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I'm gradually migrating over to the new work laptop I received yesterday evening. The substance of this migration isn't migrating the data. That's actually a minimal effort as most of my data— most of the presentations, systems, and notes I've created, and all my email— are in the cloud anyway. The time consuming part is installing all the apps I need and configuring them to work the way I want.
For example, yesterday the first thing I did was open the web browser. Apple Safari? Haha, not for long. I downloaded and installed Chrome. Bookmarks were synced in the cloud so moving them over was as simple as clicking "Yes" to a question. But configuring some things such as default font size (why is that hidden??) and gestures took a while.
This morning I installed Slack and Zoom. Again, a lot of the settings are in my accounts in the cloud. But Zoom and its permissions requests, oh dear! "Allow Zoom to access microphone?" Ok. "Allow Zoom to access camera?" Duh! "Allow Zoom to access Downloads folder (to place files you download)?" Sure. "Allow Zoom to access email?" Why? "Allow Zoom to access your whole keychain, including credit cards?" Wait, what?!
And I've still got a lot of way more finicky tools to install, like command line tools
Like, just installing

One nice thing I've discovered along the way is the convenience of the fingerprint scanner on my new MacBook Pro. With all these installs and configs I've been challenged for my password frequently. Not to mention the computer came with the default security configuration of, "For your safety, the screen locks by default after every 5 seconds of inactivity!" Tapping my finger on the scanner is way more convenient than typing a strong password every few minutes.
For example, yesterday the first thing I did was open the web browser. Apple Safari? Haha, not for long. I downloaded and installed Chrome. Bookmarks were synced in the cloud so moving them over was as simple as clicking "Yes" to a question. But configuring some things such as default font size (why is that hidden??) and gestures took a while.
This morning I installed Slack and Zoom. Again, a lot of the settings are in my accounts in the cloud. But Zoom and its permissions requests, oh dear! "Allow Zoom to access microphone?" Ok. "Allow Zoom to access camera?" Duh! "Allow Zoom to access Downloads folder (to place files you download)?" Sure. "Allow Zoom to access email?" Why? "Allow Zoom to access your whole keychain, including credit cards?" Wait, what?!
And I've still got a lot of way more finicky tools to install, like command line tools
kubectl
and eksctl
and the many, many prerequisites that are required even to install them.Like, just installing
git
I got this hilarious little number:
One nice thing I've discovered along the way is the convenience of the fingerprint scanner on my new MacBook Pro. With all these installs and configs I've been challenged for my password frequently. Not to mention the computer came with the default security configuration of, "For your safety, the screen locks by default after every 5 seconds of inactivity!" Tapping my finger on the scanner is way more convenient than typing a strong password every few minutes.
no subject
Date: 2021-12-11 06:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-12-11 06:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-12-11 06:52 pm (UTC)Mine arrived, and it is almost completely amazing. Excel feels fast on the Mac for the first time, well, ever. The only time I max the CPUs out is when I'm using Handbrake to re-encode videos (like meeting recordings) or doing lots of photo work with no pauses - flipping through a ton of pictures, playing with de-noise sliders and watching it update the picture smoothly as I move the mouse. And it's silent while doing all that. It's pretty great.
It appears there's a memory leak in Monterey though. I thought that mostly revolved around custom app icons, which I don't think I'm using? But it's telling me I'm out of my 64 GB of ram. May have to restart once a week or so until this is fixed.
no subject
Date: 2021-12-12 05:59 am (UTC)