Skip to main content

Long-delayed Universal Control feature for Mac enters beta

Universal Control was first announced during last year’s W0rldwide Developers Conference keynote covering MacOS Monterey. However, the feature didn’t appear at Monterey’s launch last fall. Now, several months later, it is finally available in the newest beta versions of MacOS Monterey (12.3) and iPadOS (15.4).

Universal Control allows you control your iPad and Mac setups with the same keyboard and mouse, seamlessly moving between them as if they were separate displays on the desktop. You can also drag and drop content such as photos and documents between the devices. All of this is supposed to work intuitively and with no setup.

Universal Control on MacOS Monterey at Apple's WWDC event.
Apple

Well, there is a little bit of setup, but it isn’t too complex. To connect an iPad and Mac, just move your cursor to the edge of the display, and the compatible device should appear. Note that you will need the latest versions of MacOS and iPadOS to do this. You will also need to reconnect the iPad any time it leaves the range of the Mac.

For managing multiple Macs and MacBooks, you can toggle the Universal Control settings from the display menu. You can also manage the display arrangement for iPads in this menu as well.

All things considered, Universal Control is pretty cool, and it’s an excellent extension of Apple’s continuity system. By all accounts, it works pretty well. Here’s an early demonstration of the feature in action, as shared by MacStories.

Holy wow Universal Control is incredible.

This is me moving between a MacBook Pro, an iPad mini, and an iPad Pro using just the MacBook trackpad and keyboard. It's aware of position, lets you drag files, and supports iPadOS gestures.

The hype was real and it all just works 🤯 pic.twitter.com/PWUTLYZtkW

— Federico Viticci (@viticci) January 27, 2022

Universal Control is yet another example of Apple flexing the strength of its product ecosystem. The tight integration between all of its devices is a major selling point, and it gets more robust every year.

Despite the implementation of Universal Control, Apple still seems resistant to the idea of merging its operating systems into a universal platform. Even when the latest iPad Pro runs an M1 chip and MacOS natively runs iOS apps, the company still sees the two systems as independent.

Apple will likely continue to want to sell each of its products in separate lines, but if Universal Control proves popular, that attitude may start to shift. For more on the Mac, check out our review for the latest MacBook Pro, which we think is the best MacBook in years.

Caleb Clark
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Caleb Clark is a full-time writer that primarily covers consumer tech and gaming. He also writes frequently on Medium about…
How an iPad just set a Geekbench record
An iPad Pro being cooled with liquid nitrogen.

Apple’s M4 chip is already setting records thanks to the help of an unconventional cooling method: liquid nitrogen. Apple’s latest ARM-based chip made its debut on the 2024 iPad Pro tablets earlier this month, which outperforms its predecessors and rival high-end desktop processors in terms of raw performance.

As reported on by Tom's Hardware, the team at Geekerwan carried out the experiment using a Kingpin Cooling T-Rex Rev 4 CPU LN2 pot and slapping it to the back of the iPad Pro. When subjected to extreme cooling using liquid nitrogen, the M4 chip managed to go past the 4000-point barrier in Geekbench 6's single-core benchmark. This achievement places it well ahead of some of the most powerful chips on the market, including Apple’s own M3 Max and the M2 Ultra.

Read more
Stop using these default Mac apps — trust me
A person using a MacBook Air connected to two monitors.

Apple makes a huge variety of its own Mac apps, and some of them are among the best Mac apps you can get. The problem is that while many of them are pretty excellent, that’s not the case for every last one -- some are middling while others are worth avoiding altogether.

Whatever the case, you might be looking for an alternative to Apple’s built-in Mac apps. Here, we’ve catalogued the apps we think you should replace first, and suggested which third-party apps you should swap them out for. That should bring you more features and an all-around better Mac experience.
Calculator (use PCalc instead)
The PCalc app in macOS Sonoma Digital Trends

Read more