Big Sur
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There seems to be just one model. I ordered it with 16GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD.
Did you pick it up yet? If so, how is it?
Next week, probably.
Of course I'm not so insane to pay for such superfluous toys with my own money, hence I have to go through some bureaucracy to get it...
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I'm not so insane to pay for such superfluous toys with my own money
That was one of the big perks of our group practice. We had a "slush fund" that could be used for any "professional or educational" expense. So, that included meetings, and things we needed to do our jobs. I took advantage of that every year by getting a new desktop for myself every other year, and a new laptop the alternate years.
When I became an "independent contractor" for my group in 2015, I lost that benefit, of course.
Which is why my current computer is 2014 vintage.
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Next week, probably.
Of course I'm not so insane to pay for such superfluous toys with my own money, hence I have to go through some bureaucracy to get it.Annnnnd?
I have the package, but I haven't unwrapped it yet.
I've read about quite a few problems with the ARM processor related to Homebrew and a couple of programs I need. Rosetta does seem to be make things complicated, and things get messy when programs containing X86 and ARM code are mixed, or the same program exists in parallel for both.
Maybe I'll give it a try soon, but I hope that time will work in my favor.
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Homebrew, since version 3.0.0, can supposedly run natively on the Apple M1 silicon. I thought I had installed it on my M1 MacBook Air but apparently I haven't.
I found this site helpful to check whether a software title Is Apple Silicon Ready:
https://isapplesiliconready.comHave fun with your new M1 Mac!
Using various web applications that rely quite heavily on Java scripts, I have found that my M1 MacBook Air often gives noticeable speed boosts over my Intel Core i5 MacBook Air.
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ETA: Be sure you back up your stuff before this update, as it's a MAJOR one. Back up to the cloud, an external drive, clone your boot drive.
And then, back up again.lol.
I just let it fly. If it bricked the machine, so be it.
It did not brick my MacBook Pro. I am now running Big Sur. I think I was at least one or two major releases behind until last night.
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I think I was at least one or two major releases behind until last night.
I still have an old Mac running Snow Leopard, and it's good for many things. There, I have Adobe's Creative Suite 6 with a perpetual license, unlike the new Adobe Creative Cloud stuff where I have to pay recurring subscription fees if I want to keep using the new stuff. It also has an old school PDF implementation that can deal with some PDF things that Apple's newer PDF implementation cannot deal with.
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Next week, probably.
Of course I'm not so insane to pay for such superfluous toys with my own money, hence I have to go through some bureaucracy to get it.Annnnnd?
Finally.
I was positively surprised how well the migration worked, even across CPU architectures. This is one thing where Mac OS is lightyears ahead of Windows.
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For my M1 MacBook Air, I have decided early on that I will only install on it software that natively supports the Apple silicon. So far that plan is working out nicely. My M1 MacBook Air is performing very well.
The thing I really want to try is run an iOS or iPadOS app on the M1 Mac, but most iOS/iPadOS apps I care to use have not been verified to be able to run on an M1 Mac, and they ones that have been thus verified are not interesting enough for me to bother. So I will wait a bit longer for this.
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