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Menumeters and high sierra
Menumeters and high sierra













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Unless Apple makes the signature restriction optional, it is not clear that MenuMeters in its present form can ever be made compatible with OS X 10.11. Although the restriction is similar, this is not directly related to 10.11’s “System Integrity Protection” (SIP, aka “rootless”) feature and disabling SIP has no effect on MenuMeters. At the time of writing, developer Alex Harper has put a warning on the MenuMeters website that reads as follows:ĭue to new Apple-enforced code signature restrictions, MenuMeters is not compatible with the OS X 10.11 “El Capitan” public beta.

I still use MenuMeters on all my PowerPC Macs.īut after upgrading to Mac OS X 10.11, I discovered that MenuMeters is not compatible with the latest version of the operating system. In my case, I’ve always been interested in one thing - checking network activity, and MenuMeters can simply show the network throughput as bytes per second (or even just arrows, if you really want the simplest, most minimalistic option).

menumeters and high sierra

I hate cluttering the menubar with icons, so it’s important that a monitoring tool let me hide everything I don’t need to see. I like it for its unobtrusiveness, level of customisation and general lightness. Every time a major Mac OS X release came out, one of the first things I used to do after upgrading was checking whether MenuMeters would work.

It has been around since Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, and it’s always been my preferred software in its category.

menumeters and high sierra

Check back in a couple of days for news.MenuMeters is a set of CPU, memory, disk, and network monitoring tools for Mac OS X.

One last thing: I’m this close to finishing a brand new, second edition of Backing Up Your Mac too! Like the others, it will be a free update (even though the changes are much more substantial). Updated A Note to Readers (and several other portions of the book) to reflect the availability of Speeding Up Your MacĪdded a new utility from Micromat called Atomic to the list of tools you can use to Check Your RAMĪdded a link to a book in Printing Doesn’t Work that, somewhat ironically, was missing only in the printed version of this book Switched to using the term “macOS” where possibleĪddressed a few small errors and formatting inconsistencies In this comparatively tiny update, I’ve made just a few small adjustments to keep the book current: Next, Troubleshooting Your Mac: A Joe On Tech Guide has moved to version 1.0.1. In Monitoring Utilities, added Checkmate to the list and included a note about a version of MenuMeters that works on 10.11 El Capitan and later Updated the sidebar RAM Usage Meanings to reflect the correct labels for memory usage categories in Mavericks and later In Exercise Your Notebook’s Battery, mentioned Apple’s advice to calibrate batteries in notebook Macs with removable batteriesĬorrected the name of the link to click for updating Take Control ebooks in Check for Ebook Updates In the sidebar Other RAM Tests, added Atomic to the list of tools for testing your RAM

menumeters and high sierra

Updated names, URLs, and pricing for various products Switched to using the term “macOS” (the new name for OS X starting with Sierra, due in late 2016) where possible This is a minor update to address a few small issues that appeared after the book’s original publication:Īdded A Note to Readers, which describes all four “Mac fitness” books from Joe On TechĬhanged all the alt.cc and links to use HTTPS

(If you have the paperback version of either book, I obviously can’t update that for free, but the Check for Updates URL in the printed book will tell you how to download the latest version in ebook format.)įirst is Maintaining Your Mac version 1.1. If you have the book and didn’t hear from me for some reason, click the Check for Updates link on the next-to-last page of the book. I’ve already sent email to people who bought these books directly from me, informing them of the updates and how to obtain them.

menumeters and high sierra

Both are free to anyone who had the previous version. Today I’m happy to announce updates to two Joe On Tech guides. Although I can’t keep everything I’ve written perfectly up to date (I’d spend my whole life doing nothing but updates!), one of the reasons I adopted several of my Take Control books and turned them into Joe On Tech titles was that I wanted the opportunity to keep these valuable resources current, since Take Control didn’t have the resources to do so (and I can hardly blame them-after all, I have written 53 books for them so far!). Technology never sits still, and as computer hardware and software evolves, I like to make sure my books reflect the current truth. Free Updates to My Mac Maintenance and Troubleshooting Books















Menumeters and high sierra