Homeport Now Available For Mac

OWC's latest dock, which offers a total of 14 ports and works with Thunderbolt 3-enabled Macs and PCs, is. The dock, which we, is one of the best Thunderbolt 3 docks available on the market thanks to its price point, wide port availability, and the fact that it supports up to 85W, which is enough juice to power the 15-inch MacBook Pro. There are two Thunderbolt 3 ports, five 5Gb/s USB-A ports, an 8Gb/s USB-C 3.1 Gen 2 port, a microSD card slot, an SD card slot, a digital audio output port, a Mini DisplayPort Port, S/PDIF output and combo 3.5 mm audio ports, and a Gigabit Ethernet port. It is OWC's most powerful dock with the highest number of available ports for attaching everything from 4K and 5K displays to your Mac to SSDs, cameras, mice, keyboards, and other accessories. It can also charge your iPhones, iPads, and other devices. You can buy OWC's 14 port Thunderbolt 3 dock. MacRumors is an affiliate partner with MacSales and may earn commissions on purchases made through links in this article.
OWC, if you are reading. Please less markings on your products and you will sell a lot more. The OCD kills me! Why not contact them directly?
Do you think vendors really visit forums to seek out feedback? doublepost=/doublepost What makes these so expensive? I’m just curious but it seems that anything TB3 has something a bit like “Apple Tax” applied.
I get that it’s very fast, but damn: 10x the price fast? Licensing fees to Intel, likely per port x 10 ports. Some of the other connections likely require licensing fees to other parties, and there are probably patent licensing fees for internals.
Next month, Garmin is releasing new versions of HomePort™ and BaseCamp™ that provide improved data security. At that time, Garmin will retire the Cloud Storage option. Be sure to export your user data from Garmin Cloud Storage before May 21, 2018. In addition, BaseCamp™allows you to configure your favorite cloud storage provider as a replacement so you can keep your favorite waypoints in the same place you store your other important files. Please note, data will no longer be available from Garmin Cloud Storage after May 21, 2018. Detailed instructions for exporting your user data can be found in our.
If you used BaseCamp with Garmin Adventures™, thank you for your participation in our online community for the past 5 years. It’s with sorrow we announce the end of Garmin Adventures.
Any adventures you have created in BaseCamp will remain on your local computer but will be removed from the online community after May 21, 2018. You will still be able to create Garmin Adventures on your computer and load them to your Garmin device. See our content if you need assistance. For HomePort users, Garmin offers an alternative to manage your waypoints, routes and other user data, without the need for the computer. The new ActiveCaptain® app, available for both Apple® and Android™ mobile devices, lets you create and sync waypoints and routes between your mobile device and your compatible chartplotter and much more. Learn more about today.

You are receiving this email because you were identified as a user of one of these services. If this data is important to you, please take action prior to May 21, 2018. If you are no longer a current user or this data is already saved elsewhere, please disregard this email.. I'm guessing you guys use the Windows version of Basecamp. Weirdly, the Mac version is completely different software that's far more pleasant and powerful to use. I've never had any significant complaints with it; it's a very good tool for planning out complex routes, editing them, etc.
I never understood the hatred for Basecamp until one day I had to help my dad out with a route on his PC. I can't imagine why Garmin is maintaining two completely separate applications; they should just port the Mac version to Windows and call it a day.

And probably make a lot of people very happy in the process. Unfortunately it sounds like this coming update will be a minor one. I'm guessing you guys use the Windows version of Basecamp. Weirdly, the Mac version is completely different software that's far more pleasant and powerful to use. I've never had any significant complaints with it; it's a very good tool for planning out complex routes, editing them, etc. I never understood the hatred for Basecamp until one day I had to help my dad out with a route on his PC. I can't imagine why Garmin is maintaining two completely separate applications; they should just port the Mac version to Windows and call it a day.
And probably make a lot of people very happy in the process. Unfortunately it sounds like this coming update will be a minor one.
Click to expand.I like Basecamp too, but it does have a learning curve. My past experience in the work environment is that 'improved security' is an Orwellian phrase which make people initially feel good, but in reality means harder to use and keeps track of everything you do. All of the data collected is a 'management tool'. Many years ago, 'improved security' for corporate email accounts meant people learned quickly that it was easier to just use gmail - if you wanted to get stuff done. Bypass corporate security to get stuff done, but give all your information to Googlie?
Who do you trust more? After working in computer security, I like stand-alone programs that do not need access to the internet, clouds, phones or networks. That is also why I like my Montana650, just like I value my privacy.
Basecamp does what I need it to do, if you think you want something 'smarter' and 'easier' then you are ready for someone's idea of 'AI' that can do all thinking for you.which will eventually translate into 'not needing to think'.which will translate into just plain old 'not needed', but then it will be too late. The Facebook thing you are seeing in the news is pretty superficial, Zuc's backers have far bigger plans for the future.
Political theatrics for the masses! Be careful what you wish for. I like Basecamp too, but it does have a learning curve. My past experience in the work environment is that 'improved security' is an Orwellian phrase which make people initially feel good, but in reality means harder to use and keeps track of everything you do. All of the data collected is a 'management tool'. Many years ago, 'improved security' for corporate email accounts meant people learned quickly that it was easier to just use gmail - if you wanted to get stuff done. Bypass corporate security to get stuff done, but give all your information to Googlie?
Who do you trust more? After working in computer security, I like stand-alone programs that do not need access to the internet, clouds, phones or networks.
That is also why I like my Montana650, just like I value my privacy. Basecamp does what I need it to do, if you think you want something 'smarter' and 'easier' then you are ready for someone's idea of 'AI' that can do all thinking for you.which will eventually translate into 'not needing to think'.which will translate into just plain old 'not needed', but then it will be too late. The Facebook thing you are seeing in the news is pretty superficial, Zuc's backers have far bigger plans for the future. Political theatrics for the masses! Be careful what you wish for.
Click to expand.I really do not see it that way. Simple things are you drop a point and it saves into your 'List'. I treat lists like playlists in iTunes, each one is a different trip.
Homeport Now Available For Mac
You simple drag and drop in the order you want into the routes window and BaseCamp does the rest. You can alter and tweak after if you want. I cannot imagine it being any simpler myself.
Now maybe it is how our brains work, Furkot makes zero sense to me and I could not figure out how to even make a basic A to B route. Guess I have a BaseCamp brain. Dead simple, save your points, drag and drop in order, let it calculate and route, adjust if necessary and you are done.
Click to expand.I think what a lot of people object to is having to make a whole bunch of individual waypoints to connect your route. It's much easier to just draw the route on screen by clicking on the map to drop a viapoint, then clicking further along the desire route for the next viapoint, etc. Or grab the route partway along and drag it onto the road you want. No need to define anything in advance. Basically the same way route creation on Google Maps works. And in the Mac version of Basecamp, you can build and endlessly edit a route exactly like that. In the PC version, this functionality seems to be far more limited.