Os X Mojave Blue Ray Player
I don't know if there's already been a thread about this, but here goes; I really thought DVD Player would die. And in fact, if you search for it in Launchpad, it isn't there anymore. So I thought it was already gone. But just to be sure, I popped in a DVD, and I got very surprised. A new logo greeted me; The DVD Player followed the System Dark Mode, and what do you know? It was a 64-bit Application.
They never added Blu-ray support to OS X. Here's a great tip to those who may have a Blu-ray optical drive in their Hacks. It's a free app, with a paid upgrade called Free Mac Blu-ray Player. I just tried it and played an encoded Blu-ray directly on OS X no problem.
I was surprised to say the least. Now that you're at it Apple, add Blu-Ray support please. Here's a screenshot proof. Click to expand.It’s not an argument, it’s a fact. This was a showstopper for every commercial OS back in the days when Blu-ray was releasing to the consumer market.
The pass through cost per seat license was too high an add on to the cost of the OS. There was no point in driving up the price for everyone by the blu-ray licensing fee when it was understood not all OS users would need it. The OS makers left it to third party market to provide solutions to those that wished to add blu-ray playback to their computer.
Maxxus in turn keeps patching. Also Apple have made it clear that MAC OSX is only to run on Apple hardware. If you install it on anything else you are in breech of the lisence agreement. Apple wont release it, so you can NEVER Legally do it. Ask questions and help your brothers and sisters who use a mac with a 'bootcamp' partition. Created by nbdy a community for 7. Can't make a win10 usb for my pc, using Mac Mojave. (you might have been using a version without APFS support yet, not sure why that didn't work for you.) From what I’ve read it should be visible after. Made a pc using mac this version of bootcamp was not created for this. Bootcamp will make a bootable copy of Windows for a Mac only. Macs have UEFI instead of traditional BIOSes. PCs are adopting this technology but slowly. I believe OS X formats the USB stick using GUID/HFS+, which PCs and Windows do not like. The final version of Boot Camp 2.0 provided with MacOS X 10.5 'Leopard' was designed to support Windows XP Home and Pro with SP2 or later as well as all versions of Windows Vista. You cannot increase or decrease the size of the Windows partition after it is created with Boot Camp. How do you install Windows 7 on an Intel Mac using Boot.
Any other technologies that incur a licensing cost are no where near as expensive as blu-ray per seat, and many even have very limited actual costs based on how the developer rolls support back into the public development initiative. When Jobs said it was a bag of hurt, he wasn’t talking the technology but the licensing cost and complexities. Access driver for mac.