macOS: It’s time to take the next step.

Andrew Ambrosino
7 min readMar 22, 2016

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(with concept photos!)

The Apple event yesterday presented a small handful of incremental changes to the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and Apple TV. But besides the iPhone 7, one of the largest outstanding questions remains where is the Mac going, what’s next, and when?

OS X. Released in 2001, still around 15 years later. While the design has morphed from Aqua to a strange Aqua/Leather abomination to the flat-ish design of Yosemite/El Cap, and the feature set has evolved to include the App Store, Continuity, and more, the core of OS X is largely the same as it was on day one. This isn’t entirely a bad thing– the operating system has been solid and consistent compared to the alternative, a Windows that has continuously wavered and seemingly dropped all efforts to provide a sense of cohesiveness to its users. But as the years go by the chatter picks up. What is the future of OS X? Will it converge with iOS? What level of innovation can we expect for the Mac? Through the debates that continue to amplify, it is becoming quite clear: after years of Mac evolution, it’s time for a revolution.

The Name

Every WWDC for the past many years, Apple has revealed a new version of OS X, iOS, and recently watchOS. iOS and watchOS are incremented by a whole number every year, while the Mac continues to get point releases. In addition we’ve seen a new naming convention emerge– iOS, watchOS, and tvOS share a format that OS X has yet to adopt. For these two reasons, it seems logical that the next major incarnation of the Mac operating systems adopts the name macOS with version number 11.0.

On Convergence

Convergence of operating systems is a very good thing, as long as we’re specific about what convergence means and how it’s done. In the past few years we’ve seen different convergence techniques. On one end, Microsoft’s unification of Windows across platforms has attempted to bring a common, scalable UI to all platforms with an implementation that has been widely regarded as hasty, messy, and poorly designed. Apple’s approach has taken longer but in typical fashion pays attention to vital nuance. iOS, watchOS, and tvOS share the same underlying OS, frameworks, and UI model but optimize their presentation for the current form and input. It’s a solution that provides developers with a common platform but doesn’t force compromise for the end user experience. The Mac has been mostly left out.

Common Threads

With the release of macOS should come innovation that positions the OS for the next decade of innovation, and it’s all about common threads that run through the ecosystem. Specifically, macOS 11 should introduce a common framework for presentation, a brand new model for content, and a common thread for people.

UIKit: A common framework for presentation

watchOS and tvOS have demonstrated that UIKit can be both consistent and versatile, and many Mac developers have been clamoring for a friendlier app framework for years. On iOS we’re used to using native apps for just about everything, yet on OS X, much of the same services are only available as web apps. While they don’t suffer from the same performance degradation as the mobile web (or at least the old mobile web), does it really make sense that so many of us keep open 10 tabs for the services we use most? The browser is really a terrible window manager. But of course, developers haven’t wanted to build their apps for yet another platform, so web apps have been simply good enough.

Right now, I really believe that OS X is a dead platform. It’s been coasting on iOS’ wake for years, picking up features often long after they’ve been implemented on iOS. Apple needs to create a unified app platform between the two OSes. This doesn’t mean a desktop would just run iOS apps, much like tvOS doesn’t ‘just run’ iOS apps. The same ideas should apply: a shared codebase, with minor platform-specific elements, and an optimized UI for the OS’ primary interaction model. — @stroughtonsmith

With the introduction of UIKit apps on macOS, apps like Facebook, Netflix, and Inbox would easily port with few modifications and take advantage of native performance, window management, notifications, offline support, and every new feature brought to the OS.

Not only would many third party apps come to the Mac, but Apple apps that have been only available on iOS could make the jump, like News and Health. For years, Apple has lived by the “Back to the Mac” strategy, but UIKit for macOS would allow the platforms to grow together. However, it would not at all decrease the power available to pro apps, one bit. Let’s take a look:

Netflix and Chill
Google Inbox
Converging in Style
3D Touch
News for Mac
Mail, with bundled content, snooze, and a more people-centered design
Apple Music for Mac. See my original full concept here
Camera
Health + Responsive UIKit on Music

FS: A brand new model for content

Last year I had the privilege of working at Upthere (if you haven’t seen what they’re doing, go take a look). Started by Bertrand Serlet and others a few years ago, the goal has been to introduce a brand new stack that forms a cloud filesystem and model for organizing content. The model is simple and the implementation complex– it lacks hierarchy and relies on powerful search and self-organization, along with building in sharing and collaboration into the filesystem itself. It’s about time for macOS to shift to this type of organization (or just buy them!).

Upthere leaves behind the hierarchical folder structures found in today’s devices and cloud storage services. Instead, Upthere stores all your stuff in a single bucket, relying on search to retrieve and display information. This approach allows for more flexibility and control without needlessly duplicating your things. Loops are a tool for grouping things into photo albums, music playlists, projects, or anything else that comes to mind. Things can be part of multiple Loops at the same time, so you are not bound by one rigid structure. –Upthere

We produce far too much content and our work is too often collaborative to rely on a manual model that was designed many, many years ago.

The new macOS finder powered by FS. Based on Upthere Home
Sublime, Slack, and the new Finder. A possible bridge between dev hierarchies and the self-organizing bucket is the concept of a ‘project’ that’s packaged up just like an OS X app. But again, this is a concept.

The People Thread

As platforms like Google and Facebook have created a cohesive organization of people/identity that has allowed them to easily interact and collaborate, Apple has begun to feel dated. As the operating system on which these other platforms often run, OS X and iOS have an opportunity to create an advanced common thread for people. This means tying together mail, messages, shared photo albums, files, and playlists into one model, one history, one closed loop. Again, this is something that Upthere has made first-class in its filesystem and apps.

Facebook lays this out specifically:

Social design is a product strategy that builds upon users’ trusted communities, encourages conversation between them and ultimately creates a stronger sense of identity for everyone. By putting people at the center of the Web, more and more experiences that naturally happen in the real world are starting to happen online.— Facebook

Contacts, with a new activity thread that runs through the system
The newly collaborative Pages + Siri

Putting it all together

When these three new developments materialize– UIKit, a new Filesystem, and a new model for people– there will be an explosion in next-generation apps across the ecosystem. This ecosystem, now drawn tightly together, will be a collection of four purpose-built operating system variants built on one common, advanced platform, one best described as Apple OS.

It’s time.

(shout out to Sketch for making this easy to tackle in 3 days)

On Dribbble, on Twitter, and my website.

(also– I’m available for design work)

Update: it’s worth noting that there isn’t actually baby-ification going on here. There is absolutely no reason for Terminal, Xcode, etc. to leave. After all, how would we be building these apps? (my background is software engineering, btw). This is also not about bringing iOS to the desktop. It’s about common threads that allow them to grow together. But to each their own.

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