Notification Center Changes

Like the rest of macOS Big Sur, Notification Center’s biggest change focuses on a redesign. In this case, there’s a single, dedicated column with notifications sorted by most recent. Today widgets have also been redesigned to make them easier to see at a glance. Further, notifications are now grouped by a thread or app, which you can disable if you want to see them individually. Some notifications are now interactive.

Key Changes: Examples

One of the most useful changes is the interactive notifications on Mac for Apple Podcasts, Mail, Calendar, etc. Now, click and hold the notification to take action or get more information. You can also reply to an email, listen to the latest podcast, and expand a Calendar invitation to see where the event falls in your day. In the following two examples, you can reply to an email or start a podcast directly from notifications:

Grouped notifications are also useful since they take up less space on your Mac. In the following example, there are numerous notifications for news and weather. And yet, because they are grouped, there’s less space being used. Click on a group to expand and see all of the notifications for that set.

Third-party widgets are also new in macOS Big Sur. These work just like native widgets. What follows is a look at Apple’s Screen Time widget alongside ones for two third-party apps, Skylight and CleanMyMac X. On the other side are widgets for the third-party Parcel, Day One, and Forecast apps.

Using and Organizing Notification Center

In the following steps, you’ll learn how to customize the notification experience, so it better matches your needs.

Opening and Closing Notifications

There isn’t a special button you need to push to bring up Notification Center on macOS Big Sur. There’s also not an official Notification Center app. Instead, it’s hidden behind your Mac’s date and time in the menu bar. To open Notification Center, click the date and time in the menu bar, or swipe left with two fingers from the right edge of the trackpad. To close the Notification Center, click anywhere on the desktop, click the date and time in the menu bar, or swipe right with two fingers toward the right edge of the trackpad.

Key Actions With Notifications

Once you’re in Notification Center, you can move the pointer over any message, then do any of the following:

Notification Center Widgets Customization

You can adjust widgets by clicking Edit Widgets at the bottom of the Notification Center. From there, you can perform the following tasks:

See more details: Click anywhere in a widget to open the related preferences, app, or webpage. For example, click anywhere in the Clock widget to open Date & Time preferences, or click anywhere in the Reminders widget to open the Reminders app.Remove a widget: Press and hold the Option key while you move the pointer over the widget, then click the Remove button.

Notification Center: Not All Perfect

Using Notification Center in macOS Big Sur is a much smoother experience than it once was. Still, Apple should make a few improvements on a future macOS version. First, there’s no way to clear all notifications, which is unfortunate, especially if you have a lot. Typically, the same notifications come to my iPhone, so I don’t need to see them on my computer, so being able to delete them all would be a great tool. Second, Notification Center overall would be better if it synced across all Apple devices. For example, if you’re receiving email notifications on your iPhone or iPad, shouldn’t they clear on your Mac automatically?

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