Systems and it appears the system requirements are in error on the I have waited for any confirmation of working 10.10.5 (except for Notes, which requires El Capitan). (Yosemite) is required minimum for the new iCloud Drive and iOS 11 Mac OS X 10.9.5 (Mavericks) one user has said is required for iOS 10 and iTunes 12.5. Does not support iOS 10 or iTunes 12.5.1 according to the Wikipedia below. (except iCloud Drive, and the new notes). Mac OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion) is required for iTunes 12.3 and iOS 9.2 and iOS 9.2.1 Mac OS X 10.7.5 (Lion) (link explains the pitfalls of losing PowerPC applications) supports iTunes 12.2.2.25 (available from Software update as of ), iOS 8 and iOS 9.0. Mac OS X 10.7.3 (Lion) supports iCloud except for iCloud Drive in its current iteration and the new Notes. PowerPC applications, iTunes 11.4 and iOS 6, and iOS 7. OS X 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard) supports Intel only Macs, but does support Mac OS X 10.5.8 (Leopard) supports PowerPC Macs, iTunes 10.6.3, iOS 5.1.1. So be sure to look this over before upgrading your iOS and backup/sync your iOS with your Mac: Which OS do I have and where should I post? IOS 12 & Yosemite -is a new tip I constructed to cover what can be done for those with Yosemite when downgrading the iOS is no longer possible. If your iOS 12 device isn't recognized by iTunes, you might need to upgrade macOS or iTunes - Apple Support Downgrading a Mac is described here:Īpple has this to say about iOS recognition: And remember no backup is complete, unless you know you haveĭowngrading Mac OS X is possible in many cases, but your iOS is not at all. Work to link an elderly Mac that can't be updated to 10.11.īe very careful to backup your data properly to avoid problems.Ĭonsider a lightning port data transfer device if you need to backupĭata. Offers a means of downgrading from iOS 12 to iOS 11, if no other means This threadĭiscusses more of the inconsistent requirements that were initially Including a method to downgrade to iOSġ0.3.3, and a method of downgrading to iOS 11.4. I appreciate the fact its free, easy to use and it has the ability to import or export the RDP files.This tip is designed to be a one stop shop to find out what iOS you can use if you are able to install a specific Mac OS X. So, I truly hope that these two issues get fixed in an update soon. I really hate this as it makes using multiple apps hard while connect. The issue sort of looks like I am using the old Microsoft magnifier app. Once I am connected and use the fit to Window option and exit out of full screen mode to window mode, The desktop rather than stay at a scaled down version now blows up. My next issue happened with the newest update. Rebooting or flushing the network makes no difference. I can map my shared drive from my MAC using the hostname yet cannot connect to the hostname with this Microsoft Remote Desktop app running on my MAC. One day I can connect to the Windows 10 LAB via the hostname, the next I must use the IP address. Both MAC and Windows PC are on the same Local network and IP scheme. However, I do PC support from home and have a Windows 10 work LAB running. But recently migrated to MAC for personal use. I have used Microsoft from DOS days to Windows 11. Its good, but needs to fix these 2 issue to be great. Also, while I appreciate the option that allows the Apple key to be interchangable with ctrl for edit operations and find, it doesn't seem to work consistently, and as everyone who has ever switched back and forth between the Mac and Windows knows, confusion over which meta key to use in editing will eventually cause brain damage and is likely to send hardware on ballistic journeys through windows (not Windows). So properly-speaking, this probably a complaint about the service and not the client app, but the entire eco-system is failing me in small ways. Now, I'm sure there really IS such a way, but the internet is not my friend in helping me find it. Since there are some operations that cannot be performed via RDP - attaching to a VPN being one of them - it would be nice if I could just leave the PC logged in and operate it via Remote Desktop at the same time. This works reasonable well except that the Remote Desktop Service on the PC requires that I can only be logged in either via the Remote Desktop app OR the PC itself. I don't want to keep changing physical keyboards, so despite the fact that the two physical machines are next to eachother beneath my desk, I use remote desktop to view and operate the PC while working on the Mac. I have a specific usage case - I work in a multiplatform environment in which I work on the Mac and on the PC.
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