Apple is making changes in macOS Tahoe aimed at fixing a core usability problem that critics have described as “un-Apple-like.” Across the sources, the focus is not on Apple’s AI-related announcements or Siri features, but on a more traditional operating-system improvement. The coverage characterizes the affected aspect of macOS as a longstanding weakness in the experience and notes that Apple’s latest fix directly targets it. One outlet frames the update as particularly effective compared with Apple’s recent emphasis on AI capabilities, arguing that the most meaningful improvement is the one addressing everyday behavior rather than new AI features. Another outlet similarly highlights that the update targets the “most un-Apple-like” part of macOS Tahoe, presenting it as the main reason the update matters to users. Both pieces describe Apple’s action as finally addressing the issue rather than leaving it unresolved. The articles do not provide detailed technical specifications in the provided excerpts, but they agree on the central point: the update is meant to correct a key flaw in macOS Tahoe’s user experience.