I'm finding it a mixed bag with Mojave.
For some reason on my 2018 MacBook Pro, Aperture is not playing nicely with Mojave but as long as I keep my iMac on Sierra all is fine. I read somewhere (or I believe I read) that future updates to Mojave may kill 32 bit app compatibility.
I think CPN, MacJournal and AquaMinds Notetaker all share some connection with Next, but somewhat oddly and ironically, a copy of Notetaker that I have is still working(!) and that seemed to be abandoned long before CPN. Again it is probably only a simple bit of code that needs some tweaking and I did reach out to see if the support email account of CPN was still working but sadly it's dead.
I recall having a deep learning curve with CPN at first and it could be frustrating at times but it did replicate the experience of a paper notebook or binder in the digital world quite well. I have both professional and personal projects stored with CPN and I guess I must bite the bullet at some point and export them all out to something else.
It's really frustrating though that once tied to a proprietary format we can really get screwed when it gets abandoned.
I still use DVD Studio Pro for clients who want DVDs and thankfully it still works with Sierra but Apple basically abandoned it as Adobe did with Encore. There are third part apps but they aren't very polished.
Growly Notes looks very similar to Outline from Gorillized and I may try it out.
Unfortunately the latter revelation only came to light after I had upgraded to Mojave from El Capitan. It was recommended that I use Growly Notes which as it happens I find cumbersome and insecure.
On the upside, when I tried to access my notebook files in Mojave, I would that opening the files directly from the menu, caused the application to crash. On the other hand, if I clicked on the file itself, it opened and asked for the password as usual.
I could then edit the file in the usual way and save it.
I still have one machine running El Capitan which I will use to extract the data from the notebook files into another format until I can find an equivalent application which is not dependent on the cloud.
I too have heard that 32 bit support is about to disappear from MacOS but no indication of exactly when. Having said that, at the moment I find Aperture works well on Mojave and I also have Lightroom working alongside it, also with no problems. It would be a shame to lose Aperture altogether as I find it easier to work with than Lightroom.
You can stay on your current OS as Apple will probably have security updates for El Captain for a bit longer, however, if you ever need to upgrade your Mac, a newer model won't run El Captain. Still it's possible to use emulation software like Parallels to run El Captain and other operating systems as virtual machines to keep vintage software going.I moved a CPN file to Scrivener. It imported the text and .pdf attachments but dropped the Word documents that were attachments in CPN. Unfortunately that ruled out Scrivener for the purpose. Does anyone know how to get the Word attachment accepted by Scrivener?
[doublepost=1541710117][/doublepost]Then again I am quite happy with El Capitan. Is there any reason a person can't just stay with the old OS? Will an upgrade to a new computer require running the new OS like it did when Apple changed from its own CPUs to Intel's? Is that likely to happen soon?
I'm finding CPN to be stable on Mojave up to this point or at least with this version. Is anyone else having a similar experience?I have a lot of material in Notebook files which I have collected over several years and was concerned about the many comments I have come across where it was stated that Notebook did not work with Mojave and in addition, Circus Ponies is now defunct and of course will no longer support their application.
Unfortunately the latter revelation only came to light after I had upgraded to Mojave from El Capitan. It was recommended that I use Growly Notes which as it happens I find cumbersome and insecure.
On the upside, when I tried to access my notebook files in Mojave, I would that opening the files directly from the menu, caused the application to crash. On the other hand, if I clicked on the file itself, it opened and asked for the password as usual.
I could then edit the file in the usual way and save it.
This is despite the underlying file system of Mojave having changed. I can only conclude at this time that the file system is not the primary cause of crashing but most likely how the application uses internal registers in the operating system.
I would be interested to hear if this work around assists anyone here.
I still have one machine running El Capitan which I will use to extract the data from the notebook files into another format until I can find an equivalent application which is not dependent on the cloud.
[doublepost=1541348376][/doublepost]
I too have heard that 32 bit support is about to disappear from MacOS but no indication of exactly when. Having said that, at the moment I find Aperture works well on Mojave and I also have Lightroom working alongside it, also with no problems. It would be a shame to lose Aperture altogether as I find it easier to work with than Lightroom.
I wonder what the difference is because it only worked for me it the first beta build (hence my premature start of this thread.)I'm finding CPN to be stable on Mojave up to this point or at least with this version. Is anyone else having a similar experience?
Again I'm testing everyday on my 2017 iMac on an external drive and CPN is playing well with Mojave. I'm not ready to commit to Mojave because of other apps that don't play nice but with CPN so far so good. There is a new beta of Mohave as well that I will download and test with CPN. Strangely on my 2018 MBP running Mohave as well I do get occasional crashes on CPN maybe 10 % of the time. Again I send the crash logs to Apple. Have you tried a fresh install of Mohave?I wonder what the difference is because it only worked for me it the first beta build (hence my premature start of this thread.)
Mojave ain't done until Circus Ponies Notebook won't run!
Have you tried a fresh install of Mohave?
Life ain't meant to be easy.
From my point of view a computer is a device which allows you to access useful tools - called software. It is the software that is the main point, not the computer, and particularly not the operating system.
I have been using Macs since the 512k was available, about 1985?, and the loss of useful tools as Apple follows its egocentric business plan has been a constant downside.
I currently use High Sierra for RagTime, LabChart, Graphite and, by necessity, Parallels. Then Snow Leopard for Extendsim and CPN, and Windows 7 for Solidworks 15 and TK!Solver. Other stuff like mail and web browser could be anywhere, often on my phone anyway.
So more than half of my everyday tools are not available on the latest MacOS.
I have used CPN for more than 10 years and have a huge amount of information. In my life as an R&D mechanical engineer projects sometimes go for many years. My main project at the moment started back in the last century and no doubt has some time to run. Converting all this data to another software tool, that also might be ephemeral, is just not viable. If it were not for Parallels I would have three computers on my desk. And it were not for iCloud and DropBox, I would be doing the USB stick shuffle all day long.
In reality all of my tools with the exception of CPN could migrate to Windows. Interestingly all of these except Solidworks started life on the Mac. I acquired my first 512k for Visicalc, the forerunner of all spreadsheets (thanks Dan), whose company also introduced TK on Mac.
Perhaps just too old to learn new tricks. Reiterating that it is the software that counts, not the operating system.
Cheers.