"supplemental update" reminds me to Windows
what are you saying?
"supplemental update" reminds me to Windows
Hasn't appeared on my 2011 iMac yet, oh well.
They will, in the next rMBP refresh, and they will only charge you full price of a new rMBP for the fix..
I have a 2011 MBP 13" and have to enter the password in iTunes several times a day since of a few months. Any thoughts?
Then do explain why I got the update for my MBA 2012 and managed to install it successfully... The article is correct: it is for all 2012 models (take a good look at what Apple's own description says about models from 2012!). Since this is a supplemental update it requires that you have 10.8.2 installed (not sure if you need to have supplemental 1.0 as well).
It does that since Lion. You can disable it by setting it to 0 via the commandline. You need to use the following command: sudo pmset -a standbydelay 0. If you do like this feature but only want it to enter standby mode after a certain amount of time you can tell it that too. It takes the amount of time in seconds. Using a value of 86400 would mean it will enter standby mode after 24 hours of sleep.
Still problems with external monitor and I don't know if related, but Time machine has said problem with backup and has started again.
Days and days of backing up. Why oh why so long.
Feeling very nervous.
I was just reading that one of the reasons why they pulled 10.8.2 is because it allowed Disk Utility to create a free Fusion drive, and of course they want to sell those.And we're still waiting for 10.8.2 for the 2012 Mac mini - it was released, but Apple has since pulled it.
Took a look at it again: What I was trying to point out was that people who got their machines after Friday are still out of luck.
I'd like to suggest that you consider switching from underlining words that you want to emphasize to using italics or bold type. The convention regarding underlined text in this context is that it is a hyperlink.
Alert
This software is not supported on your system.
EditHmm, seems it is only for 13" rMBPs, despite the support page saying all 2012 Macs
The problem here is that Apple introduced Airs and 15" retinas and 15" non-retina Macbook Pros in 2012. Those machines run the plain old 10.8.2 update which is still available, and this supplemental update does not seem to apply to them, in spite of what Apple says.Will do!
Again everybody with a 2012 Mac still running 10.8.1 are out of luck updating to 10.8.2, including 13" rMBPs!
The problem here is that Apple introduced Airs and 15" retinas and 15" non-retina Macbook Pros in 2012. Those machines run the plain old 10.8.2 update which is still available, and this supplemental update does not seem to apply to them, in spite of what Apple says.
The hibernatemode setting is completely different from the standby mode. The machine will first go into hibernate but after a certain amount of time (4200 seconds by default) it will go into standby saving a lot of power. This behaviour is default since Lion and certain hardware. This is actually the biggest reason why the standby time for an MBA is 30 days.Never tried setting standbydelay time to 0. Usually people recommend setting: sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 0
Yep. Before you could simply set the hibernatemode to 0 and delete the sleepimage file. You can do that now but the sleepimage will be created once you reboot the machine. The only way of making sure this doesn't happen is symlinking the sleepimage file to /dev/null (see sweebee's post in the topic you linked).Another problem is since the recent 10.8.2 update, disabling hibernate doesn't keep the sleepimage from reappearing (which takes up to 16GB of disk space depending on how much RAM you have). The only way to keep it off so far is a hack mentioned here:
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/1480259/
On a side note: Apple finally put the 10.8.2 update for 2012 Mac owners back online!
Is that a joke? Not to be mean but this is only an update for 2012 macs... Mentioned several times in the post.