- iPadOS 26.4 has a new feature that helps users find hidden app windows
- It adds another Mac-like element to the tablet operating system
- But the Mac-ification of the iPad could cause unnecessary confusion
In recent years, Apple has steadfastly refused to say it’s merging the iPad and Mac, all while increasing the overlap between its iPadOS and macOS operating systems. With the launch of iPadOS 26.4 in March, that was strengthened even further. But I’m concerned that it blurs the lines a little too much — and risks confusing Apple fans as a result.
In this case, we’re talking about a new feature in iPadOS 26.4 that makes it easier to locate your open windows. The original version of iPadOS 26 added support for running multiple app windows on your iPad, but the problem was that you could lose track of them if you had too many open. In iPadOS 26.4, though, that’s all changed.
Now, you’ll see a little popup appear over an app’s icon if it has multiple windows open. The popup will say “X Hidden Windows” (with X being the number of windows) and “Show All Windows” written below. Just click the popup and all that app’s existing windows will be shown on-screen. It’s a quick and handy way to keep track of your app windows without losing them over the course of your day.
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This is definitely more of a feature for iPad power users than something most people will need on a day-to-day basis, as I suspect the majority of iPad users never open more than one app window at a time, never mind lose track of them. Yet despite the useful nature of this feature, I’m concerned that it might muddy the waters between Apple’s devices.
The MacBook Neo dilemma
Adding support for multiple windows is definitely a desktop-like feature and helps the iPad feel more akin to one of Apple’s best Macs than a tablet. Throw in a compatible mouse and keyboard and the tablet can easily double up as a laptop, with some caveats.
A few years ago, that was all well and good — the iPad could serve as an affordable laptop alternative for people who didn’t want to shell out $999 or more for a MacBook. But with the launch of the MacBook Neo, that’s all changed.
Now, you just need to pay $599 / £599 / AU$899 and you get a legitimate laptop that punches well above its weight. In a world like this, why would you need an iPad that moonlights as a MacBook? The only reason I can think of is that you like the tablet form factor.
Yet that doesn’t change the fact that Apple is making its iPads more Mac-like when there’s a perfect good — and affordable — substitute in the form of the MacBook Neo. If you want an entry-level device, you’ve now got to choose between the MacBook Neo and the iPad, and that feels like a needlessly confusing situation. Should you get an iPad or a MacBook Neo? That’s a question that users are increasingly going to have to ask themselves.
Evidently, though, it’s a state of affairs that Apple is comfortable with. As the recent iPadOS 26.4 update demonstrates, the company is still bringing Mac-esque features to its iPads, even after the MacBook Neo was revealed — and even as it denies that the two systems are being combined. That makes it look like this perplexing overlap is here to stay for the foreseeable future.
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