Features lost across versions of macOS
Features lost across versions of macOS
10.10 Yosemite • A legible user interface
Oh burn.
I’ve been using OS X / macOS for over 20 years now, often alongside some Linux or *BSD distro or another. For the past 10 I’ve been exclusively using macOS, but recently I’ve started thinking of ditching it for Linux.
The OS just gets more closed down over time, includes more and more really fucking creepy surveillance features, loses features, and gains bugs. Apple also has an incredibly annoying habit of coming up with new and possibly useful features that they introduce and then just leave to languish, or replace with a similar but more broken one; Automator & Shortcuts is a pretty good example of this. Or Aperture & iPhoto/Photos.
This program written in C will help you to automatically install everything you need and configure it so that you can run Photoshop on your Linux without problems. - CSMarckitus/Photoshop
Aperture & iPhoto
Retroactive has been discontinued. You should transition from Retroactive to supported apps such as Music, iTunes for Windows, iMazing, Photos, Darktable, Lightroom Classic, and DaVinci Resolve. - ...
Anyone arguing for Mobile Me and PowerPC apps is a crazy person.
This is a bizarre list that lacks context. Also, much of this functionality still exists, but it’s been rebranded or moved.
You’d be surprised how much of this stuff has new ports, community ports, or can be run in an emulator.
Here is EV Nova:
escape-velocity.games
That said, IMHO, compatibility from the Apple / Microsoft isn’t what really made this one hard to play. The developer went out of business and turned off some servers that the game needed. It looks like the community had to build off of a cracked copy of the game.
The big one for me is Time Machine lost the ability to delete that has already been backed up.
So if you download a large file, and it fills your backup drive… that’s it. You need to either buy a new drive or erase it completely (losing all your historical backups).
Not sure either, and kali did the same. …stackexchange.com/…/what-are-the-practical-diffe…
Of course, someone posted on stackexchange a nicely detailed post.
The bash that comes with macOS is a fork of the last version distributed under version 2 of the GPL, most likely because Apple doesn’t want to distribute GPLv3 code as part of macOS, and it is ancient. They keep it updated with security fixes but nothing else, so it has gradually become less and less compatible with current bash.
Since zsh has become a popular bash replacement and it isn’t GPLv3, they switched the default shell to that.