![]() Brother iPrint&Scan 9.1.1 (tested only scanning with MFC-7860DW printer).AppCleaner (Background looks a little messed up but works).Adguard (works but may cause performance issues in Safari when Private Relay is enabled).I am currently installing and will update shortly. Let's use this post to capture the working and not working apps. REGION TYPE START - END PRT/MAX SHRMOD REGION DETAIL Termination Reason: Namespace SIGNAL, Code 10 Bus error: 10 ![]() Path: /Applications/iTube Studio.app/Contents/MacOS/iTube StudioĪnonymous UUID: 8A273FD0-16A7-6D11-460D-64DF2D0C49CF this is the error message I get, maybe someone out there can understand what's up: I'm at a loss here because you'd think something system related would start happening right after macOS 12.1 was installed, not days (weeks?) after. These both track back to the main "kernel process" crashing, but it's not a kernel panic crash, I'm still able to use everything normally without needing to reboot. Thread 2 Crashed:: Dispatch queue: NSManagedObjectContext I'm not 100% sure, but going thru the rest of the report, the Parent Process is 'launchd ' which leads me back to:ĭispatch queue: SFAnalytics data access queue One thing in the crash report that leads me to believe it's not a specific app (directly) causing this is the following:Ĭalls made by other processes targeting this process:Ĭalls made by all processes on this machine: Do be aware that when dragging windows with Option held and window snapping disabled it’s fairly easy to accidentally send a window off screen which can be a bit of it’s own nuisance requiring moving back onto the display, and sometimes requiring the off-screen window in question to be resized.įor users with older versions of MacOS who want a window snapping ability, the free utility BetterTouchTool will fit the bill, and there are several other tools that can accomplish similar functionality as well.I've been seeing this every morning now when waking my M1 MBP from Sleep. Holding Option key will prevent the window being dragged from snapping to any on screen element. To temporarily disable window snapping, hold down the Option key when you’re dragging and moving windows around. While you can’t completely turn off window snapping, you can temporarily disable window snapping in Mac OS with a keystroke action when moving windows around on the screen. If you’re using window snapping on the Mac specifically to hold two windows side-by-side, you might appreciate the split view feature on Mac OS too, which is aimed at dual-panel usage. You can snap however many windows together that you can fit on screen, regardless of their size. It’s one of those features that’s best tried out yourself than explained, but the brief demonstration video below shows the MacOS window snapping feature in action: The window snapping ability in MacOS is a bit more full featured than what is offered in the Windows world, with a broader range of snap targets.
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