![]() Since Macs don’t use Live Text with a real-time camera like iPhone and iPad, Rene says Apple was able to bring the feature to Intel Macs after all.Ĭheck out more about Live Text in iOS 15 below and just like on iPhone and iPad, look for the viewfinder square with three lines icon in the Photos app in macOS to use the feature. ![]() iOS 15 uses secure on-device intelligence to help you discover more in your photos, quickly find what you’re looking for, and relive special moments. There is so much rich information in your photos, from memorable places you’ve visited to handwritten family recipes. Here’s how Apple describes the functionality: Live Text is available across iOS 15, iPadOS 15, and macOS 12 Monterey. MacOS Monterey beta 4 arrived today with the release notes highlighting the exciting Universal Control feature is enabled, but was then quickly pulled.īut one notable addition as reported by Rene Ritchie, Intel Macs are gaining access to the handy Live Text feature that was limited to Apple Silicon in the first three betas. You can look up the meaning of words, do a web search, and even translate text into another language. For example, you can copy the text of a roadside sign and paste it into a text message or email. ![]() In Preview, you can use Live Text to copy and use the text that appears in a photo. Now with the fourth beta, macOS Monterey enables Live Text for Intel Macs. Interact with text in a photo using Live Text in Preview on Mac. However, that was originally going to be limited to M1 Macs. Given that and issues surrounding memory usage for some users, it may be best for users still on macOS Big Sur to wait until the second version of macOS Monterey before upgrading.One of the sharp new features with macOS Monterey and iOS 15 is the ability for the Photos app to automatically recognize and let you interact with text in images. Just earlier today, we reported on user reports that the macOS Monterey update is bricking some older Mac computers. Mac users on the MacRumors Forums ( 1, 2, 3, 4), the Apple Support Communities ( 1, 2), and Reddit, are noting similar experiences. When examining activity monitor pages seems to be the main culprit using up 18 GB and more! Is this evidence of a memory leak for Pages with Monterey os? Restart makes no difference. This is only occurred since downloading Monterey. Since downloading Monterey I receive repeated messages "your system has run out of application memory". A user on the Apple Support Communities noted their experience: In some instances, some users have suggested that restarting the Mac helps, while others say the pop-up reappears shortly after. The pop-up is seemingly being shown to users despite minimal use of their Macs with considerable amounts of memory to spare. I've restarted I've ran CleanMyMac x I've tried everything I know to do /TXNuEn3aylĮxcluding Firefox and Control Center related reports, more widespread reporting from users across different platforms suggest the more common bug is the pop-up "Your system has run out of application memory." Other users are also sharing similar experiences on the MacRumors Forums and got any idea what this is about ? m1 Mac mini 8gb safari does it too. Some reports call out the macOS Control Center as the main culprit, with YouTuber Gregory McFadden sharing a screenshot of Control Center using up to 20GB of RAM on their 64GB M1 Max 16-inch MacBook Pro. Reports on Twitter, Reddit, the MacRumors Forums, and the Apple Support Communities consist of users reporting their Mac warning that the system has "run out of application memory" or that specific applications are consuming ridiculously high amounts of RAM in Activity Monitor. ![]() ![]() It's difficult to pinpoint precisely what models of Mac computers are affected however, the range is relatively wide, including the newly released 14-inch and 16-inch MacBook Pros. Some users who recently upgraded to macOS Monterey are experiencing a bug known as a "memory leak," a scenario in which a specific macOS process or application is bugged out and stays running for prolonged periods in the background, consuming abnormally high amounts of memory or RAM. ![]()
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