![]() ![]() The only reason would be if you have a Mac and iOS app, and want your users to have to buy it twice, but a part from being kinda scummy, that doesn’t apply to any of those apps.Īlso why did Apple disable the ability to sideload iOS apps on Mac? Some will say it’s for piracy, but you can already download native Mac apps from the internet… so you can pirate Mac apps but no iOS one? Makes no sense.Īs of right now, the store is mostly a wasteland of unupdated/crappy apps (basically the ones the devs forgot to uncheck the box) and I genuinely can’t find one i would find any use out of. And as the compatibility was on by default, the devs must have actively disabled it. When Software Update says that your Mac is up to date, then macOS and all of the apps it installs are up to date, including Safari, Messages, Mail, Music, Photos, FaceTime, and Calendar. Most of the apps i wanted on my mac - Instagram, Netflix, YouTube, Google Authenticator, Photomath, just to name a few - have never been made available on the App Store. ![]() When Apple announced the feature, I was really excited about the ability to download any iOS app on my Mac, but after almost one and a half years, it’s become one of the most underwhelming Apple Silicon selling points.
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