You’ll instantly see everything appear much sharper, but here comes the caveat: your effective resolution is much lower. This trick reveals additional resolutions for all displays and should list the HiDPI resolutions if they weren’t already visible. Note: If you’re not seeing the HiDPI resolutions listed in System Preferences after using the Terminal command above, try clicking on the “Scaled” radio button while holding the Alt/Option key on your keyboard. Click on one of the HiDPI modes to enable it on your desired display. Click Scaled to reveal additional resolutions and you’ll see one or more options at the bottom of the list with “(HiDPI)” appended to their resolutions. Most users will likely have the “Default for Display” option checked, which is typically your display’s native resolution. Here you’ll see the familiar preference window where you can set your resolution and refresh rate. Next, reboot your Mac and, upon logging back in, head to System Preferences and click on Displays.Then press Return to execute the command and, because this is a “sudo” command, enter your admin password when prompted.$ sudo defaults write /Library/Preferences/ DisplayResolutionEnabled -bool true Fire up a new Terminal window and then copy and paste the following command:.I will try Resolve tonight and see if it's also affected. The only software i have installed other than work stuff is Little Snitch. My Mini (11.2.2) has icloud and time machine de-activated, no data on the internal drive as everything is on an external TB3 drive. If i set it to basic or no hardware acceleration it stops right away (need further tests to confirm)Īs i'm not affected when running Capture One which uses OpenCL, i wonder if the problem comes from a bad implementation of GPU acceleration + Metal with some software like the Adobe Suite. However kernel_task start to write a lot of data as soon as i open Lightroom's develop module with hardware acceleration set to full. So far my Mac Mini seems totally unaffected when i work in Capture One (Rosetta / OpenCL), Phocus, Affinity and most of my productivity + browsing software. I'm a photographer so my workflow revolve around Hasselblad Phocus / Capture One / Lightroom+Photoshop / etc. I ran quite a lot of tests since opening the box yesterday and i have some - maybe - interesting conclusions. I received a Mac Mini M1 16/256 yesterday and after reading this thread i was anxious to see how bad this problem was (my main machines are Mac Pros with maxed out RAM). I just created an account to comment here (long time lurker). I took the following image with my Fuji GFX 50S and processed it in Capture One Pro 20 on the M1 Mac mini. Thunderbolt is still required to connect the 2 USB ports in the back of the monitor.Ĭapture One Pro 20 works fine in emulation on the M1, using Apple’s Rosetta 2 automatically. To shut the M1 down requires to issue the Shut Down command twice in a row, as it will boot back up after the first attempt.Īlso the M1 would not wake up the LG monitor gone to sleep until I hooked up the monitor to the M1 with both the Thunderbolt and HDMI cables, using HDMI to drive the monitor. I kept updated versions of CCC, ClamXav, and SwitchResX. I also used EtreCheck to eliminate all Adobe and Microsoft apps from my new computer, as well as most unsigned system extensions. I used the free app EtreCheck (the Pro version is $18 and can be bought from within the app, well worth it) to weed out all 32-bit apps, as they don’t work on macOS Big Sur. Summarizing, I migrated 10 years of crude, collected on my “trashcan” to the new M1 Mac mini using a Time Maschine (TM) backup.
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