
If you don’t rely on that you should be safe to upgrade. Dropboxĭropbox is macOS High Sierra compatible, although some users are having issues with its smart sync feature. Since CCC leaves your files in a state where they’re viewable in the Finder you don’t need to worry about the backups being unreadable. Upgrade to Carbon Copy Cloner 5 before installing macOS High Sierra to make sure your backup routines don”t break. It’s been running fine for us-including database synchronization-in TMO’s tests. If you’re staying up to date with 1Password, meaning you’re running the latest version of 1Password 6, macOS High Sierra won’t be a problem for you. If that’s how you make your living, odds are you upgraded to even newer versions already. FileMaker Proĭatabase jockeys are OK to upgrade to High Sierra as long as you’re running at least FileMaker Pro 14. Compatible drivers won’t be available until some time in October. Wacom Tablet Users: If you need your Wacom tablet for your design workflow don’t install macOS High Sierra.

If you rely on Adobe’s apps don’t upgrade to macOS High Sierra until compatibility issues are worked out.

InDesign users are experiencing cursor-related bugs, too. Adobe warned macOS beta testers that Illustrator wasn’t designed to run on High Sierra. CS6 versions of Adobe’s apps ran fine in TMO’s tests, but occasionally crashed at inopportune times.Īdobe Creative Cloud versions of the apps are supported as long as you stay up to current on updates-except for Illustrator. Adobe Creative Suite and Creative CloudĪdobe isn’t testing the Creative Suite versions of Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, and its other design apps for macOS High Sierra compatibility and warns CS4 users should expect issues.

If you rely on the Office suite and plan to upgrade to High Sierra make sure you update to version 15.35 or newer. Microsoft says it isn’t offering any support for running Microsoft Office 2011 in High Sierra, and some people are reporting it doesn’t work for them at all. macOS High Sierra is out and there may be some app compatibility issues Microsoft Office TMO put together a short list of some mission critical apps and their status in macOS High Sierra. That means apps you rely on to get your job done may not work as you expect-or may not work at all. MacOS High Sierra is out, and while it looks pretty similar on the outside, under the hood we get some pretty big changes.
