Growly notes ipad4/19/2023 ![]() Sometimes this is good for organization and other times it just means a messy appearance. Growly Notes seems to be solid and is reasonably fast (much improved speed in recent years). ![]() Far more than needed and too many weren't very well polished and keyboard shortcuts were often mystifying so a major learning curve. I'm not concerned with iOS compatibility as I don't have an iPad and my iPhone is a "consumption device" except for adding events to the calendar and occasional notes.įrankly one problem with CPN was that it was a kitchen sink of features. ![]() My wife's iMac is running Mojave with no issues but she doesn't have that legacy software problem. I'm still running Sierra on my iMac, mainly because I'm worried about APFS and the Fusion drive, but am running High Sierra on my MBP for which it is the end-of-the-line version. The program apparently dates back to the Next computer, so it's nearly a 30 year old code base!Īperture seems to work fine in Mojave, along with my 32-bit Nik plugins, but I do have a number of 32-bit programs I use (and for which I expect no updates) so I don't see a way beyond Mojave. But I expect CPN is a real piece of spaghetti code. It would be nice if someone would fix CPN My guess is there are plenty of people who would pay money for just a one off repair. Abandoning users in the quest for more hardware sales when the existing hardware works fine is simply bad business IMO and will come back to bite them someday, I would like to think so anyway, but of course it's possible it never will.Īnyway, i noticed where Teddybear093 talked about seeing the suggestion on another blog about crowdfunding a buy out of CPN and taking it open source and was wondering if anyone could point me to that link? Did anything ever come of this idea? I've seen macOS Sierra and High Sierra run on what Apple considers non-supported hardware or as they call it "obsolete" and it occurs to me that even if it really works they simply are not interested in supporting customers who paid a lot of money for the computers when they were new. Apple's strange habit of abandoning old hardware is one of it's least desirable characteristics IMO, but change happens no matter what, and just deal with it as best you can is my mantra. Of course with the impending cliff that macOS 15 will create with no more 32-bit app support, that might make things look different when that happens. I have a ton of stuff that I have created over the years of using CPN and cringe when I think of the effort in converting everything. Have avoided the update to CPN 4 due to the incompatibility of its files compared to version 3. Are you folks talking about CPN 3 or 4 - I use CPN 3.1.8 on High Sierra with no real problems.
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