MacOS 27 “Golden Gate” has very few new features, focusing on design optimizations and Siri AI.
Siri comes to MacOS 27 more conversational, with onscreen awareness and powered by Gemini.
MacOS 27 is also the end of the road for Intel-based Macs, requiring an Apple M1 processor or newer to run.
Today at Apple’s Worldwide Developers’ Conference, Apple announced a slim set of new features for MacOS 27, launching later this fall. This so-called “Snow Leopard” update (focused on performance improvements — not new features) optimizes features released in MacOS Tahoe, particularly the Liquid Glass UI.
That said, there are some new features, the biggest being a complete rework of Siri to include agentic AI capabilities and on-screen awareness, allowing Mac users to ask questions about what’s on their screen or invoke Siri to perform actions on their behalf, like responding to emails or texts.
MacOS 27 also marks the end of support for Intel-based MacBooks, as it will require an Apple M1 chip or newer in order to run. The last Intel Macs were released back in 2020 (the 13-inch MacBook Pro, and 16-inch MacBook Pro in 2019) so these will be relegated to MacOS 26 Tahoe going forward.
Meet: Siri AI
Siri has been in need of a makeover for some time, and it gains significant improvements in Golden Gate with agentic capabilities and contextual awareness of what’s on your Mac. You can now invoke Siri via Spotlight, and type queries in natural language. The redesigned “Siri AI” opens in a new interactive window that can be expanded on.
You can also select individual files, invoke Spotlight, and ask Siri to summarize information or pull out key figures without individually opening each one. Additionally, you can ask for details on data across your devices. For example, you can ask Siri to find information from a specific person either in Messages or Mail.
This cross-device functionality aligns with Apple’s ongoing focus on a complete ecosystem, as the Siri app is available across Apple products and maintains a conversational history that’s synced privately in iCloud.
Liquid Glass redesign
Apple
Apple introduced its new Liquid Glass design language last year, aiming to add dimensionality to the UI with its slick, translucent menus. Not everyone was a fan, though, and Apple says it considered user feedback to incorporate more uniform design changes and customization.
For starters, window transparency can now be toggled from completely clear to fully opaque. The UI will also be more uniform, with window edges of the same size and angle.
A smarter Safari
Apple
Apple Intelligence enables some quality of life improvements to the Safari browser, chief among them being tab organization. The AI will attempt to nest tabs from similar sites into “topics,” rather than having each site on its own tab. It’s essentially the same thing as groups in Google Chrome, but you know, Apple’s version.
The AI comes in handy with “Describe an extension” — a feature in Safari that allows users to describe what kind of extension they want in natural language, which the AI will then attempt to develop. For example, the demo showed an extension that saves recipes from websites with a personalized interface.
The “Notify me” feature in Safari also lets it monitor a website on your behalf and ping you when something becomes available (waiting for ticket sales to open, for example). All of this is invoked in natural language and powered by Google’s Gemini foundational AI models, making Siri a whole lot more useful, and more importantly, up to par with competing AI models.
The perfect robot mower for you is not nearly as fancy and feature-heavy as you may think. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: it’s not the lawn mower, it’s all about the yard. A robot mower may be a market leader with top-of-the-line specs and still not be a good fit for your yard.
Here’s the great news: There’s a perfect robot mower for almost any yard. As someone who’s tested numerous types of robot lawn mowers, I’ve learned that many of the specs that brands market as groundbreaking are simply not vital for most shoppers. A mostly flat, fenced-in 0.10-acre yard doesn’t need the power that a hilly, sectioned, unfenced one-acre yard does.
A LiDAR, GPS, or wired boundary robot mower works for these yards. If you choose a wired boundary, you may have to bury wire around the flower beds, unless the borders are tall enough for the mower to avoid.
1. Don’t focus on: ‘AI-powered’ or other marketing buzzwords
Maria Diaz/ZDNET
Artificial intelligence (AI) has surpassed the popularity of acid-wash jeans in the 80s and Baby G watches in the early 2000s. And tech companies — including robot lawn mower manufacturers — are capitalizing on its appeal.
Most of these “AI-powered” or “intelligent mowing” terms are vague, geared to grab shoppers’ attention with buzzwords. That doesn’t mean that the robots don’t use AI to navigate, however.
The key is to find out how the robot uses AI to its benefit, and whether that will meet your AI expectations.
AI algorithms typically process data captured by the robot’s hardware to help it make quick decisions and adjustments. For example, a robot lawn mower may have a set of sensors and cameras to capture its surroundings. The robot’s processor then uses AI to convert that information into actionable data, so it knows whether to swerve to avoid an obstacle or slow down around a retaining wall.
Instead, look for: The navigation tech under (and on) the hood
Instead of AI and other buzzwords, you should focus on matching the robot lawn mower’s hardware and navigation system to your yard. This includes whether the robot uses RTK (Real-Time Kinematic) for positioning, and whether it features LiDAR, cameras, and sensors.
Then look at real user reviews to assess how accurately the robot mower maps and how well it performs around various types of obstacles.
There’s no blanket rule for robot mowers, but most do well with the following guidelines.
2. Don’t focus on: Premium extras
Maria Diaz/ZDNET
Skip the premium extras that don’t match your yard. You really don’t need the most advanced robot mower; you need the one that will best handle your lawn.
Most US homeowners have mostly flat lawns, simple rectangular layouts, minimal obstacles, and small yards. Yet some of the most popular mowers advertise features that don’t match this, and you don’t want to spend an extra few hundred dollars on advanced features that won’t deliver a noticeable difference in your yard.
Instead, look for: Only as much as you need
Do you have a mostly flat lawn with no fences and need a robot that can navigate to several sections separated by paths? Then you can skip AWD models and commit to superior mapping and navigation features, like multi-zone intelligence.
Similarly, if you have a yard with dense trees covering most of it, it’s safe to skip the RTK models and go for LiDAR or boundary wire options instead.
3. Don’t focus on: Flashy app features
The path lines created by the Mammotion Luba 2, as captured by our Bink Outdoor camera, is one flashy app feature I can’t quit.
Maria Diaz/ZDNET
Any dependable robot lawn mower requires an equally reliable mobile app to let you use it effectively. However, manufacturers market many flashy app features that end up being unnecessary for many users.
Don’t make app features the deciding factor unless it’s something you genuinely care about. Many users don’t rely on voice control to run their mowers and don’t mind using a separate app for their robot rather than integrating it into an existing home automation system.
A robot lawn mower with mediocre navigation and cutting performance can still have a flashy app — all while leaving behind missed patches or taking longer to finish mowing.
Instead, look for: The features you’ll actually use
Most robot mower users keep them running on a schedule to get the lawn-cutting chore off their minds. The majority of the most popular models offer basic features beyond scheduling, such as remote start and stop, basic mapping, automatic rain delay, and theft protection.
It’s easy to find robot lawn mowers with these features, but if you’re looking for anything beyond that, just be sure that the feature is worth it, especially if you’re paying extra for that model.
An example of a flashy app feature that is completely unnecessary, but I love having? The Mammotion’s pattern cutting. I can select the cutting pattern I want on the Mammotion app, whether I want lines or checkered, but I can also have the robot cut in custom patterns, like letters and numbers. I don’t care for mowed letters in my yard, but I like that it always has that freshly mowed checkered patterned with no effort from me.
4. Don’t focus on: Cutting system extras
Maria Diaz/ZDNET
The cutting width and system specs are important, as they can determine whether a robot can cover a given area in a day. However, most robot mowers use similar multiple-blade mulching systems.
Unlike traditional lawn mowers with large blades for aggressive cutting in a single pass, robot mowers typically feature a set of small blades that constantly spin. Because of this, robot mowers trim smaller amounts of grass with each pass than a traditional mower, but they also cut more frequently and leave behind smaller grass clippings that decompose naturally.
Because the robot mowers have a smaller, compounding cutting system, the real-world differences between the cutting systems from one brand to another are often smaller than you’d expect. Other issues, like poor navigation, will be glaringly obvious before small differences in blade design.
Instead, look for: Cutting width and yard size
The average US yard would benefit more from navigation quality, consistency, and connectivity than blade design. Instead, you should focus on matching the mower to your yard size.
The robot’s capacity is measured in how many acres it can cover in a day. Among other features, this is calculated based on your robot’s battery size and cutting width. Essentially, most users want a robot that can mow an entire yard in a day, so you can set it and forget it and always come home to a mowed yard. You get this by getting the appropriate robot for your yard size.
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