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Apple unveils OS X updates and iOS 9 at WWDC keynote

Apple Inc. lifted the curtain on its latest operating systems for developers during its Worldwide Developers Conference keynote today. The tech vendor is updating OS X, iOS, and its new watchOS.

Craig Federighi, senior vice-president of software engineering at Apple, gave a rundown of the new OS X El Capitan.

Aside from the feature improvements to OS X El Capitan, Federighi also promised some under the hood performance enhancements. Apple’s Metal rendering algorithm will now be supported on OS X, which will lead to faster graphical rendering for working with Adobe applications or playing 3D videogames, for example.

Next it was on to introducing the changes for iOS 9. Federighi gave a rundown of what’s new when it comes to Apple’s iPhone and iPad OS:

A few of Apple’s marquee apps that come pre-installed with iOS are also seeing some changes. Apple Maps is getting some upgrades. It will now include directions and navigation for transit, but the feature is only available in certain cities at launch, including Toronto.

Apple is introducing a new application, News, that will take the place of Newsstand. The app will aggregate news from many publications based on user-set preferences and serve it up to users in one seamless digital-magazine style interface on iPhone and iPad. News is going to launch in the U.S., U.K. and Australia first.

Jennifer Baily, vice-president of online store at Apple, introduced some new updates to Apple Pay, Apple’s tap-to-pay service for iPhone and Apple Watch that launched in the U.S. last year.

The iPad will also be getting some unique updates for iPad with iOS. The biggest update is how multi-tasking will work. There’s a new visualization for switching between apps. Also, there’s a new “slide-over” feature that allows a user to slide out a frame that’s about one-third or half of the screen and interact with another app.For video, you can use a picture-in-picture feature to continue watching and listening to video while focusing on another app. The slide-over view is available for the iPads released over the past several years, but the split-view feature is only available on the iPad 2.

Developers will be able to get the beta of iOS 9 as of today, and there’s even a public beta – a first for Apple – available in July. Apple will be making iOS 9 open source too, and releasing the compiler for use by developers.

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