Upgrading to High Sierra and indeed some of the other more recent Mac OS versions may give some benefits. It may also provide some very serious headaches.
These may even be security issues - it's difficult to tell.
1. Contacts disappear unless iCloud is turned on. Actually it's not quite that simple, but Apple may copy all the Contact information up to its iCloud. Some data may remain, but not necessarily all of it. To see all the data iCloud "should" be on - but personally I'm totally against that. I don't see why I need to be connected, and in any case why should I trust Apple any more than any other third party agent - which is probably going to be my next point.
2. In the High Sierra upgrade Calendars also disappear unless iCloud is turned on. Worse, it is possible that the calendars can be affected by Calendar spam - which I have no idea as yet how to get rid of. I was beginning to like Apple's Calendar implementations - as long as the calendars are local to my machine, but now I absolutely hate these, and my calendars have effectively been trashed.
See https://9to5mac.com/2016/11/30/apple...cking-senders/
Basically this is appalling. It's all very well Apple and others trying to work on fixes within the iCloud or email, but if the calendar application had remained as a local application in the first place - completely locked down - with no outside interference, then this could not have happened.
It is total rubbish - though I'm not convinced that trashing all my Apple products and switching to Windows or another OS will overcome or avoid problems like this.
I have been wary of clouds for years, though nobody seems to listen to me. I may decide to go back to Filofax after all.
These may even be security issues - it's difficult to tell.
1. Contacts disappear unless iCloud is turned on. Actually it's not quite that simple, but Apple may copy all the Contact information up to its iCloud. Some data may remain, but not necessarily all of it. To see all the data iCloud "should" be on - but personally I'm totally against that. I don't see why I need to be connected, and in any case why should I trust Apple any more than any other third party agent - which is probably going to be my next point.
2. In the High Sierra upgrade Calendars also disappear unless iCloud is turned on. Worse, it is possible that the calendars can be affected by Calendar spam - which I have no idea as yet how to get rid of. I was beginning to like Apple's Calendar implementations - as long as the calendars are local to my machine, but now I absolutely hate these, and my calendars have effectively been trashed.
See https://9to5mac.com/2016/11/30/apple...cking-senders/
Basically this is appalling. It's all very well Apple and others trying to work on fixes within the iCloud or email, but if the calendar application had remained as a local application in the first place - completely locked down - with no outside interference, then this could not have happened.
It is total rubbish - though I'm not convinced that trashing all my Apple products and switching to Windows or another OS will overcome or avoid problems like this.
I have been wary of clouds for years, though nobody seems to listen to me. I may decide to go back to Filofax after all.
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