Mirage launches Mac display streaming to iPad with retina quality
Mirage wirelessly streams a Mac's retina-quality display to iPads, iPhones, or Vision Pro. It offers low-latency mirroring and extended display options, providing a seamless multi-device workflow for
A new app called Mirage just launched, letting you beam your Macโs display to an iPadโor even an iPhone or Vision Proโwirelessly, in full retina quali
Read Full Story at 9to5Mac โWhy This Matters
The arrival of Mirage underscores a growing fragmentation in Apple's ecosystem, where third-party tools are stepping in to bridge gaps that Cupertino hasn't addressed. By enabling retina-quality display mirroring across devices, it challenges the assumption that Apple's own solutions (like Sidecar) are the only viable path for seamless multi-device workflows.
Background Context
Apple's historical reluctance to prioritize cross-device integrationโdespite its hardware synergyโhas left power users seeking alternatives. The company's ecosystem lock-in often forces developers to innovate around limitations, as seen with earlier mirroring tools that sacrificed quality or latency for compatibility.
What Happens Next
If Mirage gains traction, Apple may accelerate its own wireless display solutions or acquire the tech outright to maintain control. The tool's low-latency promise could also pressure other streaming apps to improve performance, while raising questions about battery life and security in prolonged usage scenarios.
Bigger Picture
Mirage reflects a broader shift where indie developers are redefining Apple's hardware boundaries, much like how Sidecar emerged to fill gaps in macOS's continuity features. It also highlights the fragmentation risk in Apple's walled garden, where third-party tools increasingly dictate user experience flexibility.

