This guy...
only a rich kid like him could consider a "clumsy" accessory to be a bigger problem than the whole thing bending with the force of a newborn.
Now it bends with the force of a newborn? Geez, it's getting worse..
This guy...
only a rich kid like him could consider a "clumsy" accessory to be a bigger problem than the whole thing bending with the force of a newborn.
anyone here with an ipad pro 10.5 ever had issues with touch responsiveness?
might wanna try resetting it and setting it up from scratch without a backup.I haven't had any such issues with my 10.5. My only "problem" is that battery life seems shorter than on my old Mini 2, but that's possibly because we play more games on the Pro.
What a jerk.
These bend videos definitely give the impression that you shouldn't put this in a bag with literature etc. And the one I saw was the 11" to boot, 12,9" already had bending issues in the past, the thinness craze surely didn't help.
Any tablet of that size is going to bend. I don't think people purposefully trying to bend their machines is at all a useful metric when discussing durability, especially since the reality of simple physics means this will always be a bigger issue the larger a machine you have ( I laughed at the bend video where the guy said 'it appears the weakest points are in the center'—like no shit any school age kid who has taken a semester of physics can tell you that every product's weak point will be in the middle when you bend stuff by getting leverage.)
The tradeoff Apple and everyone makes is how many people are going to abuse their products and benefit from a thicker product versus how many people are going to be happy with the weight savings. And they go with the latter group every time because most people aren't regularly bringing their machines in contact with razor blades and holding open flames to their screens.
Like Marco, I don't pay attention to this, and I'm not a "rich kid" buying new products every year. I just don't have any of these problems—with Lightning cables, with chargers, with my phone bending, with my computer ports "dying in half the time", with my hardware. Either I'm just magic, or the difference is in usage and thus damage is entirely preventable.
"This is like Play-Doh"or at least as durable as the older one (because remember if it was as strong as the older one this wouldn't have happened)
And let's not be naive, yes weight reductions are nice but aside from the iPad 3 no one ever complained about the weight of the iPad so if they used a thicker or more robust solution there no one would have ever complained.
Like Marco yours seems to be an approach of "screw you, got mine" where since it doesn't affect you then it means it's not important, for example i have had more than a couple of times (4-5 iirc) where Magsafe chargers cables just get tore up for no apparent reason, i have no kids nor pets and the charger always stays in place and let me tell you paying ~70€ each time because Apple can't be damned to wrap the charger's cable that doesn't decompose when in contact with air is angering... same happened with Lightning cables until i wised up and decided to buy a third party nylon one.
People here isn't demanding to have everything perfect but just something apparently worth the money one is paying, it's not asking the impossible to have a sturdy device or at least as durable as the older one (because remember if it was as strong as the older one this wouldn't have happened) especially when you raise up the prices for no real apparent vision and when everybody knows you have crazy high margins on everything you sell.
You know you are right about the 12.9' being too heavy, i honestly didn't think about it because for me as a product was totally outside my radar but that's totally on me. My bad.Yes there were. A number of reviews specifically pointed out that the size and weight of the previous 12.9" for example made it more unweildly, especially if trying to use it with a keyboard, and that it makes getting the larger screen more desirable than previously. And as pointed out, the old tablets bent too.
I'm not saying "screw you, got mine". I'm pointing out the very obvious reality that isn't a dramatic issue for most people. No one if forcing you to buy these products.
The idea your Magsafe chargers just tore themselves apart "for no reason" is pretty hilarious. If I can somehow get through college and five years of on-the-road pro work with my Magsafe chargers not even fraying around the cable connectors and my original generation Lightning cables (to say nothing of all the 30pin I still have lying around) in perfect condition, I'm going to say that it all comes down to your handling.
Yes there were. A number of reviews specifically pointed out that the size and weight of the previous 12.9" for example made it more unweildly, especially if trying to use it with a keyboard, and that it makes getting the larger screen more desirable than previously. And as pointed out, the old tablets bent too.
On which machine are you running it?Upgrading to Mojave was a huge mistake. A bunch of my apps dont work, including some Creative Cloud apps and performance just feels sloppier. Takes like 5-6 minutes for Mail to populate, App Store shows blank screens, opening apps take so much longer than before. Jesus. I reinstalled Mojave again, reset my pram and stuff and it still feels noticeably worse. Ugh.
Eagerly awaiting the next mini update.
I had the 12.9" iPad Pro for a while. I could definitely see it being unwieldy with a keyboard. I mostly used it for drawing though, and for that it was great. It also generally stayed at home, or carried in my briefcase.
Some people need more common sense, iPads aren't made of admantium. Even if the frame was stronger -- which I'm not saying it shouldn't be, they probably should've used Apple Watch quality aluminum and made it thicker -- you've got a huge piece of glass which focused pressure could crack.
We are talking about the first or second most valuable company on earth right now and the one that has the most cash reserves... if they don't do something is not because they can't do it but because they don't want to. It's ridiculous to think otherwise.If Apple was able to make it with tougher aluminum, they probably would have—I imagine there's some limitations with how much they can produce (the same way that they aren't making MacBooks out of it) and so they prioritize the smaller devices.
The suggestion by Gruber recently that the reason Apple isn't putting USB-C cables into its iPhone boxes yet because they physically don't have enough connectors makes a lot more sense than the idea Apple is trying to penny-pinch. They are the only ones aggressively pushing a USB-C future.
oh wow that a very recent machine to feel slower with a new OS... really strange.Late 2015 rMBP, i7 + 16gb ram. Maybe I should have waited a little longer to update like I did with HS.
We are talking about the first or second most valuable company on earth right now and the one that has the most cash reserves... if they don't do something is not because they can't do it but because they don't want to. It's ridiculous to think otherwise.
oh wow that a very recent machine to feel slower with a new OS... really strange.
Are you aware that in Shenzen alone there are countless companies that have the only purpose of selling and producing MFI products and cables in general that can fulfill every order you make? This isn't a supply/engineering/technology problem, never was.All the money in the world doesn't solve engineering, technology, or supply problems.
If Apple was able to make it with tougher aluminum, they probably would have—I imagine there's some limitations with how much they can produce (the same way that they aren't making MacBooks out of it) and so they prioritize the smaller devices.
The suggestion by Gruber recently that the reason Apple isn't putting USB-C cables into its iPhone boxes yet because they physically don't have enough connectors makes a lot more sense than the idea Apple is trying to penny-pinch. They are the only ones aggressively pushing a USB-C future.
This might be one of Gruber's all-time worst takes.
USB-C connectors are an absolute commodity component at this stage. It's new to iOS but even Apple, let alone the industry at large, have been using them for years. The OLED X screens last year was a potential supply chain problem; this definitely isn't.
Also the idea that only Apple are pushing USB-C is fanciful.
I have a 2013 version of that same machine and Mojave works fine for me. At least not those issues you have. All I have is the Finder eating up RAM and causing slowdown if I don't quit it once in a while which I think might be blamed on iCloud Drive but I haven't proven it since I'm afraid to turn it off and have it delete my files or something. But I digress.Late 2015 rMBP, i7 + 16gb ram. Maybe I should have waited a little longer to update like I did with HS.
I was considering getting 32 GB of RAM for my new Mac mini whenever I decide to get it even though I don't need it. How far down the line would 32 GB become close to the standard? I will definitely get 16 GB.
I have a 2013 version of that same machine and Mojave works fine for me. At least not those issues you have. All I have is the Finder eating up RAM and causing slowdown if I don't quit it once in a while which I think might be blamed on iCloud Drive but I haven't proven it since I'm afraid to turn it off and have it delete my files or something. But I digress.
Use a software audio/midi device as a "mic" to feed it your output. BOOM 3D works wonders.hey ya'll, i just upgraded to Mojave and discovered the video screencap option. i'm on a 2k15 air and i'm wondering if there's any way to capture audio using the cmd shift 5 capture function or if im still stuck with Quicktime and soundflower
Hell I'd say 8 is still pretty standard for the most part, but depends what you plan to do with it. 16 should be fine for a while either way.I was considering getting 32 GB of RAM for my new Mac mini whenever I decide to get it even though I don't need it. How far down the line would 32 GB become close to the standard? I will definitely get 16 GB.
Your other post made it sound like indexing or something was happening in the background. How long did you use it before giving up on it, and did you use Activity Monitor or something to try to figure out what was happening?I don't know if it was changed for Mojave or if it's more weirdness but I can't open Finder windows from Spotlight anymore. "Finder" doesn't show up on the search results like it used to.
Almost everyone I know had a decent experience with Mojave so I feel like my machine is just cursed.
For those of you that own the new Mac mini, has "coil whine" been a problem for any of you? Over at MacRumors, I see a lot of people experiencing this problem and even returning their machines over it. Is it really that much of a problem? I run my CPU fan at max speed (via smcfancontrol) so I wouldn't even hear the noise most likely.
I also have heard issues of crashing and the T2 chip, but this seems to be less common.
Right now, the minimum I would be spending is $1,600 if/when I do get the machine.
- Core i3 (probably wouldn't need the hex i5 coming from the 2014 2.6 dual i5)
- 16 GB of RAM
- 512 GB SSD
- Applecare+
I thought about 10 GB Ethernet but I am unsure about that.
It just happened.. After a year I got my arrow keys stuck on the 2017 MacBook Pro 13" TB.
I'll be fixing the keyboard and sell the computer so I can order the 2018 15"... I also found out I should always get a 15" due to the dGPU (I connect to 2 4K monitors at work and the 13" is suffering already)
For those of you that own the new Mac mini, has "coil whine" been a problem for any of you? Over at MacRumors, I see a lot of people experiencing this problem and even returning their machines over it. Is it really that much of a problem? I run my CPU fan at max speed (via smcfancontrol) so I wouldn't even hear the noise most likely.
Are the dual 4K displays the only reason you need the GPU? An eGPU setup would be another option, although only really makes sense if the price of everything works out and/or you prefer the 13" form factor.It just happened.. After a year I got my arrow keys stuck on the 2017 MacBook Pro 13" TB.
I'll be fixing the keyboard and sell the computer so I can order the 2018 15"... I also found out I should always get a 15" due to the dGPU (I connect to 2 4K monitors at work and the 13" is suffering already)
Yeah that one is hard to decide on cause it's a good deal...but might be years before you can actually take advantage of it. Or you spend a crapload on other stuff to take advantage of it now.Given that 10gE is a $100 addition and you can't replace it easily yourself (and external solutions are kind of annoying or bulky) I'd just bite the bullet and upgrade it now, especially if you intend on using this machine for a couple of years as >1gE devices and networks continue to proliferate.
Are the dual 4K displays the only reason you need the GPU? An eGPU setup would be another option, although only really makes sense if the price of everything works out and/or you prefer the 13" form factor.
Yeah that one is hard to decide on cause it's a good deal...but might be years before you can actually take advantage of it. Or you spend a crapload on other stuff to take advantage of it now.
Might get it cause I keep my minis around, this one will probably eventually be a server down the line and hopefully 10 gig stuff is more common and affordable by then.