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Apple 2017 OS availability dates

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MarkJFine
Professor

Apple 2017 OS availability dates

19 Sep 17 - iOS 11

25 Sep 17 - MacOS 10.13 (High Sierra)

 

Wake me up when September ends...


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.
17 REPLIES 17
MarkJFine
Professor

If you prefer updating iOS apps through iTunes on your computer to reduce redundant downloads... those days are over.

Apple decided to remove all iOS app updating through iTunes. 😡😡😡😡😡

You now have to do it through your device(s).


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

Oh, by the way... the iOS App Store downloads everything TWICE.

Somehow suddenly, 50GB for Bonus Time doesn't sound like it will last a month with four (4) iOS devices, and the same apps downloading up to 8 times.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.
maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

Um...what??  Why does it do that? Is it a glitch, or does the bloody thing want to make sure it downloaded right, so it does it again, for good measure?

 

 


@MarkJFine wrote:

Oh, by the way... the iOS App Store downloads everything TWICE.

Somehow suddenly, 50GB for Bonus Time doesn't sound like it will last a month with four (4) iOS devices, and the same apps downloading up to 8 times.


 


@maratsade wrote:

Um...what??  Why does it do that? Is it a glitch, or does the bloody thing want to make sure it downloaded right, so it does it again, for good measure?


No idea. It's very bizarre. The little download circle goes around once, then it goes around again.

Nobody is happy about this, or this new change. It's bonkers.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.
maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

Well, pitchforks and rope time, then, and let's head for Apple HQ. 

I may have been premature about it downloading twice. The download circle goes around twice, but there's a pattern where the first time around it fairly quick, and I think the second time seems like is the bulk of it. Combined, the size of the download doesn't come close to what's listed, which is probably the delta file between the installed version and the downloaded version.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.
maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

So does this mean the file is downloaded in two pieces??  


@maratsade wrote:

So does this mean the file is downloaded in two pieces??  


Guess so. First file might be a manifest/installer of sorts. It comes down about twice as fast as the second part. Or, it could be that I've been using the full files for so long, that doing it from the device it needs to re-acclimate itself. Apple's weird like that.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

Ok, so this only happens the first time you update on the device, so it must be some kind of manifest or app store certificate. The second time you update it only does the update circle once.

 

Still, the past two days of updates have been 2GB ventures each day as everyone starts updating for iOS 11 (and subsequent bug fixes).

 

Plus (naturally), Apple released Xcode 9.0 yesterday (~6GB), which contains updated emulators and build code for every Apple device on the market, including iOS 11 and High Sierra.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

So against better judgement I decided to update macOS to 10.13 High Sierra.

The 5.17GB download went fine and made sure I had a backup of everything.

Then I grit my teeth, winced, and initiated the process at 7.50 this morning...

It just got done... 8 HOURS LATER.

 

In it's defense, I think it goes through everything and tries to compress and catalog everything in a new file system, which is fine (and a bit of magic, if not dangerous to do on a single SDD if you think about it)... unless you have a 256GB iTunes folder of music and movies, and another 120GB in two Parallels VMs.

 

Not saying everyone has a hard disk full-o-stuff like I do, but if you do, be prepared for a long ride.

 

Now to see how many kernel mods and rebuilt Linux things got broken.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

Hey Mark,

     I'm running an iMac 9,1 so 10.11.6 is as far as I can go on this old of hardware.

I went to an auction this spring at a local university looking for a newer Mac but there was nothing newer enough to warrant changing.

I'm too tight (and poor) to shell out for a new iMac so I'm here for a while but elCapitan has treated me pretty good.

I do have a "Hackintosh" I keep as a backup spare but have only upgraded it to Yose. I like the DU better and plan to leave it there.

I have found that late night OS updates are the quick and easy route. (about 1.5 to 2 hrs) daytime 8 hrs= 😕

As for IOS updates (iPhone 6) I havent had any double downloads, I think your 2d assessment is correct.

 

Don  🙂

Mine's a 10,1 so I'm figuring High Sierra might be it's last rodeo.

Turns out the 8 hours was in fact converting the SDD to the new Apple File System - only 177GB free on a 750GB drive...

And it's going to have to last for a good while. Wife needed a new car and I'm in a wait state for about another year until the pension and IRA kick in.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.

I had not been paying attemtion to changes of the file system but had seen somewhere that Apple was considering going to zfs.

My Solaris UNIX server uses zfs and the pool doubles the drive space for the same amount of data but this is in case a HDD crashes there is a mirror copy on another drive. (similar to raid)

zfs on a single drive would divide it into 2 equal partitions and mirror one on the other. While this works it does not protect against drive failure since it's all on the same physical device.

As I said, I haven't looked into what they're doing as far as a new file system and it could be something totally different. Almost no Apple computer has multiple hard drives so zfs doesn't make sense. COW (cache on write) might advantageous enough. idk

It is something I need to check out.

177GB free still isn't too bad. I've got 386 free out of 500.

Mark,

I've been looking into APFS vs HFS+.

Unless your HDD was already pretty full I don't understand why it would fill up much more.

I would recommend that for future "major upgrades" you wait until there's a dot release and beware of the "bleeding edge".

I've been there plenty and learned to stay back a comfortable distance.

Anyway IMO APFS is another step to turn all of our computers into big smartphones.

Best wishes,

 

Don  🙂

maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

Gee, thanks, Apple. 

 


@MarkJFine wrote:

If you prefer updating iOS apps through iTunes on your computer to reduce redundant downloads... those days are over.

Apple decided to remove all iOS app updating through iTunes. 😡😡😡😡😡

You now have to do it through your device(s).


 

maratsade
Distinguished Professor IV

How big are these updates?

 


@MarkJFine wrote:

19 Sep 17 - iOS 11

25 Sep 17 - MacOS 10.13 (High Sierra)

 

Wake me up when September ends...


 


@maratsade wrote:

How big are these updates?


iOS is usually 1 GB or so.

MacOS is usually about 5 or 6GB.

Usually this accompanies an update to Xcode (for software developers), which is another 5 or 6 GB.


* Disclaimer: I am a HughesNet customer and not a HughesNet employee. All of my comments are my own and do not necessarily represent HughesNet in any way.