![]() This includes MacBook Pro (13, 14, 15 and 16 inch), iMac (21.5, 24 and 27 inch), iMac Pro, Mac Pro, MacBook, MacBook Air, Mac mini and Mac Studio. I continued to use it regardless, but lately it has started to show signs of old age - namely, displaying. Unfortunately, it seems to have been long abandoned by its creator - there has been no update and no support for quite some time. TG Pro natively supports both Intel and Apple Silicon Macs, from 2008 all the way up to the latest models. I've been using the iStat Pro widget for the past seven years, since I got my first Mac. It is fully compatible with macOS 13 Ventura, all the way back to macOS 10.13 High Sierra. It also has a separate secure service for fan control, only HTTPS/SSL connections and built-in support for the Internet Access Policy (when using Little Snitch). TG Pro is notarized by Apple and uses the Hardened Runtime. Extend the life of your Mac with TG Pro by monitoring all internal temperatures to know which components are hot or potentially overheating. In addition, get local or email notifications for temperature and diagnostic events, along with full logging to a CSV file for further analysis. If the Mac starts to get too hot, it's easy to either manually boost the fan speeds to improve cooling, or let TG Pro do it automatically using rules. set minimum + increase fan speeds as temp rises, shows. I read somewhere that iStats is designed for real macs and doesn't show all the sensors because of that, and I wonder if. See what was previously hidden, by viewing CPU, GPU, logic board, battery and HD temperatures, check hardware diagnostics to find problems before they occur, as well as fan speeds. Multiple rules which can control all or specific fans in various ways ie. iStatistica or iStats Menu for hardware monitoring Hi everybody, I've been using iStats Pro for years in real macs and now I can't live with it, so I keep using it in my Hackintosh, but it doesn't show all the sensors. It supports all Intel and Apple Silicon processors including the M2 Max, M2 Pro, M2, M1 Ultra, M1 Max, M1 Pro and M1. Whether it's a brand new 2023 MacBook Pro with M2 Max, a Mac Studio, a classic Intel iMac or anything in-between, it will help to keep it cool and running at peak performance. ![]() Extend the life of your Mac using TG Pro.
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