Skip to main content

You can finally try out Apple Intelligence on your Mac. Here’s how

macOS Sequoia being introduced by Apple's Craig Federighi at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2024.
Apple

The second developer beta of macOS Sequoia is open for business and it includes Apple Intelligence features. It looks like anyone can try it out as long as you’re not in China. That includes people in the EU — even though the AI features might not launch there right away. The features available for testing include Writing Tools, Siri, Safari and Mail summaries, Smart Replies, Memory Movies, transcription features, Reduce Interruptions Focus Mode, and a few more. If you want to have a look yourself, here’s everything you need to do to download the beta and activate Apple Intelligence.

Before you start, make sure you’ve backed up your Mac with Time Machine so you can restore the previous version if anything goes wrong. You can also use a secondary device if you have another Apple silicon Mac lying around because beta versions can go wrong and you have to download them at your own risk.

Recommended Videos

The next step is to sign up for the Apple Developer Program, which is free and pretty quick to do. Note that this is a slightly different process from downloading public macOS betas, which requires signing up to the Apple Beta Software Program instead.

Once you’re signed up, head over to the Software Update tab in System Settings and click the information button next to Beta Updates. It should bring up a list of betas for you to choose from, but the one you want is macOS Sequoia 15.1 Developer Beta. Click done and it should appear in the Software Update tab with an Upgrade Now button for you to press.

Settings menu showing the option to download the Sequoia 15.1 beta
Willow Roberts / Digital Trends

At this point, you have the beta, but there are a few extra steps if you want to activate Apple Intelligence. This involves finding the Apple Intelligence & Siri tab in System Settings and:

  • changing Siri’s language to English (United States)
  • changing the voice to American
  • setting your region to United States in the Language & Region section
  • setting your primary language to English (US).

Your Mac will want to restart at this point, so let it do that and then head back to the Apple Intelligence & Siri section. Now you should have an option to Join the Apple Intelligence wait-list, so click that and wait for the notification saying it’s ready. It only takes a few minutes in most cases, but if things happen to be busy when you click, it could take multiple hours. Finally, just toggle Apple Intelligence on and then you can enjoy your shiny new AI features.

Remembe, these won’t be included in the initial Sequoia launch; they’ll be added later in the year with a separate 15.1 update. There are also some Apple Intelligence features like Genmoji and Image Playground that aren’t included in the 15.1 beta and we suspect they will come later. You have everything set up now though, so you can download future developer betas in just a few clicks.

Willow Roberts
Willow Roberts has been a Computing Writer at Digital Trends for a year and has been writing for about a decade. She has a…
The M4 Mac launch is incoming, but not how you might expect
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M3 Max chip seen from behind.

The past few months have been full of speculation, anticipation, and pretty wild rumors concerning the upcoming M4 Macs -- and now the predicted release date of November 1 is just a week or so away. Despite the lack of an event announcement, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman still believes the launch is "imminent," with an announcement reportedly coming on October 30.

According to him, Apple Stores are running very low on iMac, Mac mini, MacBook Pro, Magic Keyboard, Magic Mouse, and Magic Trackpad units -- and this usually happens when updates are about to be released.

Read more
I’m worried Apple will skip its October event – here’s what that means for the M4 MacBook Pro
Apple CEO Tim Cook looks at a display of brand new redesigned MacBook Air laptop during the WWDC22

For months now, we’ve been hearing that Apple is set to announce a boatload of new products -- including the M4 MacBook Pro range, fresh iPads, and more -- at an event this October. Yet a new report suggests that things might not be quite so simple after all.

In his latest Power On newsletter, Bloomberg journalist Mark Gurman says that Apple is set to reveal these new products “around the end of October,” with the devices going on sale on Friday, November 1. So far, so expected.

Read more
An all-glass MacBook? Here’s what Apple thinks it would look like
Bladur's Gate 3 being played on the M3 MacBook Air.

Patents and clues pointing to all-glass MacBooks and iMacs have been floating around since 2011, and this week, another patent has appeared on Patently Apple -- a "glass housing" for a MacBook-like device. It has a virtual keyboard and trackpad, and there's even a separate patent for "finger devices" that would decrease the strain of typing on a glass surface.

One of the most interesting things about the glass housing is that it "provides I/O functionality." This means, that instead of inserting a separate trackpad or keyboard keys into the housing for users to interact with, the housing itself would provide a method of input and output. In some areas and contexts, the surface would function simply as housing to protect internal components, and in others, it would display information and react to user input.

Read more