It’s a terrible idea for Apple to have control over what you can and can’t do with their software. Apple is one of the big opponents of right to repair laws, and one of the worst offenders. You can’t do what you want with the hardware, either. You can’t separate the software from the hardware with Apple, so you still don’t have the ability to choose what you do and don’t do with your computer.Īpple’s desire to switch from a hardware sales company to a services revenue company means that they are incentivized to prevent you from doing things you used to be able to do and then charge you on a monthly basis to be able to do it. ($45 new, upgrades available, 42.2 MB, release notes, macOS 11+) Little Snitch 4 licensees can upgrade to version 5 at a reduced price, which you can get by visiting this Objective Development order page. The new version also enables you to specify a list of port numbers in rules, prepares the export format for backups in “human-readable” normalized JSON, and records network statistics independently of Network Monitor (so you can quit Network Monitor and still have statistics recorded). Little Snitch’s new command-line interface enables preferences editing, configuration import and export, debugging, logging, and access to traffic history. Little Snitch 5 requires Big Sur and runs on both Intel- and Apple silicon-based Macs. Version 5 focuses on integrating new network filter technologies introduced by Apple in Big Sur, with the underlying filter engine being re-built to replace the previous kernel extension-based approach that is no longer supported by macOS. Objective Development has released Little Snitch 5.0, a major upgrade that brings a design overhaul, improved traffic statistics, a new command-line interface, and compatibility with macOS 11 Big Sur to the network traffic management utility. 1654: Urgent OS security updates, upgrading to macOS 13 Ventura, using smart speakers while temporarily blind.#1655: 33 years of TidBITS, Twitter train wreck, tvOS 16.4.1, Apple Card Savings, Steve Jobs ebook.#1656: Passcode thieves lock iCloud accounts, the apps Adam uses, iPhoto and Aperture library conversion in Ventura.#1657: A deep dive into the innovative Arc Web browser.#1658: Rapid Security Responses, NYPD and industry standard AirTag news, Apple's Q2 2023 financials.
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