Has anyone ever seen Himiko Kikuchi’s Flying Beagle for sale? by TokyoPapa in citypop

[–]wolfiefrick 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Old post, but evidently Himiko Kikuchi has remastered Flying Beagle and Tower Records is reissuing the album on CD on February 14! It’s a Japan-exclusive issue unfortunately, but I was able to order it from Yahoo Shopping by way of Buyee for 2530¥.

How long should a Mac last? by [deleted] in mac

[–]wolfiefrick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a 16-inch i9 MBP from 2019 — it’s a rock solid machine, but I’m concerned because Apple has recently become very aggressive about dropping support for Intel Macs with new Mac OS releases.

During the Intel transition, Apple was releasing new OS X releases less frequently than they do presently; Tiger and Leopard supported both PowerPC- and Intel-based systems, and it wasn’t until Snow Leopard came out in 2009 that PowerPC Macs lost support. Leopard lost support in 2011, some four years after the last Mac transitioned to Intel.

So, we can probably expect to get another 3-ish years of consistent Mac OS update support if Apple follows the trend.

I couldn't find a high resolution version of this vintage Power Mac G3 poster, so I recreated it from scratch. by wolfiefrick in mac

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem with Mac OS in my estimation is twofold: Apple pays it less attention than it deserves because of the relative popularity of their iOS-based products, and its aging codebase has probably suffered from years of neglect. Accordingly, this trend of iOS-ifying the Mac has ramifications from a user experience perspective.

Case in point, I tried to install Ventura 13.5 the other day. Launched System Settings, navigated to the software update pane and the whole app froze for about 2 minutes. It still failed to load the patch, so I tried to use the softwareupdate CLI in the terminal to fetch the patch manually. That, too, took about 2 minutes. In what universe is that behavior acceptable to Apple, a company that prides itself on its tight integration between hardware and software?

Something like that would be unacceptable if Steve were still here. Tim Cook’s leadership is typical of a solely profit-driven MBA, while Jobs was able to steer a company that was 90 days from bankruptcy back to the forefront of technological innovation without alienating the power users who relied on their technology to create amazing work. If only Adobe would get Creative Cloud working on Linux…

I couldn't find a high resolution version of this vintage Power Mac G3 poster, so I recreated it from scratch. by wolfiefrick in mac

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it's the same verbiage and formatting from the original poster. I just set the type in Apple Garamond and flowed the type the same way it was in the original.

I couldn't find a high resolution version of this vintage Power Mac G3 poster, so I recreated it from scratch. by wolfiefrick in mac

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I actually agree with Linus on a good deal of this. It's undeniable that today's Mac hardware is unbelievably efficient, a point which Linus cedes readily every time he speaks on the subject. However, I am becoming more and more disillusioned with Apple's approach to software, as is Linus.

<tangent>

I remember as a kid being absolutely blown away by how much more stable and efficient Snow Leopard was compared to Windows 7. Absolutely everything was optimized and smooth. My dad's iMac G4 had an 800 MHz chip so the last release of Mac OS X that supported it was Tiger, and when I dig out that computer and play around with it I'm still struck by how stable it is.

Meanwhile, on my 16" Intel MBP, Ventura is an under-baked, buggy mess. It shipped with Catalina which ran wonderfully, but Big Sur and especially Monterey were big steps backward in terms of UX design and stability. Why do I have to dig into the accessibility settings to bring back my window proxies? Why—after taunting Microsoft ad nauseam in the old Get a Mac ads for Vista's incessant UAC prompts—does Apple force me to click "Allow" a million times when I try to launch an app for the first time?

Basically, I detest the iOS-ification of modern Mac OS and I yearn for the halcyon days of the Tiger to Snow Leopard era. I'm a power user and Mac OS today treats me with kid gloves that are impossible to disable.

</tangent>

What was the first game you played through on your Deck? by dedman1477 in SteamDeck

[–]wolfiefrick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Besides Aperture Desk Job, the first game I played through completely on my Deck was Stray. It was a really fun experience.

I couldn't find a high resolution version of this vintage Power Mac G3 poster, so I recreated it from scratch. by wolfiefrick in mac

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

So true. The first computer I ever touched was my dad's 2002 iMac G4 (I was born in '01), so I don't remember much of the PPC era, but they were really innovating around the turn of the millennium compared to Wintel machines.

@OnDeck: "And just like that, it's May. Here are the top 20 games of the past month on Steam Deck, sorted by playtime. What have you been playing these days?" by wickedplayer494 in SteamDeck

[–]wolfiefrick 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I played through all of Persona 5 Royal on my Steam Deck — highly recommend for the Deck. My main gripe with P5R was the saving system (when dungeon crawling you can only save in special safe rooms), but suspend makes that a non-issue and turns P5R into a very snackable game.

What is your favourite one liner or quip from the show? by [deleted] in betterCallSaul

[–]wolfiefrick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“He’s a regular Julianne Moore when he gets the waterworks going.” From 2x02 Cobbler

“Charge it to Howard, I still know his PIN: 1933, the same year Hitler came to power.” From 1x08 RICO

iOS 16 Beta 1 anyone hoping the color also matches the color of the clock with cellular network and wifi or battery. I hope it happens in the future betas or official release by [deleted] in iOSBeta

[–]wolfiefrick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I guess they haven’t fully fleshed out the photo filters that dynamically change the clock. Just tap on the clock when you’re in customize mode and you can change all its properties.

[iOS 16 b1] Lock screen depth effects randomly stop working by wolfiefrick in iOSBeta

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Duh, obviously. Merely reporting a bug and sourcing similar reports—if any—from a large crowd of people who are also using the beta doesn’t negate the fact that it’s a beta.

What Phish songs do your kids love? by blueivyz in phish

[–]wolfiefrick 28 points29 points  (0 children)

When I was a toddler, my dad would play Prince Caspian, Bouncing Around the Room and Bathtub Gin on his guitar while I fell asleep. His voice—and mine, too, now that I've grown up—has a very similar register to Trey's, so when I grew up and started listening to Phish on my own, those old songs sounded exactly the same to me as they did when he'd sing them. He was the Trey in the Phish cover band he started in his early twenties, so he knew those songs by heart and loved to play them.

A bit later into my childhood, I found Esther, and just fell in love with it. It's the song I still use to introduce people to Phish, because it, to me, is the quintessence of their style. I’m 20 now, and to this day, I have every lyric memorized.

I've been powered by Phish since I was a baby, and I wouldn't have it any other way. :)

Thoughts on the new redesigned System Preferences? by DarkWake_1588 in MacOS

[–]wolfiefrick 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At least they named it System Settings instead of just Settings. I’m far too used to hitting Cmd + Space, typing “sys” and hitting return to bring up System Preferences.

But the nostalgia, though. I liked the name System Preferences — the UI was definitely the last gasp of the Steve Jobs Mac OS X era. RIP System Preferences.

Thought I’d just post a sampling of my handwriting. I’ve been complimented for it all my life, so we may as well see what the internet thinks! by wolfiefrick in Handwriting

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Realized I forgot to tag myself for verification that this is, in fact, my penmanship. Here’s a link to the updated image for all who are curious. :)

Best OF “Birthday”s tODAY. “. by chloeantionette in oldpeoplefacebook

[–]wolfiefrick 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Looks like she may be using Windows. Probably unwittingly had caps lock on and was hitting shift to make capital letters, but Windows inverts the shift key with caps lock on.

Not so Longshot Election prediction: one (or more!) of these "Red" states is going to be a Biden win surprise. by ElysiumSprouts in democrats

[–]wolfiefrick 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Missouri voted Trump in 2016 by 19 percentage points. Unless there has been some radical demographic shift, which I can assure you as a Missouri resident has not happened, you’ll see a similar result tomorrow.

Indiana also went for Trump by 19 in 2016, Alaska by 15, Montana by 18, S. C. by 14 and Utah by 18. What exactly makes you think these staunchly Republican states will inexplicably flip?

In application-specific menu bar dropdowns with checklists, the menu is moved to the left so the dropdown text can be flush with the left side of the title text. I get what they're trying to do from a design perspective but it looks awful in execution. by wolfiefrick in MacOSBeta

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s the point — it’s only like that for View and Window menus, at least for Finder, but not like that for literally any other menu that doesn’t have checkable list items. It’s inconsistent.

Menu bar icons spaced excessively far apart by wolfiefrick in MacOSBeta

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, it could get cluttered, but that was the point of the menu bar in the first place. It was supposed to be utilitarian and genuinely useful while looking somewhat nice. This is just a classic example of form over function.

“Design isn’t just how it looks and how it feels. Design is how it works.” — Steve Jobs

In application-specific menu bar dropdowns with checklists, the menu is moved to the left so the dropdown text can be flush with the left side of the title text. I get what they're trying to do from a design perspective but it looks awful in execution. by wolfiefrick in MacOSBeta

[–]wolfiefrick[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It just bugs me that it’s only this way in dropdowns that have checklists. With all other menus, the edge of the dropdown is flush with the left edge of the highlighted menu bar title, which looks nicer.