

- #Softraid preferences wont open how to#
- #Softraid preferences wont open install#
- #Softraid preferences wont open driver#
- #Softraid preferences wont open upgrade#

When I got it, settings worked perfectly fine. Alas.I recently received a new Windows 10 laptop. Yeah, okay, this is probably one of those “Apple likes it this way, deal with it.” situations.
#Softraid preferences wont open how to#
I … can’t see any reason for either of these, and I’m hoping that someone has a suggestion on how to get more information onto the screen. Also, the lines are now much more widely spaced. You can say what you like about my life and the way I run it, but the new version of Mail has, bizarrely, done away with the triangle that shows that a line corresponds to a thread, rather than to a single email, so there’s no way to tell whether I’m looking at a single message or a thread of thirty messages, until I hit the right arrow. I do this because I have literally 4835 unread messages in my inbox, out of 7872 messages total. Specifically, I use the probably-now-deprecated one-line-per-email just-the-sender-subject-and-date view. Most of the differences I can deal with, but I’m wondering if anyone has any input into what appear to me to be very strange design choices in Mail. I have two machines, both older (2015), one running Big Sur and one running Catalina. However, for those who haven’t yet updated from a previous version of macOS, we recommend waiting a few more weeks to determine if macOS 11.2 will give fence-sitters sufficient confidence to make the jump to Big Sur. Wait a few days to make sure the community doesn’t find unanticipated problems, and then update. Given the severity of the exploited security vulnerabilities, we recommend installing macOS 11.2 soon if you’re already running macOS 11.1.
#Softraid preferences wont open install#
You can only install the update using Software Update Apple appears to have stopped releasing standalone downloads for Big Sur updates. The macOS 11.2 update advertises itself as being a 3.25 GB download on both an Intel-based iMac and an M1-based MacBook Air, although the latter Mac’s download window inexplicably reports 4.18 GB instead. However, no mention was made of a recent vulnerability discovered in the sudo Unix utility.

Two of the vulnerabilities-the same ones addressed in last week’s updates to Apple’s other operating systems-may have been actively exploited in the wild. If those bugs don’t seem earth-shattering, that’s because the focus of the macOS 11.2 update seems to have been on security, with 43 security fixes.
#Softraid preferences wont open upgrade#
#Softraid preferences wont open driver#
