
Meet Craig Federighi, the brain behind Apple's macOS Tahoe 26 released at WWDC 2025
Craig Federighi unveiled the macOS Tahoe 26 at Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2025 on Monday. The transformative update to the Mac operating system comes with several features, including the use of a new material called Liquid Glass, which gives apps and system elements like the Dock and menu bar a translucent, reflective look. Even icons have been redesigned with newer tints and themes.
Federighi, Apple's Senior Vice President of Software Engineering, was at the center stage of the event. Known for his presentations and technical prowess, Federighi has been the driving force behind Apple's operating systems for over a decade.
Read More: Apple WWDC: Tech giant announces new 'Liquid Glass' software design
Born May 27, 1969, in San Leandro, California, Federighi earned a Bachelor's and Master's in Computer Science from UC Berkeley (1991, 1993). Of Italian descent, he's nicknamed 'Hair Force One' for his silver locks and 'Superman' by Tim Cook for his dynamic presence.
Federighi began at NeXT, leading the Enterprise Objects Framework, and joined Apple after its 1996 acquisition of NeXT. He left in 1999 for Ariba, serving as CTO, before returning to Apple in 2009 to helm macOS engineering. Since 2012, he's overseen iOS, macOS, and other platforms.
The VP is popular for his blend of jokes and superhero-like demos at WWDC events. In 2022, he dashed through Apple Park like a superhero. In 2025, he navigated a brief protester disruption with poise, continuing his keynote.
On Monday, Federighi introduced macOS Tahoe 26, named after California's scenic lake, during the WWDC keynote. He highlighted its Liquid Glass design, a translucent, visionOS-inspired aesthetic with dynamic light refraction.
Redesigned Interface: Transparent menubar, customizable Control Center, and emoji-adorned folders.
Apple Games App: A hub for Apple Arcade and App Store games with a Game Overlay for settings and chats, powered by Metal 4.
Spotlight Overhaul: AI-driven suggestions, app actions, and clipboard history.
Continuity Enhancements: iPhone mirroring, Magnifier using iPhone cameras, and Vehicle Motion Cues to reduce motion sickness.
Apple Intelligence: Expanded AI tools, including translation in Messages and third-party developer access to Apple's LLM.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
Did Apple fire Jon Yongfook, designer behind Liquid Glass UI? Here's the truth behind viral claim
Claims about Apple firing a Jon Yongfook, allegedly the lead designer of the Liquid Glass UI unveiled at WWDC 2025, surfaced on social media on Monday. Yongfook, an influencer on social media, posted about being fired. However, now several social media users are saying that Yongfook never worked with Apple. 'I was fired by Apple today. Me and my design team have spent the last 18 months tirelessly testing different levels of gaussian blur on backgrounds when foreground elements are in focus. If you are looking for experts in the blur, glass liquid, grass or fur UI space, lmk,' Yongfook said on X, platform formerly known as Twitter. Read More: Russia fines Apple for violating 'LGBT propaganda' law, TASS reports His followers were quick to note that Yongfook never worked at Apple, and his tweet seemed satirical. 'Media has picked up this tweet and reported that Apple has fired their lead designer Jon Yong Fook for Liquid Glass design. Jon is an entrepreneur that runs SaaS products, and did not work at Apple's design. It's their in his bio Media did not even bother to check his bio...' one person tweeted. Yongfook is a serial entrepreneur, not a documented Apple employee. He founded Bannerbear, a SaaS for automated image generation, and previously worked at Aviva. His website and LinkedIn focus on startups, with no mention of Apple. Read More: 'Steve Jobs would have fired everyone': Apple's Liquid Glass design triggers online backlash 'Senior Digital leader with over 15 years of global technology and business experience at both multinational organizations and startups. Seasoned entrepreneur and technology innovator with two successful exits. Experience in industries such as Financial Services, Ecommerce and Consumer Internet. Working experience in markets including Japan, China, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore,' his bio on LinkedIn states. Apple unveiled Liquid Glass, a translucent, dynamic UI for iOS 26, macOS Tahoe 26, and other platforms, led by Craig Federighi and Alan Dye. It features Gaussian blur, rounded controls, and adaptive navigation. Apple's Human Interface Design team, under Dye, developed Liquid Glass, with no mention of Yongfook.


Economic Times
an hour ago
- Economic Times
France's Mistral unveils its first 'reasoning' AI model
French artificial intelligence startup Mistral on Tuesday announced a so-called "reasoning" model it said was capable of working through complex problems, following in the footsteps of top US developers. Available immediately on the company's platforms as well as the AI platform Hugging Face, the Magistral "is designed to think things through -- in ways familiar to us," Mistral said in a blog post. The AI was designed for "general purpose use requiring longer thought processing and better accuracy" than its previous generations of large language models (LLMs), the company other "reasoning" models, Magistral displays a so-called "chain of thought" that purports to show how the system is approaching a problem given to it in natural means users in fields like law, finance, healthcare and government would receive "traceable reasoning that meets compliance requirements" as "every conclusion can be traced back through its logical steps", Mistral said. The company's claim gestures towards the challenge of so-called "interpretability" -- working out how AI systems arrive at a given response. Since they are "trained" on gigantic corpuses of data rather than directly programmed by humans, much behaviour by AI systems remains impenetrable even to their also vaunted improved performance in software coding and creative writing by Magistral. Competing "reasoning" models include OpenAI's o3, some versions of Google's Gemini and Anthropic's Claude, or Chinese challenger DeepSeek's R1. The idea that AIs can "reason" was called into question this week by Apple -- the tech giant that has struggled to match achievements by leaders in the Apple researchers published a paper called "The Illusion of Thinking" that claimed to find "fundamental limitations in current models" which "fail to develop generalizable reasoning capabilities beyond certain complexity thresholds".


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
France's Mistral unveils its first 'reasoning' AI model
French artificial intelligence startup Mistral on Tuesday announced a so-called "reasoning" model it said was capable of working through complex problems, following in the footsteps of top US developers. Available immediately on the company's platforms as well as the AI platform Hugging Face , the Magistral "is designed to think things through -- in ways familiar to us," Mistral said in a blog post. The AI was designed for "general purpose use requiring longer thought processing and better accuracy" than its previous generations of large language models (LLMs), the company added. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Join new Free to Play WWII MMO War Thunder War Thunder Play Now Undo Like other "reasoning" models, Magistral displays a so-called "chain of thought" that purports to show how the system is approaching a problem given to it in natural language. This means users in fields like law, finance, healthcare and government would receive "traceable reasoning that meets compliance requirements" as "every conclusion can be traced back through its logical steps", Mistral said. Live Events The company's claim gestures towards the challenge of so-called "interpretability" -- working out how AI systems arrive at a given response. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories Since they are "trained" on gigantic corpuses of data rather than directly programmed by humans, much behaviour by AI systems remains impenetrable even to their creators. Mistral also vaunted improved performance in software coding and creative writing by Magistral. Competing "reasoning" models include OpenAI 's o3, some versions of Google's Gemini and Anthropic's Claude, or Chinese challenger DeepSeek's R1. The idea that AIs can "reason" was called into question this week by Apple -- the tech giant that has struggled to match achievements by leaders in the field. Several Apple researchers published a paper called "The Illusion of Thinking" that claimed to find "fundamental limitations in current models" which "fail to develop generalizable reasoning capabilities beyond certain complexity thresholds".