Apple announced iOS 26 at its 2025 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC)992 ArchivesMonday. The new iOS will bring a major design change powered by "Liquid Glass," which also means big changes for Apple Maps.
That big redesign means, first and foremost, that Maps will look a bit different. The embedded images below, for instance, show that Maps notifications will remain partially visible while you do other tasks.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The other major changes are basically aimed at making Maps smarter.
A new tool called Visited Places will help users remember places they've been. If you enable the tool, it'll automatically remember places you've been, such as shops and restaurants. The company wrote in a press release that Visited Places will be "protected with end-to-end encryption and cannot be accessed by Apple."
Apple said on Monday that iOS 26 would improve your daily commute.
It wrote in a press release that "iPhone can now use on-device intelligence to better understand a user’s daily route, presenting them with their preferred route when they’re headed home or to the office, along with notifying them of delays and offering alternate routes."
That means your iPhone should understand which route you like to drive, walk, or take transit and warn you when a different route is more efficient.
Hopefully, that means iOS 26 will lessen the time wasted in traffic.
Topics Apple WWDC
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
A glossary of 2016, the words that defined the year
The time has come to wrap your tech accessories in a burrito
Which states in America have the best and worst internet?
Skype is finally shutting down
French grocery store Monoprix parodies Amazon Go in new ad campaign
IKEA's website lets you build the perfect couch and Twitter has ideas
'Jessica Jones' ended well, but Netflix's Marvel shows deserved better
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。