I can barely believe how awful Catalina is now turning out to be. Someone suggested that I rewind back to a previous version, but that would be difficult, and would probably postpone the inevitable anyway.
However, noticing that some of my applications are now supposed to be in need of update, to Catalina macOS 10.15.6 I thought that despite the previous unpleasant experiences of installing the earlier version of Catalina, that I'd have a go.
The very first thing to notice is that Apple have changed the Software Update in Preferences, so that only does application updates. Catalina doesn't appear "obviously" in the App store, but if a search for Catalina is made there, the update to 10.15.6 shows up - so they even make it hard to find the updates/upgrade which they seem to want fo foist on users.
OK - one finds where the software is on the App store. The next thing is to make sure there's enough space to do the install. Well - actually no. Apple estimated about 13 Gbytes, so I moved files and deleted or copied ones off my 250 Gbyte laptop to make this feasible. Eventually the download worked, so then I thought that maybe the install would go OK.
"You have to be joking ...."
At this point I intercepted the install process, and captured the install file - or maybe it just stalled anyway.
Now running the install to put the OS on the main storage SSD there is a notification that an additional 14.16 Gbytes is required. Thus nearly 30 Gbytes of spare space is apparently required in order to get the updated OS installed, so that then the updated software might also be installed.
Haven't Apple heard about methods of updating which do not require such large amounts of spare space? Various forms of paged storage - even for backing store? Such an approach would minimise the space requirements, at the expense of some speed, but would be vastly preferable. It could be done. Even older methods such as system patches....
OK - they don't care - they probably think I'm going to rush out an buy a new 1 TByte laptop to replace my otherwise perfectly good one which has a mere 250 Gbytes of storage. I would do that, but not at the huge prices which Apple charge. Oh - that was the company which made it either impossible or very difficult for me to add in new SSD storage when I bought the machine? At the time I bought the most I thought I needed or could afford.
I would have been prepared to buy extra SSD memory as an after market upgrade if Apple hadn't decided to try to stop me.
I'm not sure that returning to Windows and PCs would be a "solution" for me, but this is really shoddy.
I suspect that I'm going to have to buy one or two very large SSDs (say 1Tbyte or more) and install Catalina on those, and then boot the laptop from those.
The sad thing is that I do like some of the software that Apple produce, and even the OS when it works well, but Catalina and the migration path from earlier OS versions seems to me - and also many others if one looks at what's been written about it - to have been a complete disaster.
However, noticing that some of my applications are now supposed to be in need of update, to Catalina macOS 10.15.6 I thought that despite the previous unpleasant experiences of installing the earlier version of Catalina, that I'd have a go.
The very first thing to notice is that Apple have changed the Software Update in Preferences, so that only does application updates. Catalina doesn't appear "obviously" in the App store, but if a search for Catalina is made there, the update to 10.15.6 shows up - so they even make it hard to find the updates/upgrade which they seem to want fo foist on users.
OK - one finds where the software is on the App store. The next thing is to make sure there's enough space to do the install. Well - actually no. Apple estimated about 13 Gbytes, so I moved files and deleted or copied ones off my 250 Gbyte laptop to make this feasible. Eventually the download worked, so then I thought that maybe the install would go OK.
"You have to be joking ...."
At this point I intercepted the install process, and captured the install file - or maybe it just stalled anyway.
Now running the install to put the OS on the main storage SSD there is a notification that an additional 14.16 Gbytes is required. Thus nearly 30 Gbytes of spare space is apparently required in order to get the updated OS installed, so that then the updated software might also be installed.
Haven't Apple heard about methods of updating which do not require such large amounts of spare space? Various forms of paged storage - even for backing store? Such an approach would minimise the space requirements, at the expense of some speed, but would be vastly preferable. It could be done. Even older methods such as system patches....
OK - they don't care - they probably think I'm going to rush out an buy a new 1 TByte laptop to replace my otherwise perfectly good one which has a mere 250 Gbytes of storage. I would do that, but not at the huge prices which Apple charge. Oh - that was the company which made it either impossible or very difficult for me to add in new SSD storage when I bought the machine? At the time I bought the most I thought I needed or could afford.
I would have been prepared to buy extra SSD memory as an after market upgrade if Apple hadn't decided to try to stop me.
I'm not sure that returning to Windows and PCs would be a "solution" for me, but this is really shoddy.
I suspect that I'm going to have to buy one or two very large SSDs (say 1Tbyte or more) and install Catalina on those, and then boot the laptop from those.
The sad thing is that I do like some of the software that Apple produce, and even the OS when it works well, but Catalina and the migration path from earlier OS versions seems to me - and also many others if one looks at what's been written about it - to have been a complete disaster.
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