Apple at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2014) announced new
operating systems for its Mac computers and mobile devices, or OS X
Yosemite and iOS
8 respectively.
At the event,
Apple did not launch any new devices; however, introduced a slew of
software features for its upcoming iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite operating
systems that includes integration of Microsoft's Bing search services
(doing away with Google) into its new version of Spotlight (which
revamps search on OS X Yosemite)
for iOS and OS X. DuckDuckGo support for private browsing in Safari was
also announced.
Apple has revamped and added new functions to its Spotlight,
which is the system-wide search tool. Users can now search the Web, and
if it recognises a common term, it'll show information directly from
Wikipedia, Maps, Bing, iTunes, and various other providers. Natural
language recognition was also emphasised, as well as features such as
suggestions, and even unit conversions, making it more like Siri for OS
X.
The Cupertino-based giant also overhauled the overall look of
its Safari and introduced a privacy-minded DuckDuckGo search engine.
The
Yosemite preview page notes,
"Safari now gives you more control over your privacy on the web. You can
open one Safari window in Private Browsing mode - which doesn't save
your browsing history - while keeping others in regular browsing mode.
You can also now search the web using DuckDuckGo, a search engine that
doesn't track you."
The move to replace Google Search and choose Bing as one of the
options in Spotlight search provider and also to add DuckDuckGo,
instead of any Google services, is seen as move to sideline Google
services, as noted
by
Searchengineland.
Some of the other additions in the new version of OS X
Yosemite, which is scheduled to be released this fall, include Handover
(including voice calls) and Airdrop; new iCloud Drive view is integrated
into the OS X Finder; Safari enhancements; improved notifications and
widgets, and updated mail among others.