![]() It goes deeper into development, with wars between languages like Objective-C and Swift. Yet I’m now on the wrong side of 65 (in some respects, at least) and can’t wait to order my first Apple Silicon Mac. Some of the most staunchly conservative when it comes to change are kids. In the latter case, there are plenty who live at the bleeding edge who’ll be trying to order the new release before the end of the event, and many others who’ll be content to look at their existing Mac/iPhone/iPad/Watch and shrug their shoulders. It’s the same as with WWDC, or new product announcements. People are different, and technology needs to learn to live with that. We need to appreciate that there’s nothing wrong with either response, nor various shades in between. For what it’s worth, I was delighted, as it provided me with another puzzling update to unravel, and the hope that it would leave Catalina in a better state for those who’d rather not move on to Big Sur, at least for a while yet. ![]() Your response is one gauge of whether change is a challenge which you’d usually prefer to decline, or whether you’re more like to champion it. ![]() What was your reaction last week to the surprise release of the macOS 10.15.7 update? Were you pleasantly surprised, or did you curse Apple for yet another update in the space of just over a week?
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