With the recent release of macOS 15.2Sequoia,Apple Intelligencehas been priority number one at Apple HQ. On newer Mac products runningApple Siliconprocessors, the company has been busy baking a number of AI-powered tools and features deep into the desktop operating system’s underpinnings.
With 15.2 in particular, Macs have been supercharged with an on-device generative image creation app, deeperChatGPTintegration via theSirivirtual assistant, and some additionalWriting Toolsoptions. Curiously, Apple has also taken the opportunity to introduce one non-AI feature in 15.2 – a weather widget that lives nestled within the macOS Menu Bar.

Upon updating to macOS 15.2, the new weather widget is toggled off by default, making it an easy feature to accidentally miss. To enable it, simply head toSystem Settings > Control Center > Menu Bar Only > Weather > Show in Menu Bar.
Once enabled, the top right-hand corner of your Mac will be flanked by a new Menu Bar icon, which displays an up-to-date temperature forecast and glyph design. Clicking on the icon will expand the widget, providing more granular information including temperature highs and lows, other locations, and more.

AI wars: Is Gemini or Apple Intelligence the smarter choice?
Gemini and Apple Intelligence are both likely available on one of your devices, but which one is better?
The new macOS weather widget is arguably more useful than most of the Apple Intelligence suite
AI tools are fine, but I’d love to see more quality-of-life UI additions brought to macOS
From a technical perspective, new OS features that rely on generative AI andlarge language models(LLMs) are impressive – certainly more so than a lowly Menu Bar weather widget. Nevertheless, I find glanceable weather information to be a far more pragmatic addition to macOS than the likes ofImage Playground et al.
…I find myself bending over backwards to try and incorporate Apple Intelligence into my daily workflow.

In truth, I find myself bending over backwards to try and incorporate Apple Intelligence into my daily workflow. Aside fromthe excellent Clean Up toolwithin the Photos app, I struggle to find a killer app that makes the AI suite even remotely worth the hype.
Of course, theApple Intelligence rollout is ongoing, and we’re still waiting forthe big Siri updateto land sometime in the new year. I’ll reserve my full AI judgements for a later date, but one thing is clear to me: Apple ought to focus on the small user interface considerations that actually make a difference on macOS.
Apple ought to focus on the small user interface considerations that actually make a difference.
The inclusion of a dedicated weather widget within the Menu Bar is precisely the sort of practical interface consideration I hope to see more of in future macOS releases. Other toggles and tweaks that immediately come to mind for me include aControl Centerbutton to hide all desktop icons, a clipboard history dropdown icon, an external drive ejection button, and a calendar event or month view widget.