blastdoor
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macOS 27 will be the last operating system to fully support Rosetta 2
Edgecrusherr said:I don’t mind them dropping hardware support about 7 or so years, but I really like having the power to run older apps if I need them. I’m not expecting miracles, but the Rosetta 2 layer is very modern and secure, there shouldn’t be any good reason why they can’t leave it there for 10-15 years. Hopefully what they’re leaving intact for old games will actually be enough to continue playing all of those old games, for many years to come. I have some really
good ones what are no longer developed, including the Enterprise D simulator, and some emulators (not just game emulators either).
I'd find that to be a more exciting announcement than just about anything at WWDC this year, especially if they provided easy access to old software at reasonable (or free) prices. -
macOS 27 will be the last operating system to fully support Rosetta 2
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Apple's new and sweeping user interface design is called 'Liquid Glass'
charlesn said:blastdoor said:But the elephant in the room is that Apple is noticeably behind in the most important and exciting new technology since the web. They can catch up and I think they will catch up. But they are clearly behind right now and there’s no fresh coat of paint that can cover that up.Apple’s writing tools are silky little doodles compared to what ChatGPT was doing for her. And I’ve used ChatGPT for much heavier lifting than her example.If you don’t understand how behind Apple is on this critically important technology, it means you’re also behind and are missing out. If ever there were a time when FOMO is actually appropriate, this is it. If you’re not making effective use of this “new” class of AI tools, you’re in trouble (unless you’re retired or a trust fund kid). -
Metal 4 & Game Porting Toolkit 3 boost frame rate & ray tracing performance
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Apple's new and sweeping user interface design is called 'Liquid Glass'
I’m not necessarily opposed to a fresh coat of paint. And making the UI more consistent in appearance across devices can be a positive.There are also some new features here and there that seem like genuinely useful improvements.But the elephant in the room is that Apple is noticeably behind in the most important and exciting new technology since the web. They can catch up and I think they will catch up. But they are clearly behind right now and there’s no fresh coat of paint that can cover that up.