![]() ![]() The feature still has some quirks I’d suggest Apple update. If you maximize the window, meanwhile, the sidebar will get out of the way. You can also pull out a few and create a stack that will then be minimized and expanded together.Īn underrated piece in all of this is the fact that all of the clutter on the desktop goes away when the feature is enabled. Tapping any of these will swap them into the main staging area. It’s a bit like a toolbar composed of open apps. The primary window occupies the majority of the space, and the others are minimized on the side of the screen. When enabled, the feature keeps all windows open concurrently on the desktop. I won’t say Stage Manager was perfect from the get-go on the desktop (what beta software really is?), but I enabled it on day one and have rarely found myself shutting it off, ever since. The beta implementations left a lot to be desired, contributing to the company’s decision to forgo iPadOS 16, in favor of skipping to 16.1 around a month or so later. Stage Manager has been through the ringer on the iPadOS side - and rightfully so. My adoption ratio for new macOS workflow features isn’t great - I usually use a majority of them for the duration of the review period and then immediately forget they exist. As I’ve noted before, I’ve really come to appreciate Stage Manager on the big screen. As ever, such things are not for the faint of heart. I’ve been running a beta of macOS 13 Ventura on my desktop since it was introduced back at WWDC over the summer. But there are some products that are just better tested on the road: laptops, earbuds, travel chargers and the occasional operating system. I qualify that statement because, well, it’s one more thing to shoehorn into an invariably overloaded work trip. ![]() Sometimes it’s nice when a product launch falls when I’m on the road. ![]()
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