On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 3:09 PM Thiago Macieira
wrote:
>
> That's bad. But we all know who's to blame here, in both arguments: Apple.
>
> > Try to listen to the people that work with the real, live customers
> > like Nuno and me.
>
> We have. The decision is that we need to make a cut and move on,
Hi,
One clarification: we are not talking about stopping support for macOS 10.15 in
the already released version of Qt. It continues to be supported target with Qt
5.15 LTS and Qt 6.2 LTS as well as Qt 6.4. Of course within reasonable limits
as Apple itself has already stopped supporting it.
T
We sell to construction companies. They are not computer geeks, and often
run the original OS until the machine dies. Given the flakiness of some
Mac OS upgrades, that may be ideal policy.
Apple moves far too fast with chip, OS and language changes. It's hard for
small developers to keep up. We
On Sunday, 18 December 2022 06:47:57 -03 Nuno Santos wrote:
> Many people are still running their Intel macs. I speak for myself. I had
> bought a really powerful quad core Intel mac laptop one year before m1 is
> out. Is terrible but what am I going to do? Throw it out of the window if
> it is sti
On Sunday, 18 December 2022 03:25:14 -03 coroberti wrote:
> > What matters to me is that those were the last AVX-incapable CPUs, which
> > allow us to assume that AVX2 is present.
>
> Dear Thiago and Tuukka,
> It seems that you are working under an assumption that if the HW allows it,
> users will
Hi,
Every time a new Mac OS version comes out this is what happens:
https://cdm.link/2022/11/macos-13-ventura-compatibility-plugins/
https://cdm.link/2020/11/big-sur-and-the-new-macs-look-promising-but-youll-want-to-wait/
https://cdm.link/2019/10/wait-on-catalina/
https://cdm.link/2020/05/how-