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#USB DUMPER FOR MAC DRIVER#I now fly with the C-Pilot pro which is recognised as a USB driver and doesnt require special drivers. I apologise I am wrong, its been some time since I have used the XCT. ![]() Posted: Sun 13:21 UTC Post subject: XCT and GPS dump #USB DUMPER FOR MAC SOFTWARE#its free and works on the Mac, you'll find a link in the software section. ![]() Once you have the *.igc file if you want a good flight analysis / logbook program download Airtome. Use GPS dump for Mac, works on my Mac with the XCT. Posted: Sat 23:07 UTC Post subject: XCT with mac SteveU "Never more to sing again, the Forty Shades Of Green." The other alternative to GPSDump is to use GiPSy as an add on to Firefox, if there is a version of GiPSy that works with your version of Firefox. Until this happens there is no point firing up GPSDump. When the driver is installed properly and the XCT (which must be on and connected AIUI) is recognised by the Mac then the USB device that had only numbers and letters next to it will change to something recognisable. #USB DUMPER FOR MAC DRIVERS#The way to get the XCT working (if it's possible) is to try the various drivers listed here, but every time you finish an install, go and check if it worked via the Apple Symbol -> About this Mac -> when that opens click "More info" & you'll see a section marked USB. Important: Please note that the com port item in the gpsdump menu will only list the pl2303 port if the device is connected, so please leave it connected all the time when doing your installs and checkings. Posted: Sat 17:43 UTC Post subject: RE: GPS Dump for Mac? Posted: Sat 17:13 UTC Post subject: RE: GPS Dump for Mac? #USB DUMPER FOR MAC HOW TO#Please, can anyone help me - in plain english and not computer jargon, how to upload my flights and which programmes I need to download onto my MacBook Pro in order to do this. Hi All, I have read all the post for uploading flights from the XCT to MacBook Pro, visited various websites, blogs, forums, and still have no success. Posted: Sat 15:57 UTC Post subject: XCT and MacBook Pro 10.7.3 May or may not be worth installing the Prolific Driver as lots of devices use it. Posted: Wed 16:20 UTC Post subject: RE: GPS Dump for Mac? And frankly, judging by the number of brand-new peripherals shipping with USB-A connections, it’s not nearly upon us.View All Topics :: Paragliding Forum - Forum Index -> Paragliding Gear Discussions -> Software If she plugs in her digital camera to pull photos off, well that came with a USB-A cable, so…Īs often as we have been told that USB-C is the future, and as much as we wish that future were upon us now, it just isn’t. Whoops…basically all the webcams are USB-A, too. Then she gets a webcam, because the cameras built into MacBooks are inexplicably horrible. And she still has to get the data off the old ones so… dongle. She can buy new thumb drives, but most are still USB-A and you pay a premium for USB-C. Her thumb drives are all USB-A…she’ll need a dongle for those. Let’s assume my sister, a teacher, upgrades her old MacBook (it probably needs it) because COVID-19 is going to mean more online classes. AppleĮven Apple’s newest design for its most forward-looking desktop Mac includes a couple USB-A ports.īut it’s not just professionals that needs the port. Why, if USB-C is the future, does it bother shipping its $10,000 super workstation with a pair of USB-A ports on the back? Apple likely recognizes that professionals still have a ton of gear with USB-A connections, and buying dongles is a pain. The iMac, iMac Pro, and Mac Pro all have at least a couple of them. Oddly enough, four years after dumping USB-C on laptops, Apple still equips all its desktop computers with USB-A ports. Even Apple recognizes that USB-A still matters But now four years later, with major brand-name peripherals still largely shipping with USB-A connections, we can clearly say it hasn’t worked. One might have made the case for that in 2016. It is neither freeing up significant space for important features nor successfully ushering in The Future. And as we’ve seen over the last several years, PC and peripheral makers are not eager to drop all support for USB-A in favor of USB-C.Īpple is simply making its laptops less convenient, demanding the purchase of new cables or dongles for a broad swath of peripherals. If we’re being honest, there just weren’t a lot of Mac users left to disappoint when the original iMac landed in 1998. Longtime Apple fans may not recognize this, but most iMac customers were buying into a whole new ecosystem anyway. #USB DUMPER FOR MAC SERIAL#Microsoft and PC makers were itching to dump bulky unreliable serial ports anyway, peripheral makers were eager to go digital, and Apple had a very small existing market to service. With the original iMac going USB-only, Apple had nothing to lose. ![]()
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