MacOS Golden Gate Beta 2 Adds Siri AI Chatbot to Spotlight

What You Need to Know
- Apple released macOS Golden Gate beta 2 with AI-focused features including Siri chatbot and Visual Intelligence.
- Siri AI features are geographically restricted and unavailable in the EU on iPhones and iPads.
- Design updates include Liquid Glass refinements, uniform toolbars, edge-to-edge sidebars, and reduced menu bar icons.
- Public beta version scheduled for July release following developer seed availability.
Two weeks after the first developer seed, Apple has pushed out the second beta of macOS Golden Gate, the next major Mac operating system release. Developers with a free account can pull it down through System Settings under Software Update, with a public beta still on track for July.
The headline features lean heavily on AI. Siri has been rebranded as Siri AI and repositioned as a chatbot-style assistant living inside Spotlight, combining personal data, general knowledge, and onscreen awareness. Visual Intelligence, previously limited to iPhone, arrives on Mac here, letting Siri answer questions about whatever is on your screen. Apple is also pushing AI into Photos, Safari tab organization, and the Passwords app, which can now suggest updated replacements for weak credentials.
The design changes are quieter but more pervasive than the AI additions. Liquid Glass, the translucency system Apple introduced this cycle, gets a readability pass in beta 2, including an opacity slider and revised shadowing that makes active windows easier to identify. Toolbars are now uniform across apps, sidebars run edge to edge, corners are slightly less rounded, and menu bar icon counts are trimmed down.
Siri AI and the Limits of the Rollout
What the update announcement does not highlight is that the advanced Siri AI features carry geographic restrictions, with Apple blocking them on iPhone and iPad in the EU. The Mac rollout does not resolve that carve-out.
Apple’s broader AI hardware ambitions extend well beyond the Mac. The company is reportedly exploring wearable devices built around Visual Intelligence, a category that would put Siri’s onscreen awareness into a form factor worn rather than placed on a desk. For now, developers can test the Siri integrations in beta alongside other platform previews before any of this reaches the general public.
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