
I have also had some TM problems and now use CCC as my primary backup, with TM as a convenience and secondary backup. I don't think he's the target user TM was designed for.

However, he also states that he's done lots of system modding and that he has 10 internal drives. Time Machine mistakenly marks his internal drives as removables. It's explicit that Time Machine does not back up removable drives. Sorry, but you simply didn't read the docs when setting up backup of your critical data. > Time Machine Silently Excludes Critical Data slowly but surely new API's or permissions are being made available to fix those issues, or at least improve the pain points. The new sandboxing requirement for apps while making everything a little more secure makes it more difficult to make certain types of apps. Debugging USB issues is more difficult than it should be, this is especially an issue when attempting to figure out why a driver from a vendor crashes when you use certain USB to serial devices. Outdated utilities or libraries make life more difficult, however a lot of that can be fixed with homebrew. This is going to be an issue for a little bit, but hopefully that gets better.


The fact that a replacement libc++ now exists, but parts are still using the old stdlibc++ and the two can't be linked together if you use std::string for example, thus making it harder to use C++11 features.
UNIVERSALLY APPLY MS OFFICE SERIAL FOR ACCOUNTS MA OS X INSTALL
The deprecation of OpenSSL (although I'm happy about that, but installing a secondary OpenSSL alongside the OS provided one can break things, so you have to install to a separate path and use include directives in your compile line, and or an alternate pkg-config path). kqueue() is considered so broken by libev for example that it just doesn't use it. Things like kqueue() support not being up to par with the other kqueue() providers, notably FreeBSD. There is a lot to complain about in OS X, but as a programmer I am not sure I would have picked the points he did.
