Apple’s WWDC is underway and one of Cupertino’s first big announcements is Liquid Glass, which is what Apple is calling its new design language. Yes, it’s the one that has been rumored for months and ...
“In iOS 26.4, there’s another new setting that lets you disable a different aspect of Liquid Glass. It’s called ‘Reduce ...
Apple's iOS 26 major update with the 'Liquid Glass' UI, Apple Intelligence features, changes to the messaging app, CarPlay, Apple Music, Maps, Wallet, etc, has finally been released. To download the ...
Last week, we broke down the hardware revolution coming to the living room in our exclusive report on the 2026 Apple TV 4K. We detailed the “Silicon Trinity”—the A17 Pro, 8GB of RAM, and the N1 ...
More borkage, which seems like the kind of thing that should have been caught in testing. The “choose a skin tone” UX in the emoji picker is broken as shit. Apologies for low-res bullshit images; ...
"Delightful", "elegant" and "modern" were the three main adjectives Apple used when it launched its new Liquid Glass UI design for iOS 26, iPadOS 26 and MacOS Tahoe 26 at Apple WWDC 2025 event this ...
Samsung has started the beta testing program of its One UI 8.5. The early preview of the software reveals a brief visual redesign across system apps. Apple’s recent design philosophy inspires the new ...
To disable the Liquid Glass UI in iOS 26, go to Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size and turn on Reduce Transparency. You can also switch to Dark Mode, customize app icons to use darker or ...
Two of Apple’s most important initiatives, a complete overhaul of its operating systems’ user interface design, and its efforts to become a significant player in the AI space, haven’t been home runs.
TL;DR: Apple's new Liquid Glass design introduces a major UI overhaul after 10 years but faces criticism for usability issues. Microsoft humorously compared it to Windows Vista's outdated Aero ...
Apple made two big changes to the iPhone operating system this year. First, the expected iOS 19 name was replaced with iOS 26, as Apple tied the software number to the next year for all its operating ...
I'd say it looks largely...inoffensively different. Or offensively. But yeah I wouldn't be surprised if the general public loves it. Or perhaps irrationally violently hates it even more than y'all ...