Apple has been testing Siri for Mac for years. Now, the user interface is finally ready for primetime.

Apple’s virtual personal assistant could soon be headed to your Mac.

9to5Mac on Wednesday, citing unnamed sources, reported that Apple is (finally) planning to bring Siri to Macs this fall alongside its next major OS X release. The move wouldn’t be too much of a shocker, considering Apple last year expanded Siri to the Apple Watch and Apple TV.

Apple has been testing versions of OS X with Siri “since at least 2012,” the report notes. Now, the user interface is finally ready for primetime.

“Instead of integrating Siri as a swipe menu akin to the Mac’s Notification Center or as a full screen view like on the iPhone and even the iPad Pro, Siri for the Mac will live in the Mac’s Menu Bar,” 9to5Mac reported. A new Siri icon in the top right corner of the Menu Bar will reportedly fire up the voice control feature.

When you click the Siri button, a “dark, transparent Siri interface will appear in the top right corner of the screen,” according to the report. Just like on the iPhone, you’ll see colorful sound waves when you’re asking Siri something.

There will also be an option to choose a keyboard shortcut to activate Siri on your Mac. Even easier, when your Mac is plugged in, you’ll simply be able to say “Hey Siri” to spring the digital assistant into action, just like you can with iOS 9.

Apple is expected to announce the next major version of its Mac operating system — OS X 10.12 — at its Worldwide Developers Conference in June, so stay tuned.