A neater interface with its own app icon at last, and notarized for your better protection.
macOS 10.14
When the user wants to access protected data using an app which doesn’t have the entitlement, the result is at best confusing, and could end up with a crash.
A notarized version, which should benefit all users, and pass Mojave’s Gatekeeper checks in full.
I’m all in favour of better security, so long as it doesn’t make my life any more difficult. Does Notarization fulfil that?
The same code as 4.8, but now with the additional protection of Apple’s Notarization, ready for Mojave and beyond.
While we’re worrying about 32-bit apps, something else is changing which is likely to stop many more apps from working properly. In the near future.
Parsing multiple languages in the same text, discovering which parse types are supported in a language, and finding ‘roots’ of words.
As shown at WWDC, 10.14 can parse natural language text into its parts of speech. Here’s a demo app for beta-testers, to give an idea of its powers.
XProtect’s data files haven’t been updated since 13 March 2018 – a period of 120 days. Is it being replaced in Mojave? What happens to those still using High Sierra and earlier?
Now includes all Mojave beta updates. Not needed for High Sierra or earlier, though.
