![]() There’s also improvements in Japanese video captioning. There’s now support for bilingual English and Japanese inputs. There’s a new San Francisco Arabic system wide font. You can use it right now by downloading it from here. This one is from the peaks in High Sierra. If you have more than 200 GB of iCloud Storage, you can now share it with your family members. You can now generate a web link for files stored in iCloud Drive. When enabled, you can’t go back to the voice functionality. You’ll now be able to flip and switch and enable the option to type to Siri instead of speaking to it. The mic icon has been replaced by the animating Siri orb. The text is left-aligned and the answers have an s0lid white background instead of the translucent one. The text is now bigger and the answers are in bold. Spotlight will also show multiple results from Wikipedia. Both parties will get a notification about it and the live Photo will be saved in your Photos library. Live Photos in FaceTimeĪ new shutter button in FaceTime lets you take Live Photo of your call. Search Suggestions in NotesĪ boon for extensive note takers, the Notes app now has search suggestions to make it easier for you to find notes. You can now create custom tables in the Notes app. Pinned notes will always show up at the top of the list. Swipe on a note in list view to get to the Pin option. The new Hidden tab in the sidebar gives you a quick access to all your hidden files (previously you’d have to go in via the menu bar). The Imports section in the sidebar now shows your most recent imports, in a reverse chronological order. What this means is you can quickly expand it anytime you want to open an album, or drag photos. The Sidebar is now persistent across the entire app. Or just drag them to the Desktop or any folder in Finder to export them. You can now select multiple photos and drag them to any album. You’ll now find two more editing features – Curves and Selective color. You can open photos in pro apps like Pixelmator and when you’re done editing, the changes will be saved back to the Photos library. Read More: 100 Awesome iOS 11 Features and Changes 10. Long Exposure adds a blur effect and extends water and light trails. Loop makes it an ever repeating, GIF-like image. Just like iOS 11, you can apply 3 new effects to Live Photos stored on your Mac. You can now trim and mute Live Photos on the Mac and choose a new key frame. It adds new categories like pets, kids, performances, sporting events, weddings and more. The new Photos app will be able to create a lot more different Memories videos for you. Photos app in High Sierra will finally start syncing your face recognition data across all your devices using iCloud (again, in a secure manner). Mail Search has a new suggested search section called Top Hits that puts the most relevant searches to the top. So you can compose your messages while still being able to keep an eye on your Inbox for new messages. Mail Search is now much faster as it uses Spotlight to index your messages. So your Mac won’t have a different iMessages experience than your iPhone. As this is Apple, it happens privately and securely (it’s still end-to-end encrypted). Messages will now sync between all your devices using iCloud. Reader mode presents articles in just text and images form (similar to Pocket). This way you can skip the ads, navigation, and other distractions. Safari in High Sierra can automatically open supported web articles in Reader mode for you. Users who installed their own SSDs had to hunt down third-party tools that enabled TRIM in an unsupported way.RELATED : How To Use A USB Flash Drive To Create An Emergency Mac OS Boot Device 2. Historically, Mac OS X has only enabled TRIM for the solid-state drives Apple provides. Windows 7 and newer have had built-in support for TRIM, which they enable for all SSDs. The SSD can then manage its available storage more intelligently. TRIM ensures the physical NAND memory locations containing deleted files are erased before you need to write to them. This causes your SSD to slow down over time unless TRIM is enabled. With flash memory, it’s faster to write to empty memory - to write to full memory, the memory must first be erased and then written to. The SSD knows that the file is deleted and it can erase the file’s data from its flash storage. ![]() When an operating system uses TRIM with a solid-state drive, it sends a signal to the SSD every time you delete a file. RELATED: Why Solid-State Drives Slow Down As You Fill Them Up Why TRIM is Important, and Why Macs Don’t Always Enable It by Default ![]()
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