SeCuRiTy aNd PerForManCe
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
There's no way of globally enabling hidden files and folders, there's a terminal command that does it for vanilla finder windows, but none for the finder file picker windows that apps use.
Unclear if it's hardware or MacOS, but despite having the graphical horsepower to push enough pixels, Macs are limited to two external monitors unless you buy the multi thousand dollar Max processor.
It doesn't support high quality Bluetooth audio codecs like AptX.
It doesn't natively support Google cast or Miracast.
It doesn't support sub pixel text rendering so text looks like trash on 1080p LCD monitors.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I was following the meme which listed MacOS on the front and then hardware on the back.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The cli, kind of. But everything is 10 years outdated by default, the filesystem is not case sensitive, there are no containers, and, to rub salt into the wound, if you are on ARM MacOS only let's you run two mac VMs per physical machine, even though the hardware supports way more.
It's basically the IT equivalent to buying a professional tool from Wish or Temu.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I don't even know what system it was at the time, but the first time I figured out things weren't just on "computer" and were on a particular operating system and that Mac didn't do games at all, I hated them immediately. They were completely useless for my use case.
I remember when iPods got popular that I specifically didn't want one, I wanted a different mp3 player. I got one of the first Dell ones. I forget the name of it now. It was either a "jukebox" or maybe that was the software's name. It has the scroll barrel on it. Had I think 15 or 20GB on it. I was so much happier with it than I would've been with an iPod. For one I didn't need to cover my entire library to aac. And iTunes was just a nightmare on Windows in general from what I heard.
There was no software needed for the Dell one. You just moved your music on like a removable hard drive. Playlists were actual separate files that were somehow associated to the songs. I never did (and still don't) really care about playlists.I'm too millennial for that. I just play the album I wanna hear. Or nowadays if I'm too lazy or in a hurry I have an automatic playlist that knows what kinda stuff I like to listen to and just plays from that set.
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- You can with extra software. See first paragraph of my original reply. Valid.
- ..What?
- The delete key does do something in Finder. When pressed with the Command key, it deletes the file with no prompt. I'd rather that not be a single key press. This is a preference, not an issue.
- Mentioned already.
- I'm sorry, this is literally user error. That's like saying Windows is stupid because it can't anticipate my "quit app" shortcut being Command + Q instead of Alt + F4. Or, for a closer comparison, like setting Ctrl + C to Meta + C instead. They're different operating systems, adapted for different keyboard layouts, and I shouldn't have to elaborate on why this is stupid.
- Apps with multiple windows just kinda suck in general. I fullscreen everything, navigating between apps with gestures. Not quite multi-monitor, but fullscreen always behaves as expected and all gestures work, and the dock remains accessible--which I can't say for any other desktop UI in existence.
- Preference that I personally like. Rude.
- Hardware.
- Absolutely true. They've insisted on a "one size fits all" volume bar for everything. It sucks. I laugh every time someone on an iPhone has volume trouble for this exact reason. Instead, you have to adjust media while it's actively playing in the foreground. How very intuitive.
- Hardware. Granted, stupid, but still hardware. I'm pretty sure this is Apple Silicon only.
- Just turn it off. I've never seen a benefit to having accelleration.
Not perfect, but none of this reads as annoying as a whole advertisment telling me to upgrade to an OS that I know has incredibly invasive spyware.
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Swap in "iPhone", and nothing changes.
The iPhone was an improvement to what was before, trying to make MacOS into a walled garden is going backwards
Nobody is calling support for Windows, fuck windows to, but nothing you said negates the sheer cost of being in a app walled garden on a PC, the obliteration of upgradeability and near 0 repairability
If your SSD dies or you start needing more RAM for your workflow Apples position is, essentially, "Get a new laptop, fuck the environment!"
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So criticise Apple for being anti-repair and anti-competitive. Ah, but Apple being anti-repair is parroted just as much as Windows being garbage.
Welp, gotta be angry at something, today. Fuck [POPULAR COMPANY PRODUCT], and let's go on with our day.
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negates the sheer cost of being in a app walled garden on a PC
You don't seem to want to address the walled garden problem, which flies directly in the face of user choice and freedom.
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I don't recognise the walled garden problem, because I'm on macOS, where software walled gardens do not exist. In other words, scarecrow. I've installed whatever the hell I wanted on there. It's also confusing to single out macOS (which has better third-party repos than Windows by absolute leagues), when iOS is right there.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Not defending Crapple, but in the name of fairness, some of these aren't really accurate unless you're ignoring the spirit of the complaint and being pedantic.
You can scroll right but not left with the track pad
You can scroll up, down, left, and right if you use two fingers to scroll.
The delete key doesn't do anything in the finder
You can use
command + backspace
to delete selected files.The terminal uses cmd+c instead of cmd+shift+c (really should be ctrl but okay)
The rest of the OS uses
command + c
for copying. This is consistent.Every app relies on an antiquated menu bar at the top which is straight out of 90s UI
This is a personal opinion. It's a valid complaint, but it's not a universal problem.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Not defending Crapple, but adding context:
There's no way of globally enabling hidden files and folders, there's a terminal command that does it for vanilla finder windows, but none for the finder file picker windows that apps use.
You can use
command + shift + full stop
to toggle hidden files and folders, if I recall correctly.Unclear if it's hardware or MacOS, but despite having the graphical horsepower to push enough pixels, Macs are limited to two external monitors unless you buy the multi thousand dollar Max processor.
It's the hardware. Each display needs to have a dedicated controller chip and video signal encoder, and Apple decided to be assholes and only add two of them.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
You can use command + shift + full stop to toggle hidden files and folders, if I recall correctly.
Yeah, but thats a fundamental problem from a UX standpoint. If you're a software developer who needs to work with those files and folders, you can easily run into issues where you don't even realize that there are files there that are causing problems (or that you changing or deleting might cause problems with).
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don't recognise the walled garden problem, because I'm on macOS, where software walled gardens do not exist
Really, so you haven't noticed that root hasn't really been root lately? Or that it's been getting harder to install software from outside the MacOS app store with each update? They're not stupid, they're not going to do it all at once, they're doing it bit by bit.
Mark my words, there will be a day in the short term when you go to install something outside the MacOS app store and you'll get a "Can't do that without a paid Apple dev account" error, at best
It's also confusing to single out macOS (which has better third-party repos than Windows by absolute leagues), when iOS is right there.
Once again, iOS being a walled garden is an improvement to what was before and I'm not advocating for Windows in any sense of the word
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Outside of gaming, there is not a single reason to use Windows over macOS--maybe if you enjoy suffering
Let me name a couple of shitty ones:
- Your work's IT only supports Windows.
- You work with industrial control systems or lab equipment that only supports Windows.
- Hardware vendors are assholes that use proprietary protocols instead of USB device classes and don't release drivers for anything other than Windows.
- You need to use CUDA.
- You need to use a dedicated graphics card for some reason or another.
- You're hosting a server, but not competent enough to use Linux.
None of those are reasons to voluntarily choose Windows, but sadly, they're still real reasons.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It's a persistent toggle. You could just leave it on permanently, which is what I did when I had to use a Mac for work.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It’s bullshit because I’ve never once installed anything other than Xcode from the App Store. Nothing else. It’s not a walled garden in any way, shape, or form.
It’s a full, true UNIX desktop OS.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The dock sucks when using multiple windows per app
This made me rage quit using a mac at work
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I'm not looking to argue, but this is my take:
They're going to keep making it more and more difficult for the average consumer to step outside of the Apple-intended vision (as they have with Gatekeeper, SIP, and removing kernel extension support), but I really don't think they would be stupid enough to fully close the ecosystem.
A lot of their MacBook Pro and Mac Pro sales comes from corporate hardware refreshes. If a company can't get their proprietary software working because of arbitrary restrictions, they're going to buy a Windows device next time.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
CMD ` (backtick) will switch between application windows, if that's what was frustrating you.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
If a company can't get their proprietary software working because of arbitrary restrictions, they're going to buy a Windows device next time.
They already have something in place for that, it's called the Apple Developer Enterprise Program
They've got a plan to build the wall around MacOS and they're executing it, it's not going to be an overnight thing, but it's coming