chinacat
Moderator
AAPL Long since 2006
Posts: 4,433
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Post by chinacat on Oct 30, 2021 7:36:13 GMT -8
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Post by hyci004 on Oct 30, 2021 9:06:39 GMT -8
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chinacat
Moderator
AAPL Long since 2006
Posts: 4,433
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Post by chinacat on Oct 31, 2021 5:11:24 GMT -8
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Post by BillH on Oct 31, 2021 7:34:40 GMT -8
Can't wait to hear Tim's (we believe that privacy is a basic human right) response to this.
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chinacat
Moderator
AAPL Long since 2006
Posts: 4,433
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Post by chinacat on Oct 31, 2021 10:36:44 GMT -8
MacWorld has a comprehensive comparison of the current crop of M1 chips in M1 Pro vs M1 Max: Apple has already delivered a chip that’s too fast. Honestly, nothing we (or most Mac users) do will tax any of these chips, but for the pros out there, the descriptions of what each chip does best should be very helpful. Best of all, Apple is just getting started with chip development. Being able to target the architecture of these chips based on its role(s) in the overall workflow should allow Apple to keep a variety of usage scenarios supplied with top notch silicon matched to the need.
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mark
fire starter
Posts: 1,575
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Post by mark on Nov 1, 2021 13:46:51 GMT -8
This is rather interesting. I wonder how accurate it is? And if it is accurate, I wonder how it works ... in my case, my apps are almost always open, and I only reboot my mac when an update arrives. And I only restart apps after they've updated (they usually restart on their own). So if this is accurate, when does my mac send these updates to the cloud? Each user can give iCloud permission to a whole list of apps. For example, if you give Safari permission, it will upload links to each tab opened so that same link can be easily opened in Safari on other devices (iPad, iPhone, etc). So it is also possible that this "feature" depends on how the user setup their permissions.
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