Apple today revealed OS X 10.11 El Capitan, which has two primary focus areas experience, and performance. OS X El Capitan will bring many improvements to Spotlight search performance, natural language detection for all searches, enhancements to Mission Control and window management, a new split-screen view and workflow, and many smaller changes to built-in apps and system functionality, Apple is also heavily emphasizing a variety of performance improvements derived from architectural refinements within OS X El Capitan, aiming to speed up a variety of actions and activities in OS X 10.11 when compared with OS X 10.10 Yosemite. For those wondering why Apple choose the name “El Capitan”, it’s the name of a mountain in Yosemite National Park. Given that OS X El Capitan will improvements and reiterations of OS X Yosemite, the OS X El Capitan makes sense when you think about. This is similar to how Snow Leopard was a refinement of Leopard, and Mountain Lion improved a pound Lion.
OS X 10.11 El Capitan will be available for iMac (Mid-2007 or later), MacBook (13-inch Aluminum, Late 2008), 13-inch, Early 2009 or later), MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid-2009 or later), (15-inch, Mid/Late 2007 or later), (17-inch, Late 2007 or later), MacBook Air (Late 2008 or later), Mac Mini (Early 2009 or later), Mac Pro (Early 2008 or later) and Xserve (Early 2009). OS X El Capitan will be released for developers today, and will become part of the OS X Public Beta program in July. A final public release of OS X El Capitan will be available in the fall as a free upgrade.
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