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.
 
Here’s a couple of videos showing what I mean regarding 3D Acceleration enabled vs disabled…

3D Acceleration Enabled…
3D Acceleration Disabled…

My screen recording software isn’t the best but gives the general idea what I mean.
 
One thing I've noticed is that my Windows VM was running the same resolution as my Mac, 3008x1692. My Windows PC was running 3840x2160 with 150% scaling which meant it was actually running at 2560x1440.

So I've changed the scaling on my Windows PC to 128% which now means its running at 2998x1686 and is the closest I can get to 3008x1692 which looks really good. Windows recommends 3840x2160 at 150% scaling but I find that's a bit too big.
 
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