And the OS before that had the major mDNSResponder / discoveryd issue which broke networking for a lot of people.
macOS just seems to be in a weird state right now where most of the changes are to core technology things on the backend (like this entirely new file system in High Sierra) and yet they don't really have the manpower/resources to pull it off without issues. It feels too risky to update macOS these days unfortunately. I'll be waiting until the .2 or .3 release first.
To be fair, the "gold standard" for rock-solid releases everyone uses, Snow Leopard, had absolutely terrible issues. There's a reason they ended up shipping a 10.6.x update disc because the early releases were not great.
The only major issue now is that Apple wants to put out a new release every year. If they just stuck with an every two-year cycle I think we'd all be happy.
Backed up last night, but currently I'm not sure if I want to update directly.I had a magic trackpad once but I couldn't use it for long periods or precision tasks in lightroom/photoshop so I need a mouse. The grips are coming today so I'll see if it helps!
Everyone backed up for High Sierra tomorrow?
Well, heard back from the Genius Bar...my late 2013 MacBook Pro needs a logic board replacement. $400 for this model.
killer! but I need a laptop...so if I do get the board replaced and swallow the almost-half thousand dollar repair, will it be worth it? I really just need a shoulder to cry on. thanks mac-gaf
Easily organize, edit and view your photos in Photos.
Make short videos from your Live Photos using new Loop and Bounce effects.
Easily locate and organize your content with the new sidebar.
Conveniently access all of your editing tools in the redesigned Edit View.
Fine-tune color and contrast in your photos with new Curves and Selective Color tools.
Access third-party apps directly from Photos and save the edited images back to your Photos library.
Rediscover images from your library with new Memories themes including pets, weddings, outdoor activities, and more.
Create printed photo products and more using new third-party project extensions.
Improve your browsing experience with Safari.
Stop web video with audio from playing automatically.
Prevent websites and ad networks from tracking your browsing with Intelligent Tracking Prevention.
Customize your browsing experience with new per-site settings for Reader, page zoom, content blockers, and more.
Enjoy refinements in Mail.
Instantly find the messages most relevant to your search using Top Hits.
Use Split View when composing new email in full screen.
Save space on your Mac with compressed messages.
Look up flight information in Spotlight.
Check the status of a flight by typing the airline and flight number in the Spotlight search field.
Collect your thoughts with Notes.
Organize your information using configurable tables.
Pin your favorite notes so theyre always at the top of the list.
Capture a moment in FaceTime.
Take a Live Photo during a video call to any supported Mac, iPhone, or iPad.
Get music suggestions from a more natural-sounding Siri.
Hear more variations in intonation, emphasis, and tempo when Siri responds to you.
Enjoy personalized music recommendations from Siri when you listen to Apple Music.
Copy and paste files from one Mac to another with Universal Clipboard.
Copy and paste files between your Macs using standard copy and paste commands.
Safely store your family data in iCloud.
Share a single iCloud storage plan with your family and keep everyones data backed up and safely stored.
Set up your family with a few clicks and add capabilities when needed.
Work together with iCloud Drive.
Share and work on any file in iCloud Drive with other people so it is always be up to date with the latest edits.
Upgrade the performance, reliability, and security of your Mac with the new Apple File System.
Update to a new file system architecture designed for all-flash Macs.
Experience greater responsiveness when performing common tasks like duplicating a file and finding the size of a folder.
Enjoy faster and more reliable backups.
Protect your entire drive with built-in native encryption for greater security.
Step up to the new standard for 4K video: HEVC.
Create and watch high-resolution video with High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC), which uses up to 40 percent less space without sacrificing quality.
Enjoy next-generation graphics and computation with Metal 2.
Get the most out of the graphics capabilities of your Mac with the new and improved version of Metal.
Discover immersive tools for content creation with support for virtual reality.
Build state-of-the-art apps with features that accelerate common machine learning functions.
Maybe hold off on the update.
http://www.zdnet.com/article/apple-...c64629f&bhid=21018946672900879251366930285668
From the iOS 11 thread:
or don't run unsigned apps until it's fixedFrom the iOS 11 thread:
Bloody hell. I stupidly bricked my iPad just two weeks ago, and now my Mac mini is dead too. Great, just fucking great.
After restarting, the progress bar below the Apple logo fills until about 60%, and then the Mac simply turns off.
Gonna try running diagnostics and recovery mode and whatnot next, but I don't have any hope.
edit: To avoid any misunderstandings: I did not install High Sierra.
edit 2: I was able to boot into recovery mode. My trackpad's battery was empty, because of course it was. I put new ones in, turned it on, moved the cursor towards the Next button, and halfway it lost connection. Now I'm trying to reconnect, but it just doesn't work. The trackpad just keeps blinking.
This is gonna be of of those days.
Those days suck. Best of luck!
I don't know what that means, also the 6TB drive isn't partitioned. I formatted it fresh just like I did with the 8TB. Both are WD drives. But the 6TB won't let me have the option to partition or format as APFS at all. Does the 6TB drive use some kind of fancy drive I didn't know it had that cant be partitioned? It doesn't makes sense to me.APFS doesn't work with MBR partitioned drives, I believe.
I don't know what that means, also the 6TB drive isn't partitioned. I formatted it fresh just like I did with the 8TB. Both are WD drives. But the 6TB won't let me have the option to partition or format as APFS at all. Does the 6TB drive use some kind of fancy drive I didn't know it had that cant be partitioned? It doesn't makes sense to me.
I'm on High Sierra and Disk Utility doesn't even show that at all. (For any of my drives. Even the internal HDD. Also, the Info button doesn't have that anywhere either.)What does it say for "Partition Map" on the physical drive on Disk Utility?
Note that both Media (8TB) and Extra (4TB, soon to become backup partitions) both are HFS Extended (Journaled) and the Type is the same as the 6TB drive, except that both have an option to partition and will allow me to reformat as APFS if I chose to. It's just this one drive that won't let me. But I fear that now that I'm already elbow deep in transferring the files to the 6TB that even if I did find a solution to allow me to partition, it'd be too late since I've already spent hours copying files over.6TB drive:
8TB drive for comparison:
High Sierra doesn't seem to expose that anymore. Here's the Info window. I don't see anything useful there either.That actually doesn't answer my question. Partition map is not the file system, it's the method of mapping the partitions on the physical drive.
There is MBR, APT, and GPT
That's still just the volume, you want the physical disk.
I know but I literally don't know how to get it. I had no problem formatting the 8TB drive, and Disk Utility isn't barring me from doing the same thing to the other 8TB or the 4TB drives if I want to. It's just the 6TB that is the odd man out.
If I could give you more information I would. I don't know how to get up to the physical disk. There's no triangle to expand or anything. And no useful information in the Info window.
Fake edit: Well I did find an option under the menus to "Show all devices" which does show the physical drive as well as the single partition on it. And to answer your question, it's "Master Boot Record". Dangit. I knew it. The other drives are GUID.
The problem is when I formatted it, I wasn't given an option to choose GUID. Aw man. Should I stop my file copy and start over with this drive? I guess I can't convert it later without losing any files. I just don't know how to set it to GUID. And I don't know WHY it was set to Master Boot Record in the first place when the other three drives are set as GUID.
Yeah I found it.You get the option to redo the portion map when you erase the physical disk.
Just passing along the article, I neither agree or disagree with holding off on updating!
Weirdest thing with APFS and I don't really know what causes it. Might not even be APFS fault rather the drive maybe?
I have a few large external hard drives. I got a new one and am shuffling files around. Two that I'll mention. One is a new 8TB drive and the other is an older 6TB drive. I was able to reformat the 8TB as APFS, but the 6TB drive won't let me format as APFS nor will it let me partition it. I never noticed it before because I don't really want to partition it, but I didn't notice that partitioning wasn't an option with this drive until I went to reformat it and noticed APFS wasn't an option, and just happened to look up at the toolbar and noticed the Partition option greyed out.
What could cause a drive to not be eligible for APFS or partitioning? I didn't know this was a thing.
This problem was solved already. Also I'm not on a Fusion Drive.High Sierra sort of refuses to convert Fusion drives to APFS; there must be something buggy about that config. It also doesn't convert spinning drives to APFS by default; you have to do that manually. But if you can't do that at all, I'm not sure what the problem would be.
In my opinion a 4 year old computer - you're in the grey area. If t were only 1-2 years old it'd be more cost effective to pay for the repair as you basically have a recent computer. 5 and older you're nearing "vintage" and the money would be better put towards a new machine, especially since you are probably due to update it anyway.
3-4? Tough call. Depends how close you were itching to get a new computer. Of course your funds would need consideration as well.
What actually happened? It's unfortunate that with the way things are built, any problem with the logic board be it CPU or a USB port, it's an entire board replacement.
I guess I should stop the transfer and start over. I still don't know how the disk was formatted as Master Boot Record in the first place.
That's what I thought, but somehow, out of the 8 drives I currently have hooked up (The two 8TB, 6TB and 4TB plus identical backups of all four) only that one single drive escaped my reformatting back when I got it a couple years ago. I must have just forgotten to change it to GUID. Funnily enough, the other 6TB drive (The backup of the first one) was set to GUID as were all the rest.Externals mostly come with MBR partition mapping.
I see a MacBook Pro 13 2016 Touch Bar on Craiglist for $800.
It has i7 CPU
16GB RAM
512GB SSD
2 Battery Cycles
Brand New, still in factory wrappings
What should I look for before buying this? Is this worth it?
I see a MacBook Pro 13 2016 Touch Bar on Craiglist for $800.
It has i7 CPU
16GB RAM
512GB SSD
2 Battery Cycles
Brand New, still in factory wrappings
What should I look for before buying this? Is this worth it?
The trackpad worked after restarting again.
Well, that's it. The HDD is toast. I had already had some issues about a year ago, but now it's finally dead. Not sure whether I'll bother with replacing the HDD. I'm too clumsy for computer repairs.
I had a look at iFixit's guide for replacing Mac mini HDDs. Oh boy. This won't go well.
I had a look at iFixit's guide for replacing Mac mini HDDs. Oh boy. This won't go well.
Which model? The 2010-2012 ones are straight forward.
What do you guys think is the best method of getting a new laptop? School discount? Employee discount? I just need to upgrade.
Which model? The 2010-2012 ones are straight forward.