Pull-down menus are now larger with more space between each selection. The macOS dock is also translucent, and now slightly floats near the bottom of the screen, reinforcing the edge-to-edge wallpaper concept. The menu bar and dock get changes as well, with the menu bar gaining a slightly taller stature and translucent appearance that allows background wallpaper to bleed from edge to edge. Besides being able to run actual iPhone and iPad apps, two of the most obvious changes involve the iOS-like rounded rectangle icon style, and rounded edges around Finder windows. MacOS Big Sur’s design more or less involved the iOS-ification of the look and feel of Apple’s desktop OS, and while it was a little unsettling in the beginning, I’m largely used to it by now. Every now and then, I’ll run into a weird glitch with my Mac’s display, or an occasional kernel panic, but I find it more reliable than macOS Catalina when comparing similar stages of its lifecycle. MacOS Big Sur is not without its fair share of bugs and strange glitches, but considering that it’s running on first-generation Apple Silicon chips, I’ve been impressed by its overall reliability and stability. Subscribe to 9to5Mac on YouTube for more videos Stability Thanks to MacPaw for sponsoring 9to5Mac on YouTube: Get CleanMyMac X with a 30% discount Back to the Mac: macOS Big Sur rewind review Not only are these machines considerably more powerful than their Intel predecessors, but they sport battery life numbers that run circles around previous MacBook models. ![]() Driven by macOS Big Sur, the first version of macOS compatible with Apple Silicon, the M1 MacBook Pro and MacBook Air bring incredible performance and efficiency to Apple’s laptop lineup. Apple’s M1 Macs have revitalized the Mac platform in numerous ways. It’s hard to talk about macOS Big Sur without talking about what is arguably the biggest advancement in personal computing in years. ![]() How does macOS Big Sur hold up over the long term? Watch our hands-on macOS Big Sur features rewind review for the details, and be sure to subscribe to 9to5Mac on YouTube for more Mac-centric coverage. ![]() MacOS 11 Big Sur was a major update that not only brought tons of under-the-hood changes to the Mac, but also introduced the most obvious layer of iOS-ification that we’ve seen on the Mac thus far.
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