Apple is saying goodbye to Intel processor. For the newest MacOS Big Sur, Apple unveiled it’s self-developed ARM based processor in the last WWDC 20 Online event.
Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, explains the next-generation computer operating system MacOS ‘Big Sur.’ Apple officially announced on the same day that it will release Macs equipped with self-developed processors instead of Intel processors.
The Big Sur has a new Safari Web browser. The new Safari Web browser offers user-customizable welcome pages, more convenient tap functions, fast-available translation functions, and privacy report functions.
What to expect from the new Safari in MacOS Big Sur
New Safari provides faster web page usage, while using less power to increase MacBook battery life. It guarantees 1.5 times longer battery usage time than when using Google Chrome, a competitive web browser. It has also redesigned navigation functions, and more tabs can be displayed on the screen. Just by placing the cursor over the tab, you can see a preview of the web page in question.
The new Safari’s starting page is provided with background images, reading lists and iCloud tabs. Now, like Chrome, you can quickly translate web pages with built-in prosperity functions in safari. You can also explore and install an exclusive Safari extension program through the Mac App Store.
The new Safari web browser uses a new privacy report function to inform users of how much information a specific web page requires. You can choose which web page to run a specific extension program on, and no one, including Apple, can access password information by encrypting a user’s password.
The release date of Mac with Apple’s new processor is undecided. However, related models are to appear in the market at the end of the year when Silicon Z is complete. Apple predicted that it would take about two years to apply silicon Z to all Macs.
Meanwhile, Apple had to delay its iPhone launch this year do the COVID-19 outbreak. It also had to close its factories in China due to the pandemic.