Apple hosted one of its most-awaited events of the year, WWDC, at the Apple Park recently and that’s all that the industry can talk about right now. For Apple fans in India, the event began at 10:30 PM on June 8 and brought with it a long list of announcements across iPhone, Mac, iPad, Apple Watch, and more.
AI, as expected, remained a huge focus during the event with the Apple team walking us through what’s next with Apple Intelligence and Siri. Now even though Siri’s AI makeover is grabbing a lot of attention, there is one update that isn’t being talked about enough. And that is, Safari and its AI superpowers.
Apple is embedding AI directly into the browser which means it can now help organise information, monitor websites, and even create browser extensions automatically. Let’s take a closer look at how the all-new Safari can make your life a lot easier.
Also read: WWDC 2026: 5 big changes coming with macOS 27 Golden Gate and iPadOS 27
Now whenever we talk about using Safari, one thing that comes to mind is the endless tabs. And we all know how managing multiple browser tabs is a hassle. It always begins with a single New Tab and before you know it, you have more than 30 different tabs on completely unrelated topics open. And in this scenario, finding the one you actually need feels like a treasure hunt.
But Safari’s new Organise Tabs feature will fix this issue. Using Apple Intelligence, the browser can analyse open tabs and automatically group them into relevant topics. And this should result in a much cleaner experience.
For instance, just imagine that you’re planning a trip with your family. You might have several tabs open for flights, hotels, travel guides, train passes, and restaurant recommendations. Now instead of manually sorting everything, Safari can recognise the common theme and organise these tabs for you. So you don’t need to look at each tab individually to locate the one you need. Simply look at the relevant group.
Organising tabs is one thing, but keeping track of information is a completely different game. And now, Safari can do that for you thanks to the Notify Me feature which can monitor webpages and alert users when something important changes.
For example, imagine you’re waiting for a laptop or a PC component to come back in stock, or you are hoping for a price drop on a smartphone. Normally, you have to check the same webpage several times a day. But with Notify Me, Safari can handle that work in the background and send a notification when the change you’re waiting for finally happens. Instead of constantly refreshing pages, users can simply let the browser do the monitoring.
Browser extensions have always been one of the best ways to customize the web browsing experience. They can help save recipes, compare prices, organise bookmarks, block distractions, or automate repetitive tasks. The catch is that creating a custom extension usually requires coding skills, which puts it out of reach for most people.
Apple wants to change that with a feature called Describe an Extension. As the name suggests, you can simply explain what you want an extension to do, and Safari will generate one.
For example, if you are someone who regularly saves recipes from different websites, you’re probably used to searching for an existing extension or building one yourself. But thanks to the new update, you can just ask Safari to create a button that saves and rates recipes you’ve already tried.
Other examples here are a student who needs to create an extension that collects research links into one place, or a journalist who needs to save articles from multiple websites into a reading list.
These are just some of the ways that the all-new Safari can help make your life easier. Which one of these features are you excited to try out the most? Let us know and keep watching this space for more such updates.
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