Posted on 09/25/2017 10:46:44 AM PDT by Swordmaker
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As I understand from Apple, this is true for the current iteration but that they are working on it for a future 13.x release. There is apparently a problem that became evident in the public beta testing. I am VERY GLAD that I did not subject my 3T Fusion iMac to the beta, backing out looks PAINFUL!
It’s interesting to me that APFS only supports ssds.
It’s often the little bugs that never get fixed that drive us nuts. Apple and MS alike are guilty of this. For example, in Apple Photos, you cannot delete an inadvertently named face. If I already have an identified face “Kathy” in a lot of photos and then accidentally mistype and identify a face as “Katty,” there is no way to delete “Katty” from the Faces database. The next time I go to identify Kathy in a photo and type “Kat,” I’m going to see (and forever see) “Katty “ in the list.
Also, a few revs back, they added a bug where the “x” is missing on many automatically identified faces so there is no way to remove that misidentified person. This happens a lot if you take a picture of your kid in a crowd and the software thinks you want to identify and name every single kid in the pic. There is no “x” on one-third of the faces. So your collection of faces includes hundreds of people you don’t know. It will include faces from statues, paintings, and photographs as well and you are stuck with them forever.
The web is FULL of complaints by people about these two serious bugs, but Apple never addresses them.
Apple — quit adding new whiz-bang features and fix the damn core functionality! (Like,that will ever happen)
The screen saver photo shown on the monitor was taken at North Lake in the High Sierra about 15 miles west of Bishop, California. Great trout fishing spot.
Every upgrade from Apple just finds more ways to irritate me.
Top of my bloatware list is iTunes. It used to be I’d click on an audio file and it would just play (imagine that!). Now, it very often takes the operating system 10 seconds or more to figure out that I mean “stop playing THIS song and play THAT song instead.” Why? I have no idea. Same slow-as-molasses behavior with renaming files.
And... by the way, the upgrade isn’t showing up when I access the app store. Anyone else seeing it?
Every upgrade from Apple just finds more ways to irritate me.
Top of my bloatware list is iTunes. It used to be I’d click on an audio file and it would just play (imagine that!). Now, it very often takes the operating system 10 seconds or more to figure out that I mean “stop playing THIS song and play THAT song instead.” Why? I have no idea. Same slow-as-molasses behavior with renaming files.
And... by the way, the upgrade isn’t showing up when I access the app store. Anyone else seeing it?
Agree particularly on Music on my iPhone. The controls for the song being played are these itty bitty tiny icons at the bottom of the screen about the size of a pinhead. It is just impossible to find and hit them while driving. The whole Music app is optimized to get you to buy Apple Music subscriptions rather than optimized for usability. That really bugs me.
I don’t have any problems with iTunes on my MBP (2014, I think). The UI keeps changing all the time and the challenge is to find out how to use it over and over again. But it starts playing right away for me.
I am downloading High Sierra right now from the Mac App Store homepage. It didn’t show up in Updates (for me anyway).
Won’t let me install. Entered password and little box shakes like a fish out of water. Will try later.
Not a problem per se, but a complicated install procedure for Fusion Drives that Apple did not feel comfortable releasing in a general release. The formatting of the APFS does not lend itself well to combining two different types of drives being a virtual single type of drive without going through more circumlocutions than an automatic installer can safely do without running too high a risk of data loss. Even partitioning Fusion Drives can cause such problems.
Apple may be doing a regional roll out to keep the servers from being overloaded. I have a 25Mb/sec download speed and it took about 40 minutes to do the download and install on my Mac.
Remember the password it needs is your administrator name and password, not your user name and password. . . and also check your cap locks key. Those are usually the reasons the password doesn't work.
If you upgrade the firmware of a 2009 Mac pro you can install High Sierra on it.
I don't know what iTunes you are using, but I click on an audio file and it plays. Click on the next one and it plays. No delay. (Imagine that!)... Even using Finder, click on a file and tap the space bar and an audio file will play instantly, a video file will start playing instantly, a document file will show you its contents, instantly. Renaming files? No problem or delay. Have you restarted your system anytime recently?
Thanks for that information, TheStickman.
Thanks for the ping.
I read somewhere that iTunes no longer syncs apps to your iPad/iPhone.
The problem with 2009 model is the bluetooth and WiFi. There are upgrades available to fix that. Actually the WiFi module for an iMac will bring you up to snuff but you will need some antenna wire extensions.
You may be able to take the Bluetooth and Wifi modules out and replace them with USB versions. I have a couple of 2009s and one 1012 model but have not rushed into the upgrade as yet.
TheStickman have you upgraded the Bluetooth and WiFi on your 2009?
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