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Devs who don't want to be shut out by Gatekeeper will need to update their code.

by Andrew Cunningham - Sept 18 2014

 

http://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Screen-Shot-2014-09-17-at-9.00.25-PM-640x180.pngYesterday evening Apple released OS X 10.9.5 to the general public, the fifth major update for OS X Mavericks. As usual, the update comes with a handful of fixes for user-facing features as well as a small pile of security updates. Many of these security patches are also available for OS X 10.7.5 and 10.8.5 in separate updates.

Like OS X 10.9.4, the update focuses on smaller problems that affect a subset of Macs. The new features include Safari 7.0.6, improved "reliability for VPN connections that use USB smart cards for authentication," and better reliability for connecting to file servers that use the SMB protocol. For businesses using OS X, the update fixes a problem that could keep system admins from "performing some administrative tasks successfully" on larger groups of Macs, and it also speeds up authentication "when roaming on 802.1x networks which use EAP-TLS."

 

Among the security updates are fixes for Bluetooth, CoreGraphics generally and the Intel graphics driver specifically, and OS X's version of OpenSSL among many others. The latter problems were fixed by updating from OpenSSL version 0.9.8y to 0.9.8za.

 

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Hello Jasper!



As usual you have alerted me again that there is an update to the Mac/ Maverick! My Computer is updating as I speak! My System usually tells me I have an Apple update so I guess I'll check my setting for that since I have to manually check for updates from the Apple Store.



Thank you! 🙂

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