Skip to content
Menu
  • Home
  • Tips
  • Security
  • Hardware
    • Mac
    • iPhone
    • iPad
    • Apple Watch
    • Vision Pro
    • Apple TV
    • Accessories
  • Software
    • macOS
    • iOS
    • iPadOS
    • visionOS
    • watchOS
    • tvOS
    • Apps
  • Buying Guides
    • How to choose a Mac laptop
    • How to choose a desktop Mac
    • Laptop vs desktop – how to decide
    • How to choose an Apple Watch
  • About
  • RSS

Apple releases public betas of iOS 17, iPadOS17, watchOS 10, and macOS 14 Sonoma

Posted on July 14, 2023July 14, 2023
Share on Social Media
x facebook linkedin reddit email

In keeping with previous years, the public beta versions of Apple releases public betas of iOS 17, iPadOS17, watchOS 10, and macOS 14 Sonoma have been made available to everyone who is game to try out the next generation of Apple’s software. This follows about a month of developer betas and represents an opportunity to try the latest Apple software. But beware of the risks.

Apple has provided plenty of information on what we can expect from the new operating platforms at the Apple developer website. Developers received the third developer beta early this week so it’s likely the public beta is similar to that or the second developer beta. I’ve been running developer betas of macOS Sonoma on my MacBook Air (2020 model running an M1 system on a chip) and have not found any major issues. However, I don’t run any exotic or particularly complex software on that machine.

In other words, you may have a very different experience depending on the apps you run. If you run older applications, you may find they stop working reliably, or at all, as Apple often makes system changes that are not outwardly visible but impact underlying services. I have friend running a ten year old Mac simply because changes Apple made to it’s underlying audio subsystems made it harder for them to use with an external keyboard/synth.

To access the public betas, you’ll need to sign in with your Apple ID at Apple’s developer site. Once you do that, you’ll be able to download a profile that will link your device to Apple’s software servers so that you can access the betas via Software Update on your devices.

As always, these are beta versions. That means you may suffer some stability issues. Apps may crash or totally fail. I do not recommend installing beta versions on primary systems you rely on.

Anthony Caruana

Anthony is the founder of Australian Apple News. He is a long-time Apple user and former editor of Australian Macworld. He has contributed to many technology magazines and newspapers as well as appearing regularly on radio and occasionally on TV.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X

Related

No authorisation is provided for the content on the site to be scraped or otherwise used for the training of machine learning, AI models or any other reuse without the express written permission of the site owner.

©2025 | WordPress Theme by Superb WordPress Themes