MacOS Sonoma

macOS Sonoma (version 14) is the twentieth and current major release of macOS, Apple's operating system for Macintosh computers. The successor to macOS Ventura, it was announced at WWDC 2023 on June 5, 2023, and released on September 26, 2023. It is named after the wine region located in California's Sonoma County.

The first developer beta was released on June 5, 2023, and macOS Sonoma entered public beta on July 11, 2023.

New features
macOS Sonoma includes a number of new features and improvements, mainly focused on productivity and creativity:


 * Widgets have been revamped. They are no longer constrained to the Notification Center—instead they can be placed anywhere on the desktop, and the widget picker has been redesigned to resemble the iOS and iPadOS versions of it.
 * The lock screen has been redesigned to include a date and time similar to iOS and iPadOS. The power buttons have become a context menu.
 * Video-conferencing apps can overlay the presenter's webcam video on top of screen sharing.
 * App icons have been made more rounded.
 * The Spotlight search bar has been made more rounded, and its width has been decreased.
 * Safari changes:
 * Browsing profiles enable separate sets of bookmarks, extensions, and cookies, which can be used to separate, for example, a personal setup from a work one.
 * Password sharing lets multiple people have access to the same collection of website passwords, and update them as needed, with changes syncing across all enrolled devices.
 * Safari web apps let the user add any website to the Dock and open it in a simplified Safari interface, just like an app. A similar feature is available in Google Chrome. This feature is somewhat different from progressive web apps since it does not require additional work from website developers.
 * Messages changes:
 * More precise search filters: for example, the contact name can be combined with a search term to look for the term within a specific conversation.
 * Catch-up lets the user quickly jump to the first unread message in a conversation.
 * Tapback now appears as multiple icons instead of being a context menu.
 * iMessage stickers have a new selection interface.
 * Apple TV now has a sidebar instead of a top bar.
 * Game mode optimizes gaming performance by prioritizing gaming tasks and allocating more GPU and CPU capacity to the game. It provides smoother frame rates for game play and reduced latency for  Bluetooth peripherals, such as wireless game controllers and AirPods.
 * New slow-motion screensavers of different locations worldwide. When logged in, they gradually slow down and become the desktop wallpaper.
 * Smoother animations for several areas such as the notification panel, the lock screen, and the show desktop gesture. The notifications now slide in with an ease-out motion, the lock screen now zooms in and out when unlocking and locking, the show desktop gesture has a new spring back animation.
 * Users can react with their hands and animations will pop up based on the hand gesture.
 * AV1 hardware decoding has been introduced on devices with AV1 hardware decoding support, such as Macs with SoCs from the Apple M3 family.
 * Print Center, a utility application returning from Mac OS X Tiger, was reintroduced for managing print jobs, viewing different printer queues, and pausing or deleting print jobs.
 * The text cursor now looks more like its iOS counterpart. It is bolder, has a smooth blinking motion, and its color follows the current app's accent color. It also briefly displays an indicator that shows the current input language when the user switches keyboard languages. This indicator can also signal helpful input details like when Caps Lock is on.
 * Videos now encode faster in Final Cut Pro, Compressor, and third-party video applications on Mac computers using M1 Ultra or M2 Ultra.

Gaming
Alongside macOS Sonoma, Apple announced developer tools for porting Windows games to macOS. The Game Porting Toolkit (GPTK), derived from Wine and released in beta, translates Windows application programming interface (API) calls to equivalent macOS APIs, allowing developers to run unmodified versions of their x86 Windows DirectX games on macOS. Mac users have been able to use the Game Porting Toolkit to run a number of DirectX 12 games; tech news outlets have compared the tool to Valve Corporation's Proton compatibility layer for Linux. Apple also released a Metal Shader Converter that converts shaders to Apple's Metal graphics API.

A DigitalFoundry review of the first beta of Game Porting Toolkit found it "impressive", with few graphical glitches and full support for console controllers instead of the keyboard, though they found that frame rates were around half of what they would be on Windows, and that many games were not supported. During the Sonoma beta, updates to the Game Porting Toolkit brought support for 32-bit games and around 20% better performance.

According to reporter Peter Cohen, Game Mode and the Game Porting Toolkit are improvements but do not indicate the kind of "sea change" in Apple's priorities and culture that are needed to build a true Mac gaming ecosystem. Cohen says that the problem with Mac gaming is not in the ability to port games, but in a lack of a "business case" for game publishers to do so, due to the Mac's low market share, the cost of supporting a port, and uncertain demand for Mac games when many Mac users also own consoles or gaming PCs. YouTuber Snazzy Labs issued similar criticisms, which journalist John Siracusa agreed with.

Removed features

 * Support for legacy Mail plug-ins has been removed.
 * System API support for converting PostScript and Encapsulated PostScript files to PDF format has been removed, following previous changes in macOS Ventura that removed support for viewing and converting PostScript and Encapsulated PostScript files within Preview.

Supported hardware
macOS Sonoma supports Macs with Apple silicon and Intel's Xeon-W and 8th-generation Coffee Lake/Amber Lake chips or later, and drops support for various models released in 2017, officially marking the end of support for Macs without Retina display and the 12-inch MacBook. The 2019 iMac is the only Sonoma-supported Intel Mac that lacks a T2 chip.

Mac models that support macOS Sonoma are as follows.


 * iMac (2019 and later)
 * iMac Pro (2017)
 * MacBook Air (2018 and later)
 * MacBook Pro (2018 and later)
 * Mac Mini (2018 and later)
 * Mac Pro (2019 and later)
 * Mac Studio (all models)

Unofficial support
By using patch tools such as OpenCore Legacy Patcher, macOS Sonoma can be unofficially installed on earlier models that are officially unsupported. Such models date back to the 2008 MacBook Pro and 2007 iMac.

According to an Ars Technica analysis, 2016 and 2017 Macs received on average six years of updates, lower than the seven to eight years of updates received by Intel Macs released from 2009 to 2015.

Release history
The first developer beta of macOS Sonoma was released on Monday, June 5, 2023. The Sonoma developer beta was the first to be available to anyone with a free Apple Developer account, without needing a developer subscription. The full release was released on September 26, 2023.

See Apple's official release notes, and official security update contents.