. The biggest visual difference, I think is something called stage manager. Hopefully you think it's better? I think a lot of these are changes for the better, uh, but that's not gonna be universal, but I'll tell you the single most important change in Ventura. I thought a really important, really interesting, uh, they're really gonna make your Mac work, uh, differently. Now, what are the biggest, most important changes in Ventura? I found about three or four. Speaker 1: So it's, Apple's newest MacBook and Apple's newest Mac operating system.
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But if you change too little, then what's the point of having an operating system update and people are not gonna do it with all that in mind, I downloaded the public beta version of the new Maus and installed it on this guy, the new M two chip MacBook air. You're gonna lose that muscle memory and that familiarity you have with your machine. And OS updates for computers, especially if you add too much new stuff, you change too many things. But if it adds a lot to the experience while staying in the background, that's good. I always say that operating system update should be like good cinematography. I certainly found a few, I thought were really interesting and really worth the upgrade. At least some of the new Ventura features.

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Now it's gonna be out in the fall probably officially, but if you're feeling adventurous, you can download the public beta version right now and try out. Speaker 1: There's a new version of Macko S coming.
