This is the MacOS Thread.
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You can install Chrome on the Mac side of things but that is very slow...
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Something just doesn't add up there. I can't believe you're having problems with YouTube and Netflix on the Mac side. Something must be wrong with the install.. corrupt files etc...either that or Macs just aren't as good as they claim.
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Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
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I will have my Mac Minion take a look then to see why it's not just working.
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I do not have any problems with Netflix or YouTube on my Mac.
I am running Mavericks and use Firefox v.27Some performance issues can be linked to bad Third-party RAM. When this is the case, there are specific issues that appear, such as kernel panics or system freezing while applications still appear to run. Apple-branded RAM is made by Crucial and is guaranteed to work. It's also a little more spendy, though there's no telling if it can fail over time - which I've also seen. (talking 3-4 years here)
Of the less expensive third-party RAM I've worked with, I think Kensington is the best. -
@scottalanmiller said:
Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
When did they move to HTML5? I feel like I should have seen something about that. I still, consistently, see people who have Windows 7 and IE10 or 11 on there and don't have Flash who can't watch YouTube videos. Are you sure?
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@ajstringham said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
When did they move to HTML5? I feel like I should have seen something about that. I still, consistently, see people who have Windows 7 and IE10 or 11 on there and don't have Flash who can't watch YouTube videos. Are you sure?
Since I don't install flash, yes
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@scottalanmiller said:
@ajstringham said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
When did they move to HTML5? I feel like I should have seen something about that. I still, consistently, see people who have Windows 7 and IE10 or 11 on there and don't have Flash who can't watch YouTube videos. Are you sure?
Since I don't install flash, yes
Hmm. Okay. Odd.
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@ajstringham said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@ajstringham said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
When did they move to HTML5? I feel like I should have seen something about that. I still, consistently, see people who have Windows 7 and IE10 or 11 on there and don't have Flash who can't watch YouTube videos. Are you sure?
Since I don't install flash, yes
Hmm. Okay. Odd.
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@Katie Been using a Mac since the 128k.
Apple is maintaining the primary trend on focusing on consumers.
Upfront price has never been their strong suit. Overall value is there. Notably, many people encountered have bought Macs to not have Windows problems (virus, frequent updates, forcing off OSes, etc). Having been in higher ed and assorted design firms, Macs fit in the culture.
In recent times, Mac has been more about being in the Apple ecosystemยโiPad, iPhone, Apple TV, etc. "Ecosystem" is mainly as it is the software, hardware, and peripherals. Can get nifty and smart benefits when drinking their purple kool-aid. Never have been "all in", so haven't been bit by their sudden changes in directions too much.
Have a good relationship with the local Apple rep and the Apple system engineer. No, they don't know what is coming next, either. Can be useful to get perspective on the "tips & tricks".
Mac Pro shows a nod to the pro users for design, video, audio, and associated fields. "Spendy" doesn't quite reach the appropriate expletive to describe the Mac Pro's price. The thunderbolt is one of the nifty things it is meant to exploit. It is not meant to use network resources, such as NAS or iSCSI (grr).
Thunderbolt, like firewire before it, is great & smart technology. Typical consumer won't understand the difference, and be easily swayed by lower price USB2/3 devices. Meanwhile, they miss slick options as daisy chaining monitors. Heck, am baffled at how many Mac users don't know what Time Machine is, and for the ones which have an idea that don't use it. Back to "target disk mode"? Might as well try to explain craps or the workings of the stock market.
OS X server has dropped to $19, and ARD has dropped to $79 ... odd, but use it. They have Configurator and the iPhone Configuration Utility, which can be used for interested results without added cost. (Probably still want a grown up MDM.) Updates to the iTunes VPP is helpful, if late. These bits point to limited support for limited deployments.
The non-repairability trend of the MacBook Retinas and other hardware is not a popular move. Certainly a hot button item, even among the Mac faithful.
As always, "usefulness" depends on the user, their needs, and their receptivity.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Netflix must be because of continuing Silverlight issues.
YouTube is HTML5 and should just work.
Last I knew, not 100% of YouTube was HTML5 yet, but I have not checked into it in like 6-12 months. Netflix really needs to get off Silverlight.
@minion-queen Netflix works just fine on my MacBook Pro. There is a Silverlight package for Mac that you have to get.
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@Minion-Queen said:
You can install Chrome on the Mac side of things but that is very slow...
I find Safari to be slow and Chrome seems to work better for me. I find my entire MBP to be slo at times, though I blame parallels for that. I do not think Parallels plays as nicely as it could. I really need to buy a drive for TimeMachine use and create an image to restore form then wipe this thing and start over just to see if I have screwed something up.
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@RoguePacket said:
Heck, am baffled at how many Mac users don't know what Time Machine is, and for the ones which have an idea that don't use it. Back to "target disk mode"? Might as well try to explain craps or the workings of the stock market.
I do not use Time Machine simply because all of the data on my machine is backed in various other locations already with cloud tools. I am sure I would miss some critical yet minor thing if I wiped it.
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@JaredBusch said:
@RoguePacket said:
Heck, am baffled at how many Mac users don't know what Time Machine is, and for the ones which have an idea that don't use it. Back to "target disk mode"? Might as well try to explain craps or the workings of the stock market.
I do not use Time Machine simply because all of the data on my machine is backed in various other locations already with cloud tools. I am sure I would miss some critical yet minor thing if I wiped it.
What do you use?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@JaredBusch said:
@RoguePacket said:
Heck, am baffled at how many Mac users don't know what Time Machine is, and for the ones which have an idea that don't use it. Back to "target disk mode"? Might as well try to explain craps or the workings of the stock market.
I do not use Time Machine simply because all of the data on my machine is backed in various other locations already with cloud tools. I am sure I would miss some critical yet minor thing if I wiped it.
What do you use?
The programming stuff is all in an SVN or Git repo, so I can basically never lose it unless I am being a bad user and not committing my work.
My documents folders is shared with my windows 8.1 Parallels VM and I have Windows file history turned on pointing to an old Buffalo LinkStation (does not support Time Machine in Mavericks) at the house.
I pretty much exclusively use Chrome for a browser and have them all signed in on the same Google account so those settings are synchronized.
The other large data set that was on my MacBook Pro is my Picasa (family pictures, etc) library and again I have that mostly on the LinkStation in order to have access to the pictures from any device. The only stuff not there is a few pictures that I have dumped from the memory card but not organized and moved to the LinkStation yet.
Then there is also a Google Drive that we use for various client documents. I do not even have the Drive application installed, I just use it via the website on all of my devices (Windows or Mac).
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@JaredBusch Mac and its features do have a consumer bent. Gotta consider I.T. pros being responsible for themselves and their own processes.
Actually, surprised you did not mention doing the backups via cron/systemd/etc.
Am a bit curious on the current performance comparison between Parallels v9 and VMware Fusion v6โ
- http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/10/the-latest-virtualization-showdown-parallels-desktop-9-vs-vmware-fusion-6/
- 'Tis one source, still want more being an I.T. skeptic & all that