AC 22 + Mojave
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‎2018-12-06
06:58 PM
- last edited on
‎2024-02-23
07:08 PM
by
Aruzhan Ilaikova
I have several other major pieces of software that are ready to use with Mojave, but I concerned to make the switch before AC22 is ready for it.
Thank you!
MARIANI design studio, PLLC
Architecture / Architectural Photography
www.robertmariani.com
Mac OSX 13.1
AC 24 / 25 / 26

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‎2018-12-06 09:55 PM
AC 22 (and 21) are supported in Mojave with the most recent product updates.
That said, there is a reported issue where the File Open, Save, Save As etc dialogs within ARCHICAD perform slowly with the current release AC 22 build 4023:
For general Graphisoft Mojave info, see:
https://helpcenter.graphisoft.com/knowledgebase/84821/
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‎2018-12-07 03:33 PM
What seems confusing to me is that on the Graphisoft US site, Graphisoft only recommends Sierra and High Sierra for AC22. There is no mention of Mojave being recommended in conjunction with AC22 without a "fallback" to the previous OS. That is not a solution most people would want to rely on.
The text below is copied directly from the link you provided concerning AC/22 & Mojave.....
"There might still be some incompatibilities that hasn't surfaced yet though. If we receive reports of any new issues that hasn't been fixed, we will publish them here, and try to fix everything in the next Update of ARCHICAD 21 (80xx) and 22 (50xx). Until then, only update to macOS 10.14 if you have the option to roll back to macOS 10.13"
The errors you mentioned with AC22/Mojave seem to reinforce my point here.
MARIANI design studio, PLLC
Architecture / Architectural Photography
www.robertmariani.com
Mac OSX 13.1
AC 24 / 25 / 26
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‎2018-12-07 06:06 PM

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‎2018-12-07 06:54 PM

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‎2018-12-11 05:51 PM
Karl wrote:Just wanted to share that AC 22 does NOT run adequately in a High Sierra virtual machine using Parallels Desktop 14 (newest version). AC 22 requires OpenGL 3.3 or higher, which Parallels does not support in its virtual environment. (Some online posts suggest that VMWare Fusion may support OpenGL better.)
... a bootable clone of High Sierra and/or a High Sierra virtual machine...
A bootable clone of my High Sierra machine launched AC 22 fine. So, I continue to recommend making a bootable clone prior to any MacOS upgrade if anyone is concerned about running into post-upgrade issues and still being able to quickly get back to work. Some online discussions even suggest applying the (Mojave) update to the clone (or a copy of the clone) to test all functionality before upgrading the actual system disk.

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‎2018-12-21 02:38 PM
Actually, every bug that we are aware of so far have been fixed in the first update of ARCHICAD 22 (40xx), so whatever has been reported to us or we had found during the beta period of macOS 10.14 is fixed, so we could say it is compatible with ARCHICAD.
The reason we can't say that macOS 10.14 is officially supported is that we are still waiting for feedback from the early adopters about anything we might have missed (because anything could change in the OS, even the most unexpected things that we wouldn't even think to test for), so that we can safely say that there are no clashes with this iteration of macOS.
This means that you can upgrade to macOS 10.14, just proceed with caution, because you might run into something unexpected (e.g. the dialog error that Karl just mentioned). But I personally think that since everything had been silent so far, we can say everything is fine after the 50xx (though it is up to what we find out about the file dialog slow-downs).
A colleague of mine from the GRAPHISOFT US office has created a chart that explains this timeline visually. Let me attach it for you, I think it is pretty handy. I hope this explains everything. Let me know if you have any questions about macOS 10.14.
Regards,
Professional Services Consultant
GRAPHISOFT
For Troubleshooting and useful Tips & Tricks visit
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‎2018-12-21 11:21 PM
Has anyone else encountered and figured out a work -around?
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‎2019-01-02 10:52 PM
dkovacs wrote:With all due respect, your reply is infuriating! In the same breadth, you first state AC22 is compatible with 10.14, then one sentence later you state it is NOT officially supported.
Hello Everyone,
Actually, every bug that we are aware of so far have been fixed in the first update of ARCHICAD 22 (40xx), so whatever has been reported to us or we had found during the beta period of macOS 10.14 is fixed, so we could say it is compatible with ARCHICAD.
The reason we can't say that macOS 10.14 is officially supported is that we are still waiting for feedback ..........
So which is it? I think we know what the answer; GS is not sure OFFICIALLY if the software is compatible, pushing the blame on early adopters!
The diagram you attached from your US colleague is equally frustrating. I use the entire Adobe CC studio along with accounting software, graphics, design, utilities, printers and everyone supplying me with MacOS compatible software, drivers or devices is saying OFFICIALLY they are MacOS 10.14 compatible and have been for months now. ONLY GS is scratching their heads and being completely non committal on whether their software is fully compatible or not with the latest MacOS.
As another user noted, by the time GS actually states AC22 IS fully compatible with MacOS 10.14, that will only leave about 7-9 months before Apple releases the next major OS update and we will be in the same mess all over again, with AC23.
GS used to have fully compatible versions released within just a couple months after a major MacOS update, those days are long gone! To make things worse, GS now releases their "major" updates too frequently to keep up with Revit's absurd software update model.
GS please, stop pushing out unfinished, non-fully tested software, just to boost sales revenue. We get it, you are a business and you need steady cash flow. But do you really think your current process is going to help your shrinking US market share. 9/10 Job postings in the US are looking for architects with Revit experience, not AC. Your current software release model is not helping your cause at all!
MARIANI design studio, PLLC
Architecture / Architectural Photography
www.robertmariani.com
Mac OSX 13.1
AC 24 / 25 / 26

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‎2019-01-11 12:37 PM
The annual releases stir the pot in the other direction, many software companies suffer from this worldwide - on the development side at least, because the shareholders are happy, I guess. I would prefer less frequent, but more meaningful and rock solid releases. McNeel does a pretty decent job in this sense with Rhino, but they are at least a magnitude smaller, thus easier to pull things like this.