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iPadOS 26.1 beta Restores the Slide Over Functionality

The Undoing and Redoing of iPadOS: Slide Over’s Resurrected Role in the 26.1 Beta

by Anochie Esther
October 14, 2025
in Business, Finance, Gadgets, News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Slide Over

Image Credits: Mashable

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The trajectory of Apple’s iPadOS has long been defined by a tense balancing act: maintaining the tablet’s signature simplicity while simultaneously pushing it towards true desktop-class productivity. This tension came to a head with the launch of iPadOS 26, which introduced a sweeping, Mac-inspired windowing system that promised a revolution in multitasking. However, this revolution came at the cost of a beloved, if subtle, feature: Slide Over.

In a move that serves as a powerful testament to the influence of user feedback, Apple has officially reversed this controversial decision. The latest developer build, iPadOS 26.1 beta, quietly restores the Slide Over functionality, integrating it back into the new multitasking environment. While this return is a victory for iPad power users, the feature arrives with a notable limitation, suggesting that its full integration into the new architecture is still a work in progress.

The Rise and Sudden Fall of Slide Over

For many, Slide Over was the quintessential feature of iPad multitasking. It allowed users to summon a narrow, vertically oriented app window like a notes app, a messaging client, or a quick calculator from the side of the screen. Its power lay in its transient nature: a user could “peek” at an app, interact with it briefly, and then dismiss it back to the edge of the display, all without disrupting the full-screen or Split View application underneath. It functioned as an invaluable digital scratchpad or quick-reference tool, embodying a workflow distinct from the fixed, equal split of the older Split View.

When the flagship iPadOS 26 launched in September, the windowing system was heralded as the future, effectively making the older Split View redundant by allowing two app windows to be dynamically resized side-by-side. Slide Over, however, was also removed. The rationale seemed to be that with the new, flexible desktop environment, all apps should exist as proper, resizable windows, negating the need for the special, minimized state that Slide Over provided. What Apple failed to appreciate was that Slide Over’s utility was not just about having two apps open; it was about the speed of access and the ability to quickly hide a secondary application entirely.

The Windowing Revolution: iPadOS 26’s New Vision

The new multitasking vision in iPadOS 26, often referred to simply as the “windowing system,” fundamentally shifts how users interact with applications. Apps are no longer confined to rigid screen splits; they can overlap, be resized, and be grouped in a manner that closely mimics a traditional desktop operating system like macOS. This change successfully addressed long-standing complaints about the iPad’s inability to manage complex, multi-app workflows.

However, the new architecture introduced a usability gap. While the windowing system excelled at managing primary tasks for instance, writing in a document while referencing a research paper, it lacked a streamlined mechanism for tertiary, quick-access tasks. If a user needed to briefly check a text message or input a quick calculation, the process involved minimizing a window, navigating the app switcher, or pulling in a new floating window that then needed to be manually managed and dismissed. This friction was the exact inefficiency Slide Over was designed to eliminate, and its removal created an immediate functional downgrade for a significant portion of the professional user base. It became clear that the unique “peek and hide” utility of Slide Over had no true replacement in the new, more complex windowing environment.

The Triumphant, Albeit Limited, Return in 26.1

Listening to the inevitable chorus of power users who lamented the loss of their favorite quick-access tool, Apple has reintroduced Slide Over in the iPadOS 26.1 beta. Its return is an acknowledgement that desktop-class window management does not necessarily translate to optimal tablet utility; sometimes, a specialized, streamlined tool is superior to a flexible, yet cumbersome, general-purpose solution.

The re-implemented feature now works seamlessly within the new windowing system, allowing users to again quickly bring up an app in the familiar vertical pane. Crucially, it now also features the ability to resize the app window, granting it a level of flexibility it lacked in previous iterations.

There is, however, one significant drawback in the current beta build: the re-introduced Slide Over currently only supports one app at a time. Older versions of the feature allowed users to stack and quickly switch between multiple apps within the Slide Over pane itself, essentially creating a dock of quickly accessible secondary tools. This current limitation suggests that Apple is prioritizing stability and integration with the new operating system framework. Whether this is a temporary constraint or a permanent design choice remains to be seen.

The restoration of Slide Over is a powerful move from Apple, showcasing its willingness to correct course when new features compromise crucial existing workflows. As the iPadOS 26.1 beta cycle continues, the community will be keenly watching for whether the ability to stack and switch between multiple Slide Over apps is also restored. Achieving this full functionality integrating the unique efficiency of the legacy Slide Over with the sophisticated flexibility of the new windowing system would be the final piece of the puzzle, truly delivering the best of both worlds for the modern iPad power user.

Tags: #iPadOS 26#iPadOS 26.1 beta#old feature#Slide OverApple
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