Adorable. That’s the only way to describe Apple‘s Lil Finder Guy, who arrived without much fanfare alongside the MacBook Neo. The two-tone, 3D character is a physical embodiment of Apple’s iconic Finder icon in macOS. It’s also more than that.
No one is quite certain of where Lil Finder Guy comes from. Apple’s never issued a press release. Instead, some eagle-eyed Apple fans first noticed Lil Finder Guy using a tiny MacBook Neo in the background of an Apple TikTok livestream.
During all the excitement surrounding Apple’s most affordable and excellent $599 / £599 / AU$899 MacBook Neo, I certainly didn’t notice the pale-and-deep-blue guy. However, possibly as part of Apple’s unexpectedly massive 50th Anniversary celebrations, the spungy little guy has appeared in a handful of clever Tok Tok ads, where Lil Finder Guy is seen in a director’s chair, with his squishy head resting on a desk, face down on the floor, and using the Edge Light in a FaceTime call.
Article continues below
50 years of Apple
We’re celebrating Apple’s 50th birthday with a week of content about the tech giant. It covers everything from personal recollections from our writers to the greatest — and worst — Apple gadgets as voted for by you, and you can read it all on our 50 years of Apple page.
People have such affection for him that they figured out how to make 3D printouts of Lil Finder Guy, complete with magnetically attached appendages (so you can pose him, of course). Others have used Gemini to create a whole library of Lil Finder Guy poses.
I have to admit, I’m smitten with him, and wonder if Apple will expand his presence. Could Apple add a digital version of him in macOS 27, a helpful little guy that appears on screen and offers to answer your questions? What if Lil Finder Guy takes over for Siri? Every time you summon Siri, Lil Finder Guy pops up and then runs around the desktop, doing your bidding.
With that Gemini Foundational Model integration, Lil Finder Guy could be the face of a much smarter Siri. Of course, we’re edging into Clippy territory here, so maybe Apple shouldn’t do this.
The secret
There’s another reason Lil Finder Guy can never be a stand-in for Siri: he has a very specific purpose. He’s the Finder, and the Finder is not just a locator for all your Mac folders and files. To understand Finder’s true purpose, we need to look at the original design. I did not figure this out myself.
I was listening to the Retrocast podcast discuss the cute Lil Finder Guy (and the need for a real name) when they started delving into the Finder’s design.
Here’s the secret: it’s not a face. It’s two faces. The one on the right is you, the user, and the one on the left is the computer. It’s an image of a user looking at the Mac startup face on the computer!
As the Retrocast hosts explained, the design evokes the “special relationship between people and high technology.” It’s a design manifestation of how Apple approaches technology, as a deeper connection between human and digital, and how tech does not have to be impersonal. The Macintosh launched with a face and instantly made something remote and unfeeling accessible.
Granted, this means Lil Finder Guy’s face is two faces, which is a bit weird, but he pulls off the look nicely and is still just as cute.
I don’t know what Apple’s long-term plans are for the Lil Finder Guy. At the very least, I expect physical copies to show up in Apple Stores, where you can buy them alongside the t-shirts and pins. But I hope Apple considered letting him stick around to promote future products and show us how to do things on our MacBooks. He instantly seems like a TikTok citizen. Apple could build him his own account and probably amass more than the Apple account’s 8 million followers.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
And of course, you can also follow TechRadar on YouTube and TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.
https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/HxBQM7t5KiocJeAFiwp7qF-1920-80.jpg
Source link
lance.ulanoff@futurenet.com (Lance Ulanoff)




