Pixelmator Photo is now available on iPhone - 9to5Mac.

Pixelmator Photo is now available on iPhone - 9to5Mac.

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Apple's macOS Ventura beta review: great new features, but some concerns | AppleInsider.Pixelmator Photo 













































   

 

The difference between Pixelmator and Pixelmator Pro - Pixelmator Community - Best iPhone app of the month: Currenzy



 

Software Coupons. Inkscape Free. Give full scope to your imagination with highly extensible, professional-grade artistic and technical vector graphics. Explore new paths with this vector-graphics tool. Adobe Illustrator CS6 Free to try. Explore new paths with this vector tool. Pixelmator Free to try. Touch up and enhance images, draw or paint, apply effects, or create advanced compositions with ease.

Crop, remove objects, retouch, combine photos, and reimagine the art of photography. Affinity Designer Free to try. Professional graphic design software. Give full scope to your imagination with highly extensible, professional-grade artistic and technical vector imagery. CorelDraw Graphics Suite Free to try. Design graphics, layouts, edit photos, and create Web sites.

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Produce extraordinary icons, graphical design elements, and art for user interface components and mockups. ProMotion comes to Mac for the first time, making everything from scrolling through a web page to gaming super-fluid and responsive — while also reducing power consumption. With refresh rates of up to Hz, the adaptive technology automatically adjusts to match the movement of the content. Video editors can also choose a fixed refresh rate that precisely aligns with their footage.

Display enclosure. Thousands of mini-LEDs are grouped into individually controlled local dimming zones for precise brightness and contrast. Custom optical films and diffusers. Seven films and diffusers mix and shape the light efficiently while enabling an ultra-thin design. High-mobility oxide TFT. The oxide thin film transistor TFT allows pixels to charge two times faster than before, enabling refresh rates of up to Hz.

LCD panel. Staying connected is more important than ever. And the three-mic array uses directional beamforming so your voice always comes through loud and clear. Six-speaker sound system. Spatial audio. Transfer photos and videos with an SDXC card reader. Listen using a 3. Connect to high-speed peripherals or displays with three Thunderbolt 4 ports. And Touch ID has a new, tactile ring that guides your finger for a fast, easy, secure way to unlock your Mac. Use a single keyboard and mouse or trackpad to work seamlessly between your Mac and iPad with Universal Control.

Automate complex tasks with Shortcuts. Share your screen, watch together or collaborate with FaceTime. And browse with the best Safari yet. Learn more about macOS Monterey. Over 10, apps and plug-ins are already optimised for Apple silicon. And Rosetta 2 seamlessly translates apps designed for Intel processors for use on your new MacBook Pro. Open this page using Safari on your iPhone or iPad. The new MacBook Pro has been carefully designed with the environment in mind.

And we use recycled rare earth elements in all the magnets in the product. MacBook Pro is free of numerous harmful substances and all the virgin wood fibre in our packaging comes from responsibly-managed forests. Learn more about Apple and the environment.

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Up to 11 hours of wireless web browsing

 


- Re: Pixelmator Photo vs Pixelmator for iOS - Pixelmator Community



 

That's chiefly, though, less because of the visual changes and more because of the organizational ones. The new System Settings is very clear, arguably much clearer than the old collection of icons, but certain parts have been moved. No criticism here, if anything the new place makes more sense. Only, when macOS Ventura is finally shipping, it is going to take longstanding Mac users time to find where everything is.

And at the moment, in the beta, there are two issues that make this more frustrating than it should be. One is that for some reason, macOS Ventura does not keep all of the login items, the startup apps or utilities, that were set under macOS Monterey. There's no obvious pattern to it, but in our testing, for example, it was as if Ventura forgot we had TextExpander — and remembered we use Alfred 4. Consequently, an early job in using macOS Ventura is putting back all of the missing login items.

The big annoyance, which will doubtlessly be fixed by release, is that the search feature in System Settings does not work at all. It will not return the right result if you search for "Login Items," it won't return any result. Yet overall, the new System Settings is an improvement. Under the old System Preferences for instance, you could change your wallpaper but there wasn't actually a section called that. There are many changes like this, surfacing common items better than before, making it clearer where everything is.

The new System Settings is good, it will just take time to get used to, the longer you've been working on Macs. There has also been a question, though, over whether the redesign will prove to be a problem for AppleScript users. The old System Preferences supported scripting, it had an AppleScript dictionary so users could include changing settings in their scripts. Apple hasn't commented on this yet, but it's probable that AppleScripts will continue to work as normal.

It's possible that some will have to be rewritten, but the new System Settings does present the same AppleScript dictionary. Plus although search within System Settings doesn't work, search outside it does.

If you use Alfred 4, the Spotlight replacement, then you can type the name of a System Preference pane and it will open the correct part of the new System Settings. That suggests that whatever the surface redesign is, the back end of System Settings remains the same. And so should remain as controllable by AppleScript. Spotlight has long been an amazing tool on the Mac for finding anything, whether that means searching the Mac itself or online.

It's not been quite so amazing, though, that there aren't reasons to use alternatives such as Alfred 4 or LaunchBar. The new macOS Ventura's Spotlight isn't going to pull fans of those third-party apps back into the Apple fold, but it is improved.

Visually, it now presents relevant photos in searches, and it's also more neatly designed overall. It's able to present long lists of results in a smaller space, while also appearing clearer.

Those results, too, are improved in how they can for instance include recent websites you've visited that are relevant to your search. Plus when you scroll down to a result, you can tap the space bar to get a Quick Look at the image, the document, and so on. Spotlight now also does more in presenting information rather than showing links to webpages with what you want.

So it will better show sports results right there in the search field, for instance. It's also added the ability to perform actions such as setting timer.

Although good luck figuring out what to type to get that to work. You're better off holding down the Command key and the space bar, waiting a beat for Siri to appear, and then saying, "Hey, Siri, set a timer for ten minutes," or whatever you need. Although billed as being part of the Spotlight improvements, this timer feature really exists because Apple has brought its Clock app to the Mac. This mostly resembles the form and layout of Clock on iPadOS, but now does everything you could on either iPhone or iPad.

Similarly, Apple has finally brought over the Weather app from iOS, and it is very nicely done. All of the same clarity and simply gorgeous graphics from the iPhone Weather app are here, just arranged in a different order. Where you would scroll to see all of the elements of the Weather app on iPhone, for the Mac they are all presented in a kind of dashboard layout.

See basic information at a glance, or click on an element to get more detail. It's particularly well done how you can click and drag sliders to show, for instance, predicted rainfall at different times of the day.

Although it's currently less well done how you handle the weather for multiple locations. By default, you of course get the weather for where you are now, but you can add alternatives. Only, there is a plus sign on the top of the Weather app's screen and it does not add an alternative city. It doesn't do anything, not at first. Instead, you have to use the search field next to the plus sign.

Find a city or other location you want, then as the Weather app displays data for there, now you can click that plus sign. Once you've added more than one location, they are all available in a sidebar.

This optionally pops out in exactly the same way that, for instance, you can get Preview to show you thumbnails, or Pages to show you a table of contents.

Apps like Pages continue to have their impressive Continuity Camera feature, whereby your Mac can control your iPhone to take photos or scan documents. That Continuity Camera feature, though, has been radically extended to bring key iPhone features to the Mac.

Apple tiptoed around this, but still came as close as it ever will to admitting that the Mac's built-in webcams are a bit rubbish compared to the iPhone's cameras. Now, you can use the iPhone's camera on your Mac. It's a little unwieldy, and physically looks more like a Rube Goldberg or Professor Branestawm invention. You mount your heavy iPhone atop your delicately slim MacBook Pro display, and hope it doesn't fall forward. Apple used what it implied were forthcoming mounts from Belkin, and plenty of users are already successfully trying to tape their iPhones to the screen.

Just, you know, don't go slamming shut the lid. If it's physically not wonderful, though, it is rather startlingly amazing in actual use. As long as you have an iPhone 11 or later, and it's running iOS 16, then simply being on the same Wi-Fi network, and logged in to the same Apple ID, is enough.

Your iPhone doesn't even have to be unlocked. Specifically, you get Center Stage. So just as with an iPad, you can move about in shot, or someone else can join you on your side of a video call, and the screen automatically re-frames the image to show you perfectly. There is more, though. If you have an iPhone 12 or later, then you also get a feature called Studio Light. Turn this on, and the iPhone alters the image.

It automatically dims the background and lightens your face, intelligently distinguishing between the two and creating a better image. And if Stage Manager is the most visible improvement in macOS Ventura for all users, Continuity Camera is the wow moment — for some users. Note that being able to run iOS 16 on your iPhone is not enough.

The second generation iPhone SE , for instance, is newer than the iPhone 11 and is officially supported by iOS 16 yet the new Continuity Camera features don't work on it. Without you doing anything to reposition that wobbly iPhone atop your Mac's screen, the lenses in it are able to simultaneously focus on you and your desk. Have a search for craft planner videos on YouTube. Countless videos like this show an overhead view of a crafter working at his or her desk, demonstrating something.

Continuity Camera with Desk View is the main new benefit that's come to FaceTime, but there is one more. This is feature, previously seen in audio with the iPhone and the HomePod mini , where you can switch devices seamlessly.

In that audio example, you listen to music on your iPhone until you reach home, then you handoff that music to your HomePod mini, which then plays it. Now you can be on a quick FaceTime call on your iPhone when you realise this conversation is going to take a lot longer than you expect, so you just hand it off to your Mac.

Without a moment's interruption to the call, you are now able to continue the video conversation on your Mac while you make coffee in the background. And if you are at your Mac, you can of course do this the other way around, starting with the Mac and continuing on your iPhone as you head out to work.

Only, if you're at your Mac, there is a new way to start a FaceTime call. You can do it as part of the improvements to Safari. Safari has a Collaboration icon in the toolbar. Click on that and you can Message someone with the link, or you can start a FaceTime audio or video call. If you do this a lot with the same people, you are probably working together, or perhaps just plotting a trip together.

In either case, you're likely to each be looking up websites — and now you can better share what you're up to. With a couple of clicks, you can have every site you need for work open in a tab — and not see any of your vacation-planning ones.

Or with the same clicks, dismiss all of your work tabs and only see that vacation one. Or only see your favorite news sites. It's sometimes proved a little buggy, and the macOS Ventura beta oddly re-orders the list of your tab groups, but it is little short of fantastic for productivity.

Now, though, you can take one of your carefully curated tab groups and share it with colleagues, family, friends, basically anyone who needs it and will muck it up for you. They mean well, though, and they're probably helpfully adding useful websites to your shared tab group. There are people who do not mean well, though, and who have anything but your interests at heart — and Safari is aiming to make things more difficult for them.

Apple will tell you that it stores passwords securely in the Mac's Keychain, and third-party apps like 1Password are equally strong on security. But it still remains the case that bad actors are very good at getting passwords, not least by conning us into revealing them.

As long as there is an actual password that you can read out after a phishing attack, there is a risk. And as long as there are actual passwords stored on companies' servers that could be hacked, there's even more of a risk.

Apple, along with Microsoft, Google and very many more, wants to fix this by entirely eradicating the password.

And macOS Ventura is beginning the job. Bring your photos, movies, music and documents with you — and open them in a flash. Studio quality. Without the studio. A touch on the sensor instantly unlocks your Mac and a press locks it. And when you shop online with Apple Pay, Touch ID automatically fills in your shipping and billing information without sharing your card details. Make purchases on the Apple TV app.

Thunderbolt enables data transfer, charging and video output all through a single port — and MacBook Pro has two of them.

Data transfer up to 40 Gbps Wi-Fi 6 up to 1. Open this page using Safari on your iPhone or iPad. M1 chip. Apple M1 chip. M2 chip. I've never asked it to replace my "work" computers, which are now Macs. The iPad, and especially the mini, doesn't place any big demands on me so there is always room in my life and my baggage to bring it with me regardless of whatever else I need to carry.

Reply 7 of My iPP I have the Apple sleeve with Pencil holder. I use the software keyboard, in landscape, as the primary text input. It's much more mobile than a laptop, so I can take it anywhere with me: waiting for the kids somewhere, on a table, on vacation, in bed, etc.

I use it for Safari, News, games, apps, streaming, business, shopping, scratch paper, teaching tool, books, what have you. Looking forward to replacing it with a large display iPad Pro soon. A little trepidatious about the increased size and weight, but if iPadOS is going go have overlapping arbitrary sized apps soon, bigger will be better. Also wish Apple could make the software keyboard more flexible.

Like, make the layout user designerable even. Reply 8 of I have an original 1st gen iPad Air and a 11" iPad Pro. YAM is quite nice, seeing as it works with an old iPad that doesn't support Sidecar, and can be used at the same time as Sidecar. YAM is very reliable, but I have to say, Sidecar is not that reliable for me -- it sometimes loses connection, with display still showing but cursor not able to move to that display. I have to disconnect and re-connect in Display Preferences to bring it back.

WiFi signal strength is always very strong, so not sure why Sidecar would not be more reliable. This happens even if YAM is not being used. Reply 9 of Final Cut Pro Logic Pro. CPU Performance. Faster project build 7.

Faster computational fluid dynamics performance 8. Faster publish performance Faster multicore vector performance GPU Performance. Faster 4K render speed Faster 8K render speed Faster real-time 3D performance Faster render with Redshift Faster effect render Faster GPU-accelerated filters and functions Faster combined vector and raster GPU performance We can do this all day. Up to 11 hours of wireless web browsing Up to 14 hours of wireless web browsing A whole new power structure.

M1 Pro. Up to 32 GB unified memory. M1 Max. Up to 64 GB unified memory. Up to core CPU. Up to core GPU. Incredible performance. Unrivaled efficiency. Feast your eyes on XDR. More plugged in than ever.

Pro power meets pro keyboard. Beauty and the beast.

   

 

‎Pixelmator Photo on the App Store - Wesley Hilliard



    Pixelmator Pro is not a 'professional' version and Pixelmator is not an 'entry-level' version. Both apps are focused around time-tested image editing tools. Pixelmator Photo brings a desktop-class photo editing experience to iPad and iPhone. With powerful, nondestructive color adjustments like Levels, Curves, Hue &.


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