Thursday, June 25, 2026
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Apple wants your Mac to be able to automatically align with an external display

This illustrates cursor navigation across adjacent displays.

Apple wants your Mac to be able to automatically align with an external display as evidenced by a new patent filing for “Automatic Display Alignment Using Feature Tracking.”

About the patent filing

It relates generally to workstations, and more particularly to aligning multiple displays of a workstation. Users often use more than one computer display to expand the screen space of their workstation for various applications. Typically, an external display is added to the workstation as a stand-alone display or a built-in display of another device, such as a notebook computer or tablet computer. 

Existing alignment solutions require the user to manually inform the operating system of the relative positions of the displays. For example, macOS provides a settings option that allows the user to manually arrange display icons representing the displays. 

To arrange the displays, you drag the display icons to a desired relative position to each other in a settings pane. For example, the user may drag the icon for an external display to the right side of the icon for a desktop computer display. 

However, Apple says that, although tech savvy users may know how to use this settings option, other folks may not. This can result in a significant number of calls to the developer’s support service by users requesting help on how to set up an external display. Apple wants to overcome such a problem.

Summary of the patent filing

Here’s Apple’s abstract of the patent filing: “Embodiments are disclosed for automatic display alignment using feature tracking. In some embodiments, a method comprises: capturing, with a first camera of a first display, a first image; capturing, with a second camera of a second display, a second image, where the respective fields of view for the first camera and the second camera are at least partially overlapped; transforming the first head pose into a first reference frame for the first display; transforming the second head pose into a second reference frame for the second display; generating a dual-display environment for the first and second displays based on the first and second head poses in the first and second reference frames, respectively; presenting a first portion of the dual-display environment on the first display; and presenting a second portion of the dual-display environment on the second display.”

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Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.

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