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| And how are our parents going to do this without us being there? It once took be 3 hours to accomplish it with my father. He’s 3000 miles away but it was only marginally better than a plane trip. |
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| > The right-click/control-click option for easily opening unsigned apps is no longer available. Users who want to open unsigned software will now need to go the long way around to do it: first, try to launch the app and dismiss the dialog box telling you that it can't be opened. Then, open Settings, go to the Privacy & Security screen, scroll all the way to the bottom to get to the Security section, and click the Open Anyway button that appears for the last unsigned app you tried to run.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/08/macos-15-sequoia-mak... |
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| If these features need to be forced by legislative action, the product itself is probably shit. And most importantly, not in the interest of users, like some like to argue. |
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| to be fair, developers on mac create like 100% of their highly profitable iOS app store revenue because you can't hardly make iOS apps without a mac. |
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| Before this update you could hold control and click the application, then select "open" from the menu. It would give you a warning and let you confirm you'd like to run it anyway. |
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| again, i keep asking: which apps have actually switched to the new screen sharing API and which apps have not?
does zoom, chrome, google meet, etc still require this? |
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| Defaults to. You can tell it to compile yourself, if that matters to you. I don’t see what the issue is here. Why is it a problem that it defaults to binary distribution? |
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| To me these are clear security improvements; things are not getting worse. And there is absolutely no reason to think they'll be dropping support for endusers running their own compiled software. |
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| The obvious end point would be the same as iOS, which is to say - you can run it to your heart's content, provided that you shell out for a dev certificate. |
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| Hm, I've been really happy with Rectangle (https://rectangleapp.com) and its shortcuts have become second nature to me, but if the native version is equally keyboard friendly I might give it a go.
(btw, have you tried Rectangle and if so - what didn't you like?) (Not affiliated with it, just a happy user) |
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| Genuine q: is cmd–backspace too much? I’m in general pretty satisfied with the Finder keyboard navigation/editing. Especially with “enter” for rename, copy/paste/cut/move and deletion too… |
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| I never understood the enter for rename shortcut. People open (or "execute", which is the general understanding of the action for the "enter" key) files far more than they rename them. |
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| I think the issue is if you do cmd-x on a file and then don’t paste it will it be deleted…?
cmd-c & cmd-opt-v is a different, “safer” operation. |
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| I don't know which ones you've tried, but the most popular ones (Magnet and Rectangle) have worked perfectly for me for years. I routinely forget that I have Rectangle installed. |
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| I have to use XQuartz for some apps I run in macOS. Magnet (and other apps I've tried) don't understand those windows. ShiftIt does, but it's buggy and no longer maintained. |
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| The most annoying one is Safari, which arbitrarily decides on what the "best" window width is, even if the website could easily reflow to fit a wider window. |
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| It maximises, but slightly smaller than full maximisation, which is driving me crazy. Eg there's a 30px or so gap, and if you double tap the chrome it fills the remaining space. |
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| If you hold option while dragging the window, yes. Otherwise dragging the window to the top of the screen is the method of moving it between spaces (e.g. separate desktop workspaces). |
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| The original Aero Snap was almost perfect. But I find the newer variation in Win11 a bit annoying as it adds a bunch of UI for tiling that is too easy to activate by accident. |
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| For the first time Apple responded to my bug report through the Feedback Assistant and requested more information, so kind of feel involved in this :)
So the bug was about the screen recording permission needed for some apps, Shottr specifically. Despite me allowing screen recording previously macOS Sequoia kept asking me to go into the settings and give the permission. According to Apple, that should have had happened once a week, so I gave a follow up feedback about definitely me not wanting to repeat this more than once. Fingers crossed I won't have to fiddle with permission when taking a screenshot. But unfortunately it appears that they only changed the policy to do it once a month: https://a.dropoverapp.com/cloud/download/50dcbf08-a812-4ef4-... Still better than once a week and the final UI is fine, but IMHO it should have an option to disable this behavior. |
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| Does it mean macOS will periodically ask me again and again that Teams/Zoom/etc need screen recording permissions? As if I didn’t have enough pop-ups and prompts in my life already |
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| I think that's the case. It's doing it for Shottr(screenshots app) and Ice(toolbar management app), the two apps I regularly use and require that permission. |
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| $ jq '.[] | messages | .thank_you'
wait, maybe it's... $ jq '. | .messages.thank_you' < strings.json darn it! how about $ jq '[].messages.thank_you' < strings.json !??@@! |
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| Wow, that might be the best part of the update. System Integrity Protection shields /usr, /bin, and /sbin, so I prefer to use the system provided executables in those directories when possible. |
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| "dirty" usually means that the commit doesn't correspond to any specific version tag in the repo (or whatever other mechanism is used to map commits to versions). |
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| >Maybe in a couple more major versions we'll have a re-re-designed system prefs app that actually looks like a desktop app again!
And it will only take a few dozen seconds to load! Can't wait! |
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| I am usually slow to upgrade but I jumped on this and iOS 18 immediately because of "iPhone Mirroring".
I've only had it for a few minutes, but it's really nice! |
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| > It is sad to see such a misinformed take on a technical forum.
If you’re going to make such a claim, you should be very careful to ensure you’re not misinformed yourself. > Similar things were said about iMessage interoperability with Android, until Beeper proved them wrong. No, they did not. We already knew Apple not allowing iMessage on Android was a lock-in choice. The trial with Epic brought that unambiguously to light, years before the release of Beeper Mini¹. https://www.theverge.com/2021/4/9/22375128/apple-imessage-an... https://www.theverge.com/2021/4/27/22406303/imessage-android... > They managed to reverse-engineer it, build a compatible client and clearly proved Apple's claims were BS What claims? The only time I remember Apple publicly addressing iMessage on Android was after cutting off Beeper Mini’s access. ¹ Which is an important distinction from the earlier Beeper, which used trickery with iPhones to accomplish the task. |
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| They've made a statement, however weak: https://archive.is/Rl7Ue
“Due to the regulatory uncertainties brought about by the Digital Markets Act, we do not believe that we will be able to roll out three of these [new] features — iPhone Mirroring, SharePlay Screen Sharing enhancements and Apple Intelligence — to our EU users this year.” |
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| Can you articulate where in the DMA where it says that all Apple has to do "is promise not to sue anyone" to be in compliance. Or where it talks about protocol publication.
Hint: it doesn't. |
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| I know that Apple wants their cake and eat it too, looking for ways to wiggle out of this while still dodging their responsibilities. This is why they need years and a small army of lawyers. |
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| But that was already part of continuity or was it previously limited to user activities?
It’s hilarious that Apple made such a big deal out of it and then failed to release it for everyone. |
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| Oh interesting! Does it mean that the content of these forwarded notifications goest through Apple servers then? With no way for the source app to prevent it? |
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| Let us know if you're actually using it in a week or so. (I tried it a couple of times in the beta. It is slow. It is clunky. It is an impractical way to interact with your iPhone.) |
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| As someone who dislikes the “you’re holding it wrong” argument, I don’t think that’s what’s happening here. Your network latency is outside of Apple’s control. |
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| I was excited to use this, and confusingly it requires the attached phone to use the same Apple ID/iCloud account as the Mac!
This makes it practically useless for developers. |
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| In the beta builds with Apple Intelligence, it is possible to turn the entire feature set off (including cloud calls). Don’t think you can keep the local features and skip the cloud though. |
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| Although I don’t use MacOS, the fact that you can now control an iPhone from a Mac will probably be reverse engineered to allow Linux to do the same at some point. A lot of automation opportunities |
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| Bot farms will love that. A lot of websites are using reCAPTCHA and similar to prevent automation, but a lot of apps do not have anything similar. Maybe they do a jailbreak check and that's it. |
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| I also get great battery life on older intel macbooks (2012 Pro w/Matte Screen 16/GB/4TB SATA + 2015 Air w/2TB NVME).
Feels good knowing when my storage wears out, i don't lose the whole machine. |
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| There really doesn't seem to be much here that's worthwhile? I'd love it if someone made a better macOS settings app, the current one feels like it's made to be used on an ipad or touchscreen device. |
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| It’s not like OS-level features and improvements aren’t in every release—Apple’s been talking about them since WWDC in developer channels. Read the release notes. |
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| Well, 1Password must be feeling pretty sour about how Apple Passwords app is a complete 1:1 clone.
They don’t do licenses, credit cards or ssh keys yet so we probably won’t switch… yet |
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| It also doesn't do half the shit Keychain Access did other than hold onto passwords. At least they didn't rip it out of the OS altogether, it's in /System/Library/CoreServices/Applications now. |
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| Not require a third-party kernel extension.
Apple is generally much better at development in their kernel, and more judicious about keeping it functional, than other developers. |
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| Honestly most of the time I download these, it's just to get new wallpapers
The recent live wallpapers feature is really cool, hopefully they've added more |
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| Happened has you with Universal Control.
I'm ok with this. I'd rather they get the core right rather than scrambling to deliver all these nice-to-haves in time, and botching it up. |
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| Most likely the second last version of macOS supporting Intel Macs.
That is what Apple is not telling you with this announcement. |
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| However, we can't guess whether the judgment is good or not, we need to collect power consumption and loading speed values to prove that the new version is indeed good or not |
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| Pedant: Enshittification means something different, involving a company making one group’s experience worse so they can extract more money from another. It’s not “just” making a product worse. |
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| Meanwhile, Wall Street and normies call Satya Nadella a genius and will be shocked in 5 to 10 years when their tabloid news operation/tech company starts looking more like IBM. |
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| > why the hell are you using a non-retina display?
Probably because for the price of a 27" 5k apple display I can buy four 27" 4k displays with money left over for the VESA mounting. |
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| Yes, but these are the ones I already own and that’s also completely besides the point, which is that they look great on Ubuntu, Windows 10/11, and pretty much every OS that’s not macOS |
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| When the apps are shipped bundled with the OS by the same company, and use new system framework/API features that are part of the OS what is really the distinction? |
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| iOS isn’t killing OOM apps. It’s killing inactive apps. It’s something that wouldn’t fly on a desktop or server OS under general use, but works reasonably well in the mobile space. |
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| Apple is most certainly not the company you want to purchase products from if you're afraid of major updates. They are far more aggressive and eager to break things than Microsoft. |
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| This.
Moving from Windows to Mac because you hate updates is like moving from Ubuntu to Red Hat. It's more of the stuff you hated except you don't realize it; ignorance is bliss? |
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| I hope they will fix some bugs as well. The top one on my personal list would be fixing broken exfat support https://superuser.com/questions/321161/disable-automatic-fsc...
Or maybe Bluetooth automatically switching to "reduced audio quality" (I know, I know, it's a feature, not a bug...) Or wait, the kernel panic I get every once in a while would be nice: panic(cpu 1 caller 0xfffffe00318c8a1c): DCP PANIC - ASSERT!AppleDCPDPTXPowerController.cpp:538 No device added after powering on the rails. HPD=0 - dcpav(27) I haven't had a system that felt so unreliable since Windows 98. :D |
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| That kernel panic sounds like a hardware fault just from first blush. Sounds like it's turning on some device but the device isn't responding after being turned on |
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| MacPorts has a pretty slick migration feature now. Not sure about Django, but this is the smoothest migration I've experienced with MacPorts in over 15+ years. |
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| iPhone Mirroring is insanely well-implemented and it's a testament to what only Apple can do. Seamless integration of their products and every just works as you expect. |
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| > I like all the privacy protections that Safari gives me as a user.
... compared to Chrome, right? Not to Firefox with uBlock Origin and Facebook and Google containers ... |
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| Yeah compared to Chrome.
I do like and respect Firefox but it’s hard to take them too seriously as a separate competitor if all their revenue comes from Google. But what choice do they have? |
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| As a happy user of Safari, I'd be happy if a lot of web developers just stopped trying to turn my web browser into a buggy, bloated JS House of Cards "operating system" for their crappy SPAs. |
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| Well, available since a lot of time on Android: https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy
And it works perfectly. Pair it with kdeconnect and you have even a better experience of integration between your phone and your PC than with Apple. Only thing that is missing is the ability to take calls from the PC, that to be fair, it's not something that useful to me (if I want to make phone calls from the PC I use my landline number with VOIP). Again, I see no innovation in the Apple ecosystem, after trying it out I'm happy to have returned to Linux+Android, overall a better experience. I don't miss Apple at all, it was like being in a cage... |
1. Screen-recording permission once every week ?
2. No more sudo spctl —master-disable. Alternative way is bit complicated.
2. No more control+ click to bypass gatekeeper.
3. Why tcutil reset Accessibility not working for a specific app? It works for “All” .
4. Script to convert NSURL node ref url to posix url not working.
5. Normal usb Mouse pointer acceleration is not smooth. May be need to re tweak those again.
Anything else ? Otherwise all good.