Show more

i didn't even get my automatic mac provisioning scripts repo updated for 11.x and now 12.0.1 is out.

nostromo:~/tmp/12.0.1$ shasum "./Install macOS Monterey.app/Contents/SharedSupport/SharedSupport.dmg"
c33afa5bffc65afbc104e63f9542a20d1179b297 ./Install macOS Monterey.app/Contents/SharedSupport/SharedSupport.dmg

On the 30th of April 2021, Apple committed to encrypting their OCSP revocation checks and providing an opt-out so that your mac doesn't phone home on every app launch.

Tick tock, motherfuckers.

support.apple.com/en-us/HT2024

We're now a new major version beyond and unencrypted OCSP is still (I assume) a thing. (Downloading os12 now, will confirm.)

reminder: the hardware pipeline is 2-3 years long. apple had these new systems on and beyond the drawing board for the entire time you were screaming about the touchbar.

there is a product manager inside of apple that is in charge of memoji.

i think they may have also been an extra in mike judge's idiocracy

there is a key on all modern macintoshes that opens the music app, which, upon opening, transmits your unchangeable hardware serial number to apple over the network.

there's a literal hardware phone-home button.

the on-device dictation stuff in macos 12.x and ios 15.x doesn't actually *always* run on-device. it only does on-device if the off-device one is slow or unavailable. it's actually no privacy guarantee at all unless you're doing your dictation inside of a faraday cage.

12.x (monterey) includes apple's paid icloud addon Private Relay, which is their first-party privacy vpn thing. they are now financially incentivized to make non-apple VPN products and services work less well or not work at all.

yo @tedu it would be sweet if this changes one day

it would appear that openbsd's signify has the same issue. the arguments "pubkey" and "seckey" are actually pubkeyfile and seckeyfile, paths to the pubkey and seckey on disk, not the actual pubkey or seckey.

what's the signing-only equivalent of FiloSottile's age? signify from openbsd seems like it's headed there but it doesn't seem to be widely used outside of openbsd-land.

there seems to be a growing anger in the internet underground toward good and non-malicious actors in the space like CloudFlare and Signal simply because they chose to build centralized systems, as if centralization is an inherently bad thing.

i wonder how many of those people so complaining also avail themselves of 12-36h amazon delivery.

centralization gives huge efficiency wins. decentralized is not always better.

i would like an rpi 4 case that is:

a) metal
b) has an integrated oled and maybe some buttons
c) has a non-shitty fan
d) reproduces the GPIOs externally
e) (optional) has an 18650 UPS inside it

my smb service was running fine but inaccessible to the lan, and i dicked around with it for several hours before simply rebooting the box and now it's fine.

i thought this shit wasn't supposed to happen on lunix

big sur is the first macos release since i have been using macintoshes (which started at system 5 or 6 - i distinctly recall installing system 7 right after release) where i never actually put it on my main machine before the next version (monterey, out now) was released.

the keyboard on the new mbp is black (even between the keys) which fixes a pro/notpro branding oversight that has been persisting for a while

i just now noticed that you can get the m1 max in the 14" pro. that's pretty rad that a 14" laptop can be that powerful (although i bet it's battery murdah)

Show more
Mastodon

The social network of the future: No ads, no corporate surveillance, ethical design, and decentralization! Own your data with Mastodon!