iMac – Valerian's Realm https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com Only the Autodidact is Free Sat, 16 Jan 2021 00:45:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-beyond-the-veil-1-32x32.jpg iMac – Valerian's Realm https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com 32 32 Apple Plans First iMac Desktop Redesign In Nearly a Decade https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/apple-plans-first-imac-desktop-redesign-in-nearly-a-decade/ Sat, 16 Jan 2021 00:45:00 +0000 https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/apple-plans-first-imac-desktop-redesign-in-nearly-a-decade/ In addition to upgraded MacBook Pros, Bloomberg reports that Apple is also “planning the first redesign of its iMac all-in-one desktop computer since 2012,” as it shifts away from Intel to its own silicon. From the report: The new models will slim down the thick black borders around the screen and do away with the sizable metal chin area in favor of a design similar to Apple’s Pro Display XDR monitor. These iMacs will have a flat back, moving away from the curved rear of the current iMac. Apple is planning to launch two versions — codenamed J456 and J457 — to replace the existing 21.5-inch and 27-inch models later this year, the people said, asking not to be identified because the products are not yet announced. The new models will use next-generation versions of Apple’s Mac processors like the upcoming 2021 MacBook Pros. The iMac redesign will be one of the biggest visual updates to any Apple product this year, according to people familiar with the company’s roadmap. Apple is also working on a pair of new Mac Pro desktop computers, its priciest Mac machines that don’t come with a screen included, the people said. One version is a direct update to the current Mac Pro and will continue to use the same design as the version launched in 2019. Apple has discussed continuing to use Intel processors for that model rather than moving to its own chips. The second version, however, will use Apple’s own processors and be less than half the size of the current Mac Pro. The design will feature a mostly aluminum exterior and could invoke nostalgia for the Power Mac G4 Cube, a short-lived smaller version of the Power Mac, an earlier iteration of the Mac Pro. Apple has also reportedly started development of a cheaper external monitor to sell alongside the Pro Display XDR. “The cheaper monitor would feature a screen geared more for consumer than professional use and wouldn’t have the brightness and contrast ratio of the top-tier offering,” reports Bloomberg.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source:
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/21/01/15/2140219/apple-plans-first-imac-desktop-redesign-in-nearly-a-decade?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

]]>
Ask Slashdot: Did You Upgrade To macOS Big Sur? https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/ask-slashdot-did-you-upgrade-to-macos-big-sur/ Fri, 13 Nov 2020 23:20:00 +0000 https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/ask-slashdot-did-you-upgrade-to-macos-big-sur/ Yesterday, Apple released the latest version of macOS: macOS Big Sur (also known as macOS 11.0) and the rollout was anything but smooth. Many users have complained about Apple services such as iMessage, or even Apple Pay, not working for them. Personally, my 5K iMac (2013), which isn’t even compatible with Big Sur, ground to a halt yesterday, as I was unable to open up Google Chrome or any of my Adobe Creative Cloud apps. Even navigating my system preferences was painfully slow. According to developer Jeff Johnson, the reason apps were failing to launch was because a process called “trustd” failed to attempt to connect to Apple’s Online Certificate Status Protocol website (oscp.apple.com). “[D]enying the connection between “trustd” and oscp.apple.com fixes the issue, as does disabling a Mac’s connection to the internet,” notes Apple Insider. Slashdot reader shanen shares their experience: The story is about different problems, so I’ll just start with my own anecdote. The 12GB download was amazingly slow. I’m being charitable and willing to attribute that to high demand. Eventually it did finish. The installation process didn’t seem to be too bad. Then I did something with the Mac and it immediately wanted another upgrade. Turned out to be a double upgrade of two slightly different versions of some tools, but another (slow) GB bites the dust. Meanwhile, it decided to do that double-upgrade again? One of those two must have succeeded, because the third attempt failed with the appropriate notice that it had succeeded. Bottom line? Not reassuring, but it seems to be okay now. I should have made a note about what triggered the extra GB, but I don’t think I did anything unusual that should have required an OS-level extension of the system. Ergo, whatever was going on, I think it belonged in the original 12 GB download… Disclaimer needed: I just had an extremely negative interaction with Apple about the battery swelling problem in the course of attempting to consider whether or not I should upgrade my old MacBook Pro. It started on the Apple website, which was amazingly unhelpful even after it dangled a trade-in offer of some kind. Then it continued with a long phone call to a very kind and friendly person who seemed to know not so much, though he eventually led me to the search that revealed “Optimized Battery Charging” as an option that my old Mac cannot use. By the way, new iPhones apparently have it, too. So right now I think Apple finally figured out how to stop the battery swelling, but I am still screwed. I regard the Mac as a sunk cost, and the second rule of sunk cost is to NOT throw good money after bad. The first rule is that no one wants to talk about their mistakes, eh? So did your upgrade to Big Sur go better than mine? I really hope so. Why share the misery? We have plenty of that with “He whose name need not be mentioned” anymore.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source:
https://ask.slashdot.org/story/20/11/13/2231219/ask-slashdot-did-you-upgrade-to-macos-big-sur?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

]]>
Netflix Will Only Stream In 4K To Macs That Have a T2 Security Chip https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/netflix-will-only-stream-in-4k-to-macs-that-have-a-t2-security-chip/ Fri, 02 Oct 2020 02:10:00 +0000 https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/netflix-will-only-stream-in-4k-to-macs-that-have-a-t2-security-chip/ According to a Netflix support document, an Apple T2 Security chip is required to stream Netflix in 4K HDR on a Mac. “What that hardware requirement means is that only recent Macs have the ability to play UHD content from Netflix,” reports Engadget. From the report: Here’s the full list of T2-equipped Macs: 2018 or later MacBook Pro, 2018 or later MacBook Air, 2018 Mac mini, 2019 Mac Pro, iMac Pro and 2020 iMac. If you’re not sure whether your Mac has the necessary hardware, you can find out by following the steps Apple details on its website. The Verge suggests the requirement could have something to do with the T2 chip’s ability to process HEVC encoded videos. On its webpage for the iMac, Apple says the coprocessor can transcode HEVC video up to twice as fast as its previous generation T1 chip. If Netflix is encoding streams using HEVC, that could explain the requirement. Whatever the case, we’ve reached out to both Apple and Netflix for more information, and we’ll update this article when we hear back from them. There are some other requirements too. In addition to having a T2-equipped Mac, you’ll need macOS Big Sur, a Premium Netflix subscription, and the Safari browser — other browsers will limit you to 720p on a Mac.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source:
https://it.slashdot.org/story/20/10/01/2252257/netflix-will-only-stream-in-4k-to-macs-that-have-a-t2-security-chip?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

]]>
The 20th Anniversary of the Power Mac G4 Cube https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/the-20th-anniversary-of-the-power-mac-g4-cube/ Sat, 25 Jul 2020 10:00:00 +0000 https://vr.staging.stswebhosting.com/geek/the-20th-anniversary-of-the-power-mac-g4-cube/ Steven Levy from Wired remembers the Power Mac G4 Cube, which debuted July 19, 2000. From the report: I was reminded of this last week, as I listened to a cassette tape recorded 20 years prior, almost to the day. It documented a two-hour session with Jobs in Cupertino, California, shortly before the launch. The main reason he had summoned me to Apple’s headquarters was sitting under the over of a dark sheet of fabric on the long table in the boardroom of One Infinite Loop. “We have made the coolest computer ever,” he told me. “I guess I’ll just show it to you.” He yanked off the fabric, exposing an 8-inch stump of transparent plastic with a block of electronics suspended inside. It looked less like a computer than a toaster born from an immaculate conception between Philip K. Dick and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. (But the fingerprints were, of course, Jony Ive’s.) Alongside it were two speakers encased in Christmas-ornament-sized, glasslike spheres. “The Cube,” Jobs said, in a stage whisper, hardly containing his excitement. He began by emphasizing that while the Cube was powerful, it was air-cooled. (Jobs hated fans. Hated them.) He demonstrated how it didn’t have a power switch, but could sense a wave of your hand to turn on the juice. He showed me how Apple had eliminated the tray that held CDs — with the Cube, you just hovered the disk over the slot and the machine inhaled it. And then he got to the plastics. It was as if Jobs had taken to heart that guy in The Graduate who gave career advice to Benjamin Braddock. “We are doing more with plastics than anyone else in the world,” he told me. “These are all specially formulated, and it’s all proprietary, just us. It took us six months just to formulate these plastics. They make bulletproof vests out of it! And it’s incredibly sturdy, and it’s just beautiful! There’s never been anything like that. How do you make something like that? Nobody ever made anything like that! Isn’t that beautiful? I think it’s stunning!” For one thing, the price was prohibitive — by the time you bought the display, it was almost three times the price of an iMac and even more than some PowerMacs. By and large, people don’t spend their art budget on computers. That wasn’t the only issue with the G4 Cube. Those plastics were hard to manufacture, and people reported flaws. The air cooling had problems. If you left a sheet of paper on top of the device, it would shut down to prevent overheating. And because it had no On button, a stray wave of your hand would send the machine into action, like it or not. In any case, the G4 Cube failed to push buttons on the computer-buying public. Jobs told me it would sell millions. But Apple sold fewer than 150,000 units.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source:
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/20/07/25/0352256/the-20th-anniversary-of-the-power-mac-g4-cube?utm_source=rss1.0mainlinkanon&utm_medium=feed

]]>