Feek's macOS useful tools, utilities and applications thread

Yes. You can also run a Mac VM 0n Windows but the Apple’s T&Cs prohibit MacOS being run on non Apple hardware.

Yeah, I've been trying it with Big Sur tonight but it's horrendously slow so I gave up on that idea. I just need the real thing. :D
 
Do you not own a Mac then?

I have previously but for one reason or another (mainly because I miss gaming) got rid of them all. With the likes of GeForce Now and Xbox cloud gaming, I think I could cope better. And I really, really want to start tinkering about with Swift.
 
I tried downloading the latest Windows ARM version of Libreoffice but it wouldn't install. So I downloaded an older version from here...

https://downloadarchive.documentfoundation.org/libreoffice/old/?C=M;O=D

Then it installed and updated itself to the latest version anyway. Going to start using Libreoffice instead of Openoffice on main Windows 11 PC now as well. I ran a non ARM edition of Openoffice on Windows 11 ARM edition and it didn't run very well. Libreoffice is so much better.
 
I've noticed something with Libreoffice, by default in Tools > Options > View > the Graphics Output is set to Use Skia for all rendering. When set like this the tool bars aren't displayed properly i.e. like this...

7sGHVvr.jpeg


However if I set the Graphics Output to Use hardware acceleration the tool bar icons are displayed properly like this...

ZCbGTfW.jpeg


However it's dead slow at rendering them but if I turn off Accelerate 3D Graphics in VMWare Fusion display options...

r5mTzQb.jpeg


It shows the tool bars properly and also renders them much quicker.
 
I ran your post through my new best friend, ChatGPT, and it said.

Given your description, the fastest and most visually correct configuration in VMware Fusion + Windows 11 would be:

  1. VMware Fusion Settings:
    • Turn off “Accelerate 3D graphics” in the VM display settings.
  2. LibreOffice Settings:
    • Set Graphics Output to “Use hardware acceleration”, or even leave Skia enabled — with 3D acceleration off, it should fall back gracefully to software rendering.
This avoids the virtual GPU issues but still gives you decent performance.
 
Yeah, I've been trying it with Big Sur tonight but it's horrendously slow so I gave up on that idea. I just need the real thing. :D
Let me remind you, and anyone else talking about running macOS as a VM of the final line in this thread. Thanks.
 
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