On 1 Apr 2019, at 16:46, Eric Sharakan wrote:
On 1 Apr 2019, at 8:35, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
I realized that this support is done using AppleScript. The Calendar
entitlement isn't really needed and I've removed it. But the Calendar
bundle should still work.
So, having just (finally) upgr
On 1 Apr 2019, at 8:35, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 27 Mar 2019, at 13:36, Verdon Vaillancourt wrote:
On 26 Mar 2019, at 19:33, Randall Gellens wrote:
On 25 Mar 2019, at 7:27, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
The hardened runtime means that MailMate cannot access resources
for which I have not e
On 27 Mar 2019, at 13:36, Verdon Vaillancourt wrote:
On 26 Mar 2019, at 19:33, Randall Gellens wrote:
On 25 Mar 2019, at 7:27, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
The hardened runtime means that MailMate cannot access resources for
which I have not explicitly requested MailMate to be able to access.
On 26 Mar 2019, at 19:33, Randall Gellens wrote:
On 25 Mar 2019, at 7:27, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
The hardened runtime means that MailMate cannot access resources for
which I have not explicitly requested MailMate to be able to access.
For example, MailMate can no longer, in any way, acce
On 25 Mar 2019, at 7:27, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
The hardened runtime means that MailMate cannot access resources for
which I have not explicitly requested MailMate to be able to access.
For example, MailMate can no longer, in any way, access the camera,
because I have not requested such acc
Benny, thanks for this. I understand there might be a rough ride for a while
although given your quality of work I do not see that as a high risk. :-) In
general, more developers should go down the path you do.
Thanks!
Patrik
P.S. And thanks for the pointers to documentation about it!
On 2
Hi MailMate users,
the latest test release of MailMate is the first one which has a
so-called “hardened runtime”. This allows it to be notarized by
Apple resulting in the following to be shown when new users open
MailMate for the first time:
![](cid:F4BB4190-6CF2-45AD-BABA-A4E43183D58C@frero