SeCuRiTy aNd PerForManCe
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Thank you so much for sharing this! I have to use a Mac for work and the stock dock sucks as mentioned! Bummer that it costs $25 to have a functional dock, but it might be worth it.
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Sasha [They/Them]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Don't even get me started on how god awful finder is, windows 3.1 was nicer to use, macOS is garbage painted silver
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Still better than Windows, though.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Honestly my M2 MacBook Pro feels like it’s built to last. I paid a lot, but I feel like I’ve gotten great value out of it and genuinely enjoy using it. And it’s still going strong.
yeah until you want to upgrade or repair something, then it's fuck you buy another one. I get the apple premium, what I don't get is the scorn they show for people who have purchased their overpriced hardware when they want to upgrade it. that's just insulting - you gotta buy it with everything maxed out on APPLE ram, ssds etc.,
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Seriously? This old-ass fight is still alive? Grow he fuck up, dudes.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The only thing that makes Apple marginally better is that the company spying on you tries to pretend like they're not in it for your sweet data.
They might not be selling it right now, but only because they keep making money hand over fist from the non-repairable proprietary bullshit they produce. Once that faucet starts to slow down, you better believe they'll be the next Google.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Apple making a proprietary pinout for NVME is what will keep me from ever giving them money.
It's not like Apple uses a different controller, or that they invented a different communication standard. They just put the same communication pins from the same controller on a different physical connector, and charge you 10x for the replacement part. It's why boards like this can work at all:
If Apple wasn't using standard NVMe controller communication protocols and controllers, these adapter boards wouldn't work at all.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
They're both about the same in terms of privacy so that's quite an irrelevant thing to bring up. Windows sucks infinitely more from an usability perspective, though.
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I don’t get it either but think it’s a meme that people grabbed on to. We’re one step away from this appearing on Stephen Colbert. Sort of like talking about Taco Bell affecting people poorly.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
There genuinely are
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
They’re both about the same in terms of privacy so that’s quite an irrelevant thing to bring up. Windows sucks infinitely more from an usability perspective, though.
As someone who has used Linux as their primary desktop OS for about 7 years now, you don't have to tell me that Windows sucks.
Edit: Oh, one more thing, you don’t have to do some bs hacks to use macOS without an Apple account.
I don't use any accounts for my OS at all.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
you don't have to tell me that Windows sucks.
Then I don't see why you have a problem with me saying macOS is better than Windows.
I don't use any accounts for my OS at all.
You mean Linux? I don't either but that's irrelevant, isn't it?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Being in a similar situation as you (have to use for work), I would also add the fact that docking station support when it comes to displays is awful, almost nobody got 2 displays working with the dock and I have to plug one HDMI directly into the Mac. Then there is the fact that it's impossible to turn on the computer via the docking station button, so I had to just use sleep instead, and 40% of the times the USB peripherals get disconnected, so I can't wake it up except by unplugging and replugging the docking cable.
Besides that, I have 2 2k display and using Mac they are substantially more blurred than they are with Linux or windows.it's like if everything is bold on Mac. Apparently it has to do with some feature which got removed for non-4k monitors or something.
Thankfully we managed to get Aerospace now installed (I.e. approved), because being used to efficient i3-like window managing, using macos native window management felt like being back in bronze age. There are so many things that apple built expecting you to use the trackpad for efficient workflows... Why would I use a trackpad in a (home) office setting, when it's terrible for ergonomics, requires the laptop to be open etc...
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Oh yeah, I have same issue. Certain things are impossible to enlarge. It's infuriating.
Same with moving window controls on the right. You would think a "premium" OS would let you choose trivial things like this, but no.
Apple "superior" workflow means bending to use tools and workflows they designed, the way they intended. Anything else and you are generally going to be blocked one way or another.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yes, but it breaks so many other tools that it is basically not worth. For example, all shell shortcuts (Ctrl+A, Ctrl+E, Ctrl+W etc.).
Neither me nor anybody in my company found a viable solution which is to ultimately learn to use cmd for certain things on Mac (like copy/paste).
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Window management on macos is a joke
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I’ve owned computers since the 286 was a big deal.
I’ve NEVER had an SSD ”die”
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Do you prefer windows for servers then?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Quick quibble:
at the heart of them all is that Apple makes their stuff harder to use by people used to other systems, on purpose.
As a UXD/usability and also software dev in both Windows and Mac OS software, I’d say Apple doesn’t make transition experiences harder on purpose. They try to make it as smooth as possible, whilst working within their own established design & dev standards, which is often the opposite of other companies’ philosophy.
Lesser-sought functions are nearly always changeable in settings or via terminal, and everything is easy to configure from the settings. That’s based on OS standards of not vomiting all options all over the UI (which is the polar opposite of Microsoft, so there’s some adjustment time yes. Seems the OS installer walkthrough/tutorials aren’t that effective.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I skipped the iPod as well. Had a Creative Zen Touch, which I thought was a great device. Same kind of deal, it showed up as a removable drive or MTP device or something like that. Can't remember for sure.