I bought and returned this display. The panel I got was practically unusable if you have even just a little care for color. All four corners were significantly dimmer than the center, and color accuracy dropped off toward the bottom of the screen. Somehow the macOS dock icons were washed-out and dim.
Unfortunately, this seems to be a common issue with this display, not a one-off panel discrepancy.
Do yourself a favor and wait for whatever Apple has upcoming, at least if you’re in the Apple ecosystem already.
The majority of MacPorts programs I installed over the years uninstalled cleanly.
Also I could be wrong but isn't/wasn't the whole "fat binaries + static binaries + app binary and its associated assets live in a magic folder that the OS-X GUI displays as 'the app' + other past Mac app trickery such as resource forks etc" all meant to make both app install and UN-install painless and easy ?
I know and used a few commercial apps that were a damn pain to scrub completely off the Macs I owned but that was expensive proprietary commercial software that felt the need to take my money and also saddle me with DRM to enforce their licensing.
Not all Mac apps are of the "drag to your /Applications folder" variety. Some still come with an installer they expect you to run, and prompt you for admin rights.
Relay is basically the framework that brings everything together. Relay handles data fetching, storage, and mutations using a central store and GraphQL. If I'm understanding it correctly, Redux is replaced by Relay.
Yeah, in the GraphQL lectures the FB presenters basically said. [1] Watch the first ten minutes if nothing else.
React = the view layer.
GraphQL = the store.
Relay = the glue.
I'm still ambivalent on this form of stack but it's a move in the right direction. Component composition makes JS a lot less messy. Meteor is doing something real interesting with isomorphic JS, and whether or not it gets widespread adoption, I'm happy that avenue is being explored as well. Stefan Richter is doing some REAL interesting work with isomorphic Clojure [2] in his shop in Germany, that has some real interesting exercises. The talk is from 2010, so it was more novel when I first watched it than you'd think of today.
Unfortunately, this seems to be a common issue with this display, not a one-off panel discrepancy.
Do yourself a favor and wait for whatever Apple has upcoming, at least if you’re in the Apple ecosystem already.