XPS 13 is a good portable, considered one myself. I just prefer OSX over Ubuntu, battery life mostly.Dell XPS 13 is about $1,000 for a really good laptop, Ubuntu installed. But to each their own.
Q-6
XPS 13 is a good portable, considered one myself. I just prefer OSX over Ubuntu, battery life mostly.Dell XPS 13 is about $1,000 for a really good laptop, Ubuntu installed. But to each their own.
No need can do that in the OS, mostly useful for desktops. Not in front of the Mac right now so cant confirm with Sonoma and as my Mac moves so not a tool I have use for.how does one terminal the "on at 7am off at 10PM" settings in Sonoma that were set in Monterey?
there is a sudo entry I discovered on live, but the source seemed fishy,
and this is my MacBook Air which I still love very much...
thanks
sudo pmset repeat wakeorpoweron MTWRFSU 07:00:00
sudo pmset repeat shutdown MTWRFSU 22:00:00
thanks, I do want to adjust this and Sonoma dropped this GUI feature in settings aka sys-pref.No need can do that in the OS, mostly useful for desktops. Not in front of the Mac right now so cant confirm with Sonoma and as my Mac moves so not a tool I have use for.
This should work
Code:sudo pmset repeat wakeorpoweron MTWRFSU 07:00:00 sudo pmset repeat shutdown MTWRFSU 22:00:00
sudo is mandatory in this case as you are altering the system...
Q-6
It's well overpowered for what I need, but got a brand new, sealed 16" MacBook Pro (M1 Pro / 32 GB RAM) for $1600. Returned my 14" M3 Pro (also an awesome machine!) and put the difference towards AppleCare+. The last MacBook I had, I kept for 4 years... will try and do better this time! And once it's "retired," it can become our family's desktop computer, anyway.
I can't believe they did that. I use it all the time in Energy Saver preferences on 10.14.thanks, I do want to adjust this and Sonoma dropped this GUI feature in settings aka sys-pref.
then again I will probably return the MBA to Monterey today.
With Apple silicone now available for three years, is it a feasible option to upgrade yearly or maybe every other year? The specs and design upgrades are minimal, so how long do you plan to stick with your current devices before considering an upgrade?
Probably at least until 2025, probably longer honestly with the way things are looking right now.With Apple silicone now available for three years, is it a feasible option to upgrade yearly or maybe every other year? The specs and design upgrades are minimal, so how long do you plan to stick with your current devices before considering an upgrade?
If not needing the power the 15" Air springs to mind. Can upgrade sooner and keep under the cover of Apple Care in a more portable package. Your not wrong regarding the M1, soon as I tried one was a done deal. Talk about lightening in the bottle...I don't really *need* the power of the MBP, but have gotten it because I wanted the higher-end machine. Have been "Day 1" purchaser of the last 2 generations: 2016 13" MBP (first gen of the butterfly / 4TB ports), and the 2021 14" M1 Pro MBP that I currently have.
Still more than enough for my needs. If/when Apple does another design refresh of the MBP line (could see it being 2025?) I might do it again.
These machines are fantastic, and agree with many who say the huge leap was to the M1 Apple Silicon. Unlikely to get that kind of a step-change again for a long time.
Why? Is there some compelling reason you need the most current MacOS? Is there anything associated with how you use your Mac that requires that you have the most current OS?If not, I'll still hang onto it for various reasons, but it'll be replaced as my main Mac by either an MBA15 or MBP16.
Why? Is there some compelling reason you need the most current MacOS? Is there anything associated with how you use your Mac that requires that you have the most current OS?
But for many, old software is just fine. And vast majority of security holes don’t matter as long as you practice smart communication etiquette (don’t click on unknown links or attachments, don’t give strangers physical access to your machine, don’t plug in unknown cables or memory sticks, etc).I will use older OSes for other tasks, but for my primary machine I will only use something up to date and patched. Yes, Apple does patches for the prior two OSes but they're also clear that they don't fix every hole with those patches - just the ones that don't take too much effort and share code with the current version.
And once they cut off Intel there's not going to be an OCLP option.
But for many, old software is just fine. And vast majority of security holes don’t matter as long as you practice smart communication etiquette (don’t click on unknown links or attachments, don’t give strangers physical access to your machine, don’t plug in unknown cables or memory sticks, etc).
I just feel that there was a lot of artificial fear of obsolescence that isn’t applicable for most users.
Yes, while that's a valid point, given I don't upgrade very often, I: 1) like having the "Pro" model (I will admit to myself that this is a factor, a small one, but one nonetheless), 2) like having 120Hz ProMotion (unfortunately I've gotten used to this as I've had the iPad Pro / iPhone Pros for so many years with it...), 3) like having the extra ports, in particular the HDMI port, as I often will take with me traveling and makes for easy-connection in conference rooms without needing to bring a different cable / adapter, 4) don't like having to deal with selling my old computer as frequently (and I find usually, Apple trade-in values for laptops are particularly lower than "fair market value" on the secondary market.If not needing the power the 15" Air springs to mind. Can upgrade sooner and keep under the cover of Apple Care in a more portable package. Your not wrong regarding the M1, soon as I tried one was a done deal. Talk about lightening in the bottle...