Where did I say that?Are you really trying to say that Catalina is even remotely bug fee upon release? You are out of your mind.
Where did I say that?Are you really trying to say that Catalina is even remotely bug fee upon release? You are out of your mind.
OMG Every update over the past few months has done nothing but break stuff. What the heck is up with Apple lately?
And I just found out on the Apple Support Forums that the breaking of Safari iCloud tabs and history sync between iOS 13 and pre-Catalina macOS was intentional and will not be fixed. That's insane. That means a major feature of iCloud has dropped support for a one year old OS version.
Add to that, your perfectly good Smart Battery Case will stop working on iOS 13, Reminders will break older versions, Airplay controls for AppleTV no longer work, etc etc. All without warning and you can't revert iOS versions. Apple is neck deep in new **** and their legacy support is no longer a blip on their screen. They actually expect me to go out and buy new stuff when they break my old stuff with updates. They must be out of their minds. I've been their loyal customer for 30 years but that ***** is too much.
And speaking of their support forums (I refuse to use the word "community" bc it's anything but), F that place too. If you dare utter a minor criticism of the holy Apple, you get deleted with threats of banning. You don't ban me, I ban you Apple!
/r
Theoretically, that shouldn't be necessary. I would expect iOS 14, macOS 10.16 to be mostly bug fixes and stability fixes.I think it's a shame that you have the clueless updating to *anything* that's a .0... doesn't matter whether it's Apple software, or Microsoft software, or fill-in-the-blank multi-billion-dollar company. *Never* install a .0 unless you have *no choice*.
But you will never convince people of that.
Theoretically, that shouldn't be necessary. I would expect iOS 14, macOS 10.16 to be mostly bug fixes and stability fixes.
14.0 should be a stability release and therefore you shouldn't have to worry about waiting for a .1What, other than nothing, does that have to do with the point I was making?
The same should've been the case for 13.0. But it was not. Apple has fallen into the "release now fix later" mentality, and it has damaged their reputation as software developers greatly.14.0 should be a stability release and therefore you shouldn't have to worry about waiting for a .1
Do you have any idea what point you're actually making? I was assuming you just didn't have one.
13.0 wasn't a stability release...The same should've been the case for 13.0. But it was not. Apple has fallen into the "release now fix later" mentality, and it has damaged their reputation as software developers greatly.
I should not need to wait 6 months to update the OS because Apple decides they need to pump out a new OS every year without extensive bug testing.
Really? There was no such thing as a stability release when I was doing OS development in the late 90s-early 2000s. We released OSes in a usable state. Were there bugs? Of course. But we didn't throw broken garbage to our clients and tell them to wait for the next one to fix it.13.0 wasn't a stability release...
Maybe you just don't understand major software releases.
Really? There was no such thing as a stability release when I was doing OS development in the late 90s-early 2000s. We released OSes in a usable state. Were there bugs? Of course. But we didn't throw broken garbage to our clients and tell them to wait for the next one to fix it.
Maybe I am just a relic of the personal computer era, but that is some extremely backward thinking.
Windows ME was a botched release. I know that. I was working on the NT line, which was done following the classic development system. I am not entirely sure what went wrong with the 9x team, other than that Windows 9x was a flawed system to begin with. But to throw a whole decade in the trash because of one botched release is absurd. Surely Mac OS should not fall into the same pitfalls, as its foundation is rock solid. It is the poor work of the developers and bug testers that have caused this. If that wasn't true, why would they be revamping their development process?Except, you're not being honest. Windows Me came out in that time period.
14.0 should be a stability release and therefore you shouldn't have to worry about waiting for a .1
The fact is, today, we exist in a feature-based OS environment. It's not just updating, it's adding features. Adding features increasing the influx of bugs.Windows ME was a botched release. I know that. I was working on the NT line, which was done following the classic development system. I am not entirely sure what went wrong with the 9x team, other than that Windows 9x was a flawed system to begin with. But to throw a whole decade in the trash because of one botched release is absurd. Surely Mac OS should not fall into the same pitfalls, as its foundation is rock solid. It is the poor work of the developers and bug testers that have caused this. If that wasn't true, why would they be revamping their development process?
Better get that meter fixed.I can only assume that's sarcasm.
Windows Vista/7 is an interesting point. They actually had most of the MS caused issues fixed by Vista Service Pack 2, but Windows 7 was definitely a refinement OS. It is to be somewhat expected (although ridiculous considering the 6 year dev time of Vista) that a release that totally overdoes the previous in terms of UI and feature set is going to have some bugs. But a good chunk of the issues users ran into with Vista were drivers, which was the responsibility of the third part hardware makers. If good drivers were available at launch, the hate we saw for Vista would've been much smaller.The fact is, today, we exist in a feature-based OS environment. It's not just updating, it's adding features. Adding features increasing the influx of bugs.
This goes back to the mid 2000s, where Vista was a major paradigm shift for Windows but never reached fruition until Windows 7 which was a stability release.
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Better get that meter fixed.
Really? There was no such thing as a stability release when I was doing OS development in the late 90s-early 2000s. We released OSes in a usable state. Were there bugs? Of course. But we didn't throw broken garbage to our clients and tell them to wait for the next one to fix it.
Maybe I am just a relic of the personal computer era, but that is some extremely backward thinking.
Well, it is a fact that the development cycle has changed dramatically since the 90s. For one, you are talking about a time when OS was still delivered primarily via disc and not internet downloads. That is significant since you've got one shot to deliver the goods as you couldn't just push out a major fix to OS releases for customers to download. Conventional wisdom in the IT world was to wait for a service pack before installing the next Windows OS, but much of the world was still on dial up and unless you had a TechNet subscription, getting the latest and greatest wasn't easy. Microsoft products were notoriously buggy in that time frame(including NT 4.0).
What you’re talking about is using customers as beta testers. I use my computer for important stuff. I don’t want to beta test.
Recently, I got a letter in the mail saying my Car insurance had been cancelled because I didn’t pay my car insurance bill. Which was weird because I. know I had out a reminder in the Reminders app to remind me to pay it the day after my credit card statement printed. I was low on cash and needed to put off paying my car insurance until the next month. I looked on my iPhone which had been upgraded to iOS 13 and my reminder wasn't in there, weird. So I called my car insurance, they reinstated me, I paid them, everything was fixed. But apparently I had driven around for 20 days without car insurance. Good thing I did it get into a wreck.
A week later, I noticed on my iPad that I rarely use and hadn’t upgraded to iOS 13, the reminder to pay my car insurance was in the Reminder app there. Which is weird, because for years I had been effortlessly syncing Reminders between my iPhone and iPad without thinking about it, Then I noticed on my iPad’s reminder app there were two other reminders that were saying stuff about “This reminder’s list has been upgraded. Please click here to see why.”
Basically, because Apple decided to break Remders syncing when you upgrade one of your devices to iOS 13 but not the other, my car insurance got cancelled for awhile.
Thinking it’s okay if we screw up customers software temporarily because we can easily download a fix later is a horrible way to run a company. I hope that’s not what Apple is thinking.
Basically, because Apple decided to break Remders syncing when you upgrade one of your devices to iOS 13 but not the other, my car insurance got cancelled for awhile.
Apple expects you to go to the latest version of iOS and macOS. They make it free and easy.
This sounds like a you problem, OP.
I’ve been hearing good things about how Lenovo handles warranties. Probably gonna try them out.
i hate on my high sierra machines i get constantly harrassed to update to Mojave even though Apple's not playing nice with NVIDIA anymore, it should be able to suppress the nagging when it detects the kexts/GPU being used but NO...
im still mad about apple removing RSS from safari or locking down extensions to the inferior AppStore approach they do now.
im also annoyed about the new deprecation of dashboard and they're are dozens of other nits i could pick, but the fact is Apple doesnt care about me, my 30+ years of buying macs or the average 10K a year i spend on apple products.
because a true apple fan in modern apple's eyes is a barely computer literate, cash machine that likes closed platforms, microtransactions and whose most strenuous workload is browsing facebook while using the modern more neutered version of pages.
they dont care about the dedicated IT professional with computer science degree's that wants to think different
That's a very arrogant and ignorant statement. It completely ignores that the reality can be very different for different people.
I jumped on the Apple kart with the arrival of OS X (= Unix) and has been advocating for it for years. However, Catalina is a big problem for me and my family; we have many apps we depend on that are 32-bit and for which there are no upgrades available. Apple has not only forced me to jump through hoops to keep Catalina off my machines but also made upgrading to newer hardware a non-option.
This is a really difficult situation and there are no good options available for me. At least, for Windows applications I could keep running them in a VM, but with Apple I'm screwed (you can only legally run macOS VMs on Apple hardware).
It's not that we are asking Apple to support serial drives or Cassettes, we are simply asking for the continued function of apps whose functionality has not yet been matched by a modern product. There are plenty of apps that are 32 bit or have enough 32 bit code to stop functioning on Catalina that are still part of people's workflow. People may claim that they need to "move on" but without the porting of missing functions to newer versions of these apps or creations of a new version of a type of app it is not feasible.You’re right. How dare Apple end support of old technology?
See how silly you sound?