Kernel extensions present - This machine has kernel extensions that may not work in the future.Ģ,3 GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9 (i9-9880H) CPU: 8-coreīattery: Health = Normal - Cycle count = 14ĭisk0 - APPLE SSD AP1024N 1.00 TB (Solid State - TRIM: Yes) System modifications - There are a large number of system modifications running in the background. Apple has said that unsigned software will not run by default in a future version of the operating system. Unsigned files - There are unsigned software files installed. Time Machine auto backup disabled - Time Machine auto backups are disabled.Ĭlean up - There are orphan files that could be removed. These issues do not need immediate attention but they may indicate future problems or opportunities for improvement. Unsigned files - There are unsigned software files installed that could be adware and should be reviewed. Last loaded kext at 173139957578733: 850.1 (addr 0xffffff7f9bb7b000, size 73728)Ĭom. 3.1.0Īnything that appears on this list needs immediate attention. Kernel Extensions in process name corresponding to current thread: watchdogdīoot args: chunklist-security-epoch=0 -chunklist-no-rev2-devĭarwin Kernel Version 19.6.0: Sun Jul 5 00:43: root:xnu-6153.141.1~9/RELEASE_X86_64 Very annoying.Panic(cpu 2 caller 0xffffff7f951a1ad5): userspace watchdog timeout: remoted connection watchdog expired, 17340 successful replies since load (347040 seconds ago), last successful checkin 240 seconds agoīacktrace (CPU 2), Frame : Return Address Which is really a pity, since there's really not that much decent mac security software on the market, most is garbage really. It's so unprofessional, it makes me very skeptical about this "security" software.Īnd it's not the 1st time, I found things like this also informed the developer about things now and then, but I'm afraid it's not going to be of much use (never got any feedback). If you deactivate one of those, of course the software doesn't work correctly anymore. if I find them after half a year or so? I know my mac quite well, therefore I was able to find out - but the average user can't. How am I supposed to know, which programs these background activities are belonging to, esp. What's worse, they still look strange / suspicious in the "Background processes" section of the system prefs: there's exactly these 2 entries "Mark Allan" and "open" (the last one even states: "Item from an unidentified developer"). I mean what the heck is "Mark Allan", or "open" supposed to mean, why should I allow this? It's confusing for end users and simply bad GUI design (not optimized in any way for macOS Ventura, and this is after several months of the final release). For example when it installs, it shows strange notifications. I think this is true only for badly programmed AV-software, well programmed AV software should offer these features, leave it to users to deactivate them - and perform good anyhow.īut worse: it's partly rather buggy. ![]() I'd say, there's really plenty, not to say too much room for improvement options like behavioral / network protection - of course this wouldn't be for everyone, I know all these mac users who state: it's useless and only slows down my mac.
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