Monterey is the next version of Apple's macOS
Where can Apple go after macOS Big Sur? Last year's release delivered a (long overdue) visual facelift, as well as major changes for core apps like Safari, Maps and Messages. Now with macOS Monterey, Apple is trying to polish its desktop operating system even further. There's support for sharing your music and movies with SharePlay, and some other features shared with iOS 15. Sure, this isn't the massive macOS reboot some have been waiting for — at its core, it still looks mostly like the original OS X — but it should still make life a bit easier for Apple desktop users.
One of the most notable new features of macOS Monterey is Universal Control, a way for you to seamlessly use your keyboard and mouse across a Mac and iPad. That's something third-party apps like Across have offered for some time, but historically they've been hard to set up and finicky to use. Apple's advantage, as always, is that it can do much of the configuration work within its OS. As demonstrated by Craig Federighi, Apple's VP of software, Universal Control seems to work as advertised. He had no trouble using a single set of input devices to work across an iPad, MacBook Pro and iPad.
Additionally, macOS
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