by nl 11 hours ago

Yes I agree.

I have an M1 Max like the author of this piece and recently upgraded. It's fine.

I don't like the look of it much and the drag targets are annoying but other than that it's been completely normal.

card_zero 11 hours ago | [-6 more]

So are you saying the long list of bugs don't actually happen?

crazygringo 10 hours ago | [-1 more]

They definitely do. But in my experience they "accumulate".

Like, things all work pretty well at first. And then god only knows what happens as config and preference files get into weird states, and temp files accumulate and never get deleted, and cache files get stuck with old info and refuse to update, and god only knows.

So people with relatively new installations have a pretty good time, while people who have migrated their data across three MacBooks over ten years are encountering problems left and right.

I reinstalled Sequoia fresh last year because some mystery process would slowly consume 50GB of disk space over the course of every two weeks, no disk utility could locate any file responsible, but restarting reset it. But with the fresh reinstall, everything started working fine again. It's annoying. Then I upgraded to Tahoe and zero problems. But I'm sure they'll gradually start appearing over the next year or two.

itopaloglu83 8 hours ago | [-0 more]

Death by a thousand cuts.

Yes, things like small bugs and abnormal user experiences accumulate and over time the OS and other apps become inconsistent.

As heavy users who are generally by profession spend a lot more time with a Mac, they tend to experience more issues, and things that used to work for decades start to crumble. It all works if you’re acting like working on glass pieces, but that’s not what computers are made for.

You’re supposed to use it extensively and get more efficient over time without a glassy UI and other broken systems pulling you down at every turn.

It’s not about using a system for 10 minutes to visit a website with Chrome, but instead spending days programming things, having a normal life, and still having the very simple file discovery features working.

There’s no reason for a computer to be this choppy and slow (in things like context switching etc.) unless something else is going on in the background.

possibleworlds 6 hours ago | [-1 more]

Which particular long list of bugs? I’m on my work laptop, personal laptop and phone all day no problem. I’ve seen all the ranting here about the interface, window corners and menu icons but in day to day use have not encountered a single “bug”. And after some initial skepticism I actually like the design direction of Tahoe.

card_zero 3 hours ago | [-0 more]

In the article. It says (paraphrasing): Time Machine goes wrong (over time!), Spotlight doesn't index tags right (requires relaunching Finder), Finder sometimes hangs when using Spotlight (requires relaunching Finder), folders sometimes won't update to show new files (requires relaunching Finder), using Quick Look on a video makes airpods glitch, and switching by cmd+tab to a fullscreen window doesn't give it keyboard focus.

bombcar 10 hours ago | [-1 more]

They happen but you learn to work around them and they fall into the noise.

FtFF has been a mantra for 20+ years; it’s never going to happen, stop trying to make it happen.

card_zero 2 hours ago | [-0 more]

OK. I stopped buying Macs more than 20 years ago. The Finder used to work.