As Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference

The other improvements include the ability to rename folders in the App Library (apps are currently sorted by their App Store category) and changes to the Control Center, which offers quick access to controls for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and volume. What Apple could end up doing with the Control Center hasn’t leaked in detail other than that the improvements will be “major,”

Thanks to the EU’s Digital Markets Act, Apple’s been forced to open up its mobile operating systems and end the App Store’s monopoly on software distribution and sales. To do that, Apple is reportedly introducing a method to sideload apps in iOS 17. Based on what Bloomberg has learned so far, sideloading will likely come with some disincentives for developers like “mandating certain security requirements,” requiring that Apple “verify” apps, and charging some kind of fee.

And don’t expect the option to be available outside of Europe, either. Considering how critical the money the company makes on each App Store transaction is to its overall business, sideloading is not likely to become standard until it legally has to.

iPadOS 17

Less is known about what Apple plans for its tablet operating system, but it sounds like the iPad could get at least one app it’s been missing up until this point. Apple is planning on expanding its health offering by bringing the Health app to its tablets with iPadOS 17 and adding tools for tracking your mood and vision (perhaps a place to store a prescription), according to Bloomberg. One assumes the company’s new journaling app will also make the jump to larger screens too.

The work on Stage Manager, the new multitasking interface Apple first introduced in iPadOS 16, will also reportedly continue. iPadOS 17 will include several Stage Manager quality-of-life additions like support for external webcams, the ability to use the interface on an external display with the iPad screen off, and resize the iPad’s dock, according to @analyst941.

watchOS 10

Apple introduced the Apple Watch Ultra last year, signaling at least some interest in expanding what its smartwatches can do all on their own. That new hardware wasn’t accompanied by a dramatic rethinking of how watchOS should work, but apparently, watchOS 10 will address the issue.

The biggest change is rumored to be an updated interface for watchOS, which some leakers have claimed would basically bring watches more in alignment with iOS and iPadOS, including software elements like folders. Based on what Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman has reported, it now sounds like update will have a specific focus on widgets, and reintroducing a widget system similar to the Glances that were a part of the first version of watchOS. Apple’s efforts to push app development on watchOS have faltered in comparison to its other platforms, and widgets might end up being a lighter lift for developers and more useful for customers.

It’s not clear if that would mean standalone apps for Apple Watch are totally off the table, however. There’s a lot of screen real estate on the Ultra, and it would make sense that Apple would try to use it better than with just a few extra complications and watch faces. But whether or not that’s something the company will focus on this year remains to be seen.

There are plenty of unknowns in regards to what other software improvements Apple might have in store for WWDC 2023 — including, what, if anything, is changing in macOS — but it does at least seem like there’ll be things to look forward to in June that don’t require you to strap anything your face.

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