Apple’s WWDC is Watch Hugas Onlineunderwayand 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 monthsand is now official.
Apple describes Liquid Glass as a material that sits above the user interface (UI) on your phone. The material moves based on how you interact with it. For example, if you grab a Liquid Glass window and pull, it’ll jiggle and move with your finger. Liquid Glass UI elements also refract light like real glass and is heavily influenced by whatever is underneath it on the screen.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Liquid Glass is not a massive departure from what was already there, but that’s not the big news. This new design language will be what Apple uses moving forward on all of its major operating systems, including macOS, iOS, iPadOS, and more. It was inspired by visionOS, and it’ll be what you see on everything made by Apple starting later this year.
On top of looking pretty, Apple says that it’s also functional. Liquid Glass UI elements will be able to expand and contract with nice-looking animations to adapt to what the app needs it to do. It also works with light and dark modes along with Apple’s new clear mode, which makes all of your icons look like glass.
With Liquid Glass, Apple aims to make all of its operating systems look more lively. During the WWDC presentation, Apple showed off how responsive the new UI would be to everything from user touch to the background on the screen.
As part of the redesign, Apple tweaked some other things as well: the lock screen, Notifications, and Control Center. UI elements are also edited to align with the screen's curve to make things look more symmetrical. App icons also got a redesign with “multiple layers of Liquid Glass,” per Apple.
Liquid Glass is the first major overhaul to iOS’s visual design language since its skeuomorphic design was introduced with iOS 7 in 2013.
Topics Apple WWDC
Hands have never been so interesting, thanks to the 'Subway Hands' Instagram accountZayn and Gigi Hadid have broken up and the future is bleakWhatsApp rolls out encryption for chats backed up in the cloud'The Last Duel’s most shocking element is a defiant sense of humorWhat channels are on Amazon's Fire TV StickWhat to expect from Apple's October 18 eventSteven Crowder suspended from YouTube for hate speech. The story he was pushing is fake.How to use a VPN to watch NetflixMeet the true crime podcaster making your guilty pleasure more ethicalMeet the true crime podcaster making your guilty pleasure more ethicalSelena Gomez privately put Facebook execs on blast in 2020 for all the hateful contentWhat is my VPN IP address — and how can I hide it?Online risk predictor claims to estimate chance of developing melanomaJared Kushner's brother makes a big donation to 'March For Our Lives''Succession' slays again with ruthless, relentless Season 3The 10 best National Geographic series on Disney+ to help you learn something newThis Kate Middleton finger optical illusion is confusing the internetJump start your holiday list with the Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga, starting at $952Report: Rex Tillerson learned of firing from Trump's tweetTwitter pulls the plug on vibe checks Hello, World! Part One: Eliza by Sheila Heti Making of a Poem: Kyra Wilder on “John Wick Is So Tired” by Kyra Wilder On Anzia Yezierska’s Bread Givers by Deborah Feldman At William Faulkner’s House by Benjamin Nugent Hello, World! Part Three: Alice by Sheila Heti The Last Furriers by Ann Manov Faring by Saskia Hamilton On Hegel, Nadine Gordimer, and Kyle Abraham by The Paris Review Love Songs: “Aguacero” by Carina del Valle Schorske The Leap by Dan Beachy Love Songs: “I’m Your Man” by Laurie Stone Plan for a Journal by Italo Calvino Love Songs: “Slow Show” by Nathan Goldman I Love Birds Most by Kate Riley Kickoff: The World Cup by Jonathan Wilson My Royal Quiet Deluxe by Matthew Zapruder Only Style Survives: On Chateaubriand by Lisa Robertson The Blackstairs Mountains by Colm Tóibín Ordinary Notes by Christina Sharpe Selling to the Strand: A Conversation with Larry Campbell by Troy Schipdam
2.163s , 10133.1640625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Hugas Online】,Charm Information Network