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Safari is getting a glow-up with Apple Intelligence, and I'm all set to make it my default browser, again.
Apple announced a bunch of Siri AI and Apple Intelligence upgrades at WWDC 2026. Your Apple products could get faster, more reliable, and more responsive with the upcoming OS versions. However, I'm excited for a browser update because Safari is promised to get features that could genuinely make things easier for me. I didn't think I'd say this, but I'm excited to use Safari again. Here's why.
I am a lazy man. When I get a notification about compromised passwords on websites (non-finance-related), I shrug and close the pop-up. I don't want to create a new password -- even when it is compromised -- for multiple websites one by one. It would drag me away from the task I opened the website for, and I forget about it by the time my password is updated. That's why Apple's new Apple Intelligence feature in Safari appeals to me.
Also: Chrome stops hackers from stealing your browser cookies now - how its new security feature works
With the upcoming OS updates, Apple's Passwords will be able to automatically update your compromised passwords to secured versions on multiple websites simultaneously.
"Passwords securely navigates through websites to sign in and upgrade their accounts to strong passwords," the company said. I use an iPhone, Mac Mini, and the MacBook Air in my workflow, and if Safari can update and remember my password automatically, I don't mind switching back from Chrome.
Apple's new Safari feature, Notify Me, will let you ask the web browser to monitor a web page for changes. For instance, you can set it up for product restocks or price drops.
