+Frank B. Subscriber² Posted May 22, 2015 Subscriber² Share Posted May 22, 2015 iOS 9 & OS X 10.11 to bring Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Obry Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 Sounds good to me. Would be happy to see a more polished OS on my iPhone 6. Also excited to see Swift reaching ABI stability. Makes it a lot more valuable language to learn instead of Obj-C (which I shudder each time I try to even read)... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Quillz Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 Good, it's just what iOS and OS X need. I hope "smaller apps" translates to a complete rebuild of iTunes. Strip it down to music playback only. Move podcast support, video support and app support into either new apps or other existing apps. I also still have terrible luck with iTunes in the Cloud, it's still almost completely broken for me (and many others). If there truly is a focus on stability in iOS 9/OS X 10.11, this would be a great time to really fix all the annoyances that presently exist with Apple products. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beyond Godlike Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 OSX really needs this. After trying a new MBP 13" Retina, and seeing the huge amounts of UI lag and such from the i7 ver with 16GB ram, I ended up returning it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Argi Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 "Rootless" sounds a lot like UAC in some ways. Very interested to hear more about how it works under the hood! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
protocol7 Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 OSX really needs this. After trying a new MBP 13" Retina, and seeing the huge amounts of UI lag and such from the i7 ver with 16GB ram, I ended up returning it. With so many developers dropping Snow Leopard support I finally moved to Mavericks a few months back. Despite having fairly beefy hardware it doesn't run anywhere near as smoothly as Snow Leopard did. So I'd really like to see them work on the performance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Depicus Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 OSX really needs this. After trying a new MBP 13" Retina, and seeing the huge amounts of UI lag and such from the i7 ver with 16GB ram, I ended up returning it. Really !!! because I run on a 4 year old with 4GB and never noticed UI lag ever. Maybe you were using it wrong. +Warwagon 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Beyond Godlike Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 Really !!! because I run on a 4 year old with 4GB and never noticed UI lag ever. Maybe you were using it wrong. Not sure if dumb or sarcastic. Its a known issue though with the Retina macs. My Air works flawlessly right now.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+virtorio MVC Posted May 22, 2015 MVC Share Posted May 22, 2015 Just fix this: f0rk_b0mb 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Depicus Posted May 22, 2015 Share Posted May 22, 2015 Not sure if dumb or sarcastic. Its a known issue though with the Retina macs. My Air works flawlessly right now.. Dumb, I did not know there was an issue with retina macs. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The_Decryptor Veteran Posted May 23, 2015 Veteran Share Posted May 23, 2015 Dumb, I did not know there was an issue with retina macs. The only issue I've got with a retina mac is image retention, the UI responsiveness is fine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lucas Posted May 23, 2015 Share Posted May 23, 2015 My MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Late 2013) with 4GB RAM also experiences the UI lag issues, very often I may say, although it has improved a bit in the past updates since I first bought it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
game_over Posted May 23, 2015 Share Posted May 23, 2015 I have the first retina 15" macbook pro (2012) and not noticed any UI lag what so ever... no problems at all in fact, it still runs flawless (i7, 8gb). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tiagosilva29 Posted May 25, 2015 Share Posted May 25, 2015 Good. I've been using an iPhone for about two weeks in "phone mode": no apps, 1 hour of 2G calls, some SMS texting, contact handling and that's it. There some crashes already due to exceptions, and the battery lasts about 2 days and 10--17 hours. I don't find this acceptable. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+Matthew S. Subscriber² Posted May 25, 2015 Subscriber² Share Posted May 25, 2015 "Rootless" sounds a lot like UAC in some ways. Very interested to hear more about how it works under the hood! Except OS X (and most if not all Unixes) by design had UAC before windows had UAC (all it is, is elevating to Root privileges). Hence why when you try to edit a system file it requires your initial user's password on Mac OS X. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adrynalyne Posted May 25, 2015 Share Posted May 25, 2015 Except OS X (and most if not all Unixes) by design had UAC before windows had UAC (all it is, is elevating to Root privileges). Hence why when you try to edit a system file it requires your initial user's password on Mac OS X. Which is why I always found it amusing when people used to (and may still) say they were going to OS X and GNU/Linux because of UAC disrupting their computer usage. siah1214 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
+Matthew S. Subscriber² Posted May 25, 2015 Subscriber² Share Posted May 25, 2015 It's admitted less invasive on Unixes, on windows UAC blocks you from doing anything else, while a good thing (the window doesn't get lost to the fodder) it's annoying as hell. Also you really don't see/notice the Elevation prompt much on OS X. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
adrynalyne Posted May 25, 2015 Share Posted May 25, 2015 It's admitted less invasive on Unixes, on windows UAC blocks you from doing anything else, while a good thing (the window doesn't get lost to the fodder) it's annoying as hell. Also you really don't see/notice the Elevation prompt much on OS X. I see it about as often as I see UAC on Windows. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The_Decryptor Veteran Posted May 26, 2015 Veteran Share Posted May 26, 2015 You don't get the prompts much on OS X because they weaken the security to let average users install applications (Something that normally require root on *NIX installations) For a home computer that's fine, for a corporate install they'd want that locked down. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rudy Posted May 30, 2015 Share Posted May 30, 2015 Not sure if dumb or sarcastic. Its a known issue though with the Retina macs. My Air works flawlessly right now.. Really? Are you sure it affects the 15" rMBP?? I gave my old 2012 to my wife and it's still running great (no lag at all) and I'm typing this from a late 2013 15" rMBP which also has absolutely no lag running at the highest possible resolution (while my wife runs it at the default resolution) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DeadEndAccount Posted June 10, 2015 Share Posted June 10, 2015 Which is why I always found it amusing when people used to (and may still) say they were going to OS X and GNU/Linux because of UAC disrupting their computer usage. The problem is that these end users blame Microsoft when what they should be doing is blaming lazy developers who wrote their software assuming that it was running in administrator mode all the time resulting in the mess that exists today. Unfortunately that is due in part with Microsoft failing to enforce good security standards 20 years ago all for the sake of 'ease of use' and 'backwards compatibility'. Depicus 1 Share Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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