Videoglide For Mac Catalina

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  • Joined Mar 25, 2013 Messages 42 Motherboard GA-z77x-D3H motherboard CPU core i3 3.3 GHz processor Graphics Intel HD 3000 Mac.
  • MacOS Catalina: Avoid my mistake and wait before you upgrade. If, like me, you've been ignoring those popups warning you that this app or another won't be compatible with the next version of macOS.
  1. Videoglide For Mac Catalina Patcher
  2. Videoglide For Mac Catalina 10.15
  3. Videoglide For Mac Catalina Island
  4. Videoglide For Mac Catalina Installer

Tuesday saw Apple drop the first public release of macOS Catalina, a move which has caught out a number of developers, including some offering security solutions, as well as organizations and ordinary macOS users. While SentinelOne is already Catalina-compatible (more details below), Apple’s unannounced release date has left some scrambling to catch up as macOS 10.15 introduces some major changes under the hood, undoubtedly the biggest we’ve seen in some time. Anyone considering a Catalina upgrade should be aware of how these changes could affect current enterprise workflows, whether further updates for dependency code are required and are available, and whether the new version of macOS is going to necessitate a shift to new software or working practices. In this post, we cover the major changes and challenges that Catalina brings to enterprise macOS fleets.

Does SentinelOne Work With macOS Catalina?

Running Catalina without full graphics acceleration will result in extremely poor system performance. 2008 Mac Pro 3,1 AMD GPU Support: FIXED as of Catalina Patcher 1.2.0.

First things first: Yes, it does. SentinelOne macOS Agent version 3.2.1.2800 was rolled out on the same day that Apple released macOS 10.15 Catalina. This Agent is supported with Management Consoles Grand Canyon & Houston. Ideally, you should update your SentinelOne Agent version before updating to Catalina to ensure the smoothest upgrade flow.

Developers Play Catalina Catch-up

Contrary to popular (mis)belief, kexts or kernel extensions are still alive and well in Catalina, and the move to a new “kextless” future with Apple’s SystemExtensions framework remains optional at least for the time being. However, that doesn’t mean your current array of kernel extensions from other developers are necessarily going to be unproblematic during an upgrade.

New rules for kexts mean developers at a minimum have to notarize them, and users will have to restart the Mac after approving them. On top of that, developers – particularly those distributing security software – will need to update their kexts and solutions to be compatible with Catalina’s new TCC and user privacy rules, changes in partition architecture and discontinued support for 32-bit apps (see below), among other things.

Upgrading a Mac to 10.15 with incompatible kexts already installed could lead to one or more kernel panics.

The safest bet is to contact vendors to check on their Catalina support before you pull the trigger on the Catalina upgrade. If for some reason that’s not possible or you have legacy kexts installed which are out of support, the best advice is to remove those before you upgrade a test machine, then immediately test for compatibility as part of your post-install routine.

Bye Bye, 32-Bit Applications

Apple called time on 32-bit applicationsseveral releases ago, offering increasingly urgent warnings of their impending doom through High Sierra and Mojave. However, in macOS Mojave these would still run after users dismissed the one-time warning alert, but Catalina finally drops the axe on 32-bit applications.

Before upgrading, check what legacy applications you have installed. From the command line, you can output a report with:

system_profiler SPLegacySoftwareDataType

For GUI users, you can take a trip to Apple > About This Mac and click the System Report… button.

Scroll down the sidebar to “Legacy Apps” and click on it. Here you’ll see a list of all the apps that won’t run on Catalina. macOS 10.15 itself will also list any legacy apps during the upgrade process, but it’s wise to be prepared before you get that far.

VPP & Apple School/Business Manager Support

Catalina continues to allow various enterprise upgrade paths through its Mobile Device Management (MDM) framework, Device Enrollment Program (DEP) and Apple Configurator. For organizations enrolled in Apple’s Volume Purchase Program or with Apple Business Manager or Apple School Manager licensing, Catalina is supported right out of the door, saving you the bother of having to manually download, package and then install multiple instances of 10.15.

New in Catalina are Managed Apple IDs for Business, which attempt to separate the user’s work identity from their personal identity, allowing them to use separate accounts for things like iCloud Notes, iCloud Drive, Mail, Contacts and other services.

There is a plus here for user privacy, but for admins used to having total control over managed endpoints, be aware that a device with an enrollment profile and managed Apple ID means the business loses power over things like remote wipe and access to certain user data. Effectively, the device is separated in to “personal” and “managed” (i.e., business use), with a separate APFS volume for the managed accounts, apps and data.

Privacy Controls Reach New Heights

That’s not the only thing to be aware of with regards user data. The biggest change that end users are going to notice as they get to work on a newly upgraded macOS 10.15 Catalina install is Apple’s extended privacy control policies, which will manifest themselves in a number of ways.

In the earlier, macOS 10.14 Mojave, there are 12 items listed in the Privacy tab of the Security & Privacy pane in System Preferences. Catalina adds five more, with Speech Recognition, Input Monitoring, Files and Folders, Screen Recording, and Developer Tools added in the new version of macOS.

Here’s what the first three control:

Importantly, the three items above can only be allowed at the specific time when applications try to touch any of these services. Although applications can be pre-denied by MDM provisioning and configuration profiles, they cannot be pre-allowed. That has important implications for your workflows since any software in the enterprise that requires these permissions must obtain user approval in the UI in order to function correctly, or indeed at all. Be aware that Catalina’s implementation of Transparency, Consent and Control is not particularly forthcoming with feedback. Applications may simply silently fail when permission is denied.

The most obvious, but certainly not only, place where privacy controls are going to cause issue is with video meeting/conferencing software like Zoom, Skype and similar. Prompts from the OS that suggest applications must be restarted after permission has been granted for certain services like Screen Recording have raised fears that clicking ‘Allow’ during a meeting might kick users out of the conference while the app re-launches. Conversely, users who inadvertently click ‘Don’t Allow’ may wonder why later attempts to use the software continue to fail.

What all this means is that with macOS Catalina, there is a greater onus on sysadmins to engage in user education to preempt these kinds of issues before they arise. Thoroughly test how the apps you rely on are going to behave and what workflow users need to follow to ensure minimal interruption to their daily activities.

The remaining two additional items are:

These last two can both be pre-approved. The first grants access to user files in places like Desktop, Downloads, and Documents folders. The second allows developers to run their own software that isn’t yet notarized, signed or ready to be distributed (and thus subject to macOS’s full system policy).

And New Lows…

Here’s a good example of what all this might mean in practice. Let’s take as destination a user’s machine on which File Sharing, Remote Management (which allows Screen Sharing) and Remote Login (for SSH) have been enabled.

Suppose, as admin, I choose to both Screen Share and File Share from my source machine into this user’s computer. These two different services only require the same credentials – user name and password for a registered user on the destination device – to be entered a single time per session to simultaneously enable both services, but they have confusingly different restrictions.

Trying to navigate to the destination’s Desktop folder via File Sharing in the Finder from the source indicates that the user’s Desktop folder is empty rather than inaccessible.

If I persist in trying to access any of these protected folders, the misleading Finder display is eventually replaced with a permission denied alert.

While Screen Sharing in the same session, however, I can see the Desktop folder’s contents without a problem; in fact, in this case it contains 17 items. Indeed, via Screen Sharing, I can move these items from the Desktop folder to any other folder that is accessible through File Sharing, such as the ~/Public folder. That, in a roundabout and inconvenient way, means I can get past the permission denial thrown above. Further, because I can enable other services in the Privacy pane from my Screen Sharing session, such as Full Disk Access, I can also use those to grant myself SSH access, with which I am similarly also able to work around the File Share permission denied problem.

This kind of inconsistency and complexity is unfortunate. Aside from making legitimate users jump through these hoops for no security pay-off, it raises this question: what does a legitimate user need to do to make File Sharing work properly? It seems we should go to the Files and Folders pane in System preferences and add the required process. But what process needs to be added? There’s simply no help here for those trying to figure out how to manage Apple’s user privacy controls. As it turns out, there also appears to be a bug in the UI that prevents anything at all being added to Files and Folders, so at the moment we can’t answer that question for you either.

Mac

Catalina’s Vista of Alerts: Cancel or Allow?

This expansion of user privacy controls has one very significant and obvious consequence for everyone using macOS 10.15 Catalina, graphically portrayed in this tweet by Tyler Hall.

The spectacle of numerous alerts has made some liken Apple’s investment in user privacy through consent to Microsoft’s much-maligned Windows Vista release, which had a similarly poor reputation for irritating users with an array of constant popups and dialogs, many of which seemed quite unnecessary.

Yes, your macOS users are going to be hit by a plethora of authorization requests, alerts and notifications. While Tyler Hall’s image was undoubtedly designed to illustrate the effect in dramatic fashion, there’s no doubt that Catalina’s insistence on popping alerts is going to cause a certain amount of irritation among many users after they upgrade, and who then try getting down to some work only to be interrupted multiple times. However, if the trade-off for a bit of disruption to workflows is improved security, then that’s surely not such a bad thing?

The question is whether security is improved in this way or not. Experience has taught malware authors that users are easily manipulated, a well-recognized phenomenon that led to the coining of the phrase “social engineering” and the prevalence of phishing and spearphishing attacks as the key to business compromise.

On the one hand, some will feel that these kinds of alerts and notifications help educate users about what applications are doing – or attempting to do – behind the scenes, and user education is always a net positive in terms of security.

On the other hand, the reality is that most users are simply trying to use a device to get work done. Outside of admins, IT and security folk, the overwhelming majority of users have no interest in how devices work or what applications are doing, as much as we ‘tech people’ would like it to be otherwise. What users want is to be productive, and they expect technology and policy to ensure that they are productive in a safe environment rather than harangued by lots of operating system noise.

The alert shown above illustrates the point. How informative would that really be to most users, who are unlikely to have even heard of System Events.app or understand the consequences adumbrated in the message text?

Critically, consent dialogs rely on the user making an immediate decision about security for which they are not sufficiently informed, at a time when it’s not convenient, and by an “actor” – the application that’s driving the alert and whose developer writes the alert message text – whose interests lie in the user choosing to allow.

As the user has opened the application with the intent to do something productive, their own interests lie in responding quickly and taking the path that will cause least further interruption. In that context, it seems that users are overwhelmingly likely to choose to allow the request regardless of whether that’s the most secure thing to do or not.

The urgency of time, the paucity of information and the combined interests of the user and the developer to get the app up and running conspire to make these kinds of controls a poor choice for a security mechanism. We talk a lot about “defense in depth”, but when a certain layer of that security posture relies on annoying users with numerous alerts, it could be argued that technology is failing the user. Security needs to be handled in a better way that leaves users to get on with their work and lets automated security solutions take care of the slog of deciding what’s malicious and what’s not.

Conclusion

If you are an enterprise invested in a Mac fleet, then upgrading to Catalina is a question of “when” rather than “if”. Given the massive changes presented by Catalina – from dropping support for 32-bit apps and compatibility issues with existing kernel extensions to new restrictions on critical business software like meeting apps and user consent alerts – there’s no doubt that that’s a decision not to be rushed into. Test your workflows, look at your current dependencies and roll out your upgrades with caution.

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Read more about Cyber Security

Supported Devices:

Click the product names to open a new window listing possible sources for the hardware. Be sure to consider USB hardware only. VideoGlide does not support PCI devices.

The following devices come with VideoGlide or similar software. You do not need to have VideoGlide or a VideoGlide serial number in order to use them:

  • USA: Geniatech iGrabber iGrabber
  • USA: Daystar Technology ProView, XtraView
  • Australia: Kaiser Baas Video to DVD Maker

    The following devices do NOT come with VideoGlide. You will need to download VideoGlide and purchase a VideoGlide serial number in order to use them:

  • Yakumo MovieMixer (info)
  • Acutronic Spectral (info)
  • PixelView Play TV Box 4*** (info)
  • DATOptic DigiREC*** (info)
  • Geniatech HandyCap (Pro) (info)
  • Konig CMP-USBVG4
  • Ex-Pro USB 2.0 Video / Audio Grabber Editor
  • Tevion or Zolid (Europe, Australasia)
    Sold by Aldi supermarkets branded in combinations of: Xpert, Hi Speed, High Speed,
    DVD Maker, DVD Grabber, DVD Creator, VS2800, VS-2800, VS-USB2800D etc.
  • MSI Movie Vox mini, USB 2.0 (Europe)
  • EasyCAP009, EasyCap DC60+

    Videoglide For Mac Catalina Patcher

    Warning: These devices are extremely difficult to distinguish from the EasyCAP DC60
    which is not supported. For this reason EchoFX does not recommend this device.
    In general, VideoGlide devices have one s-video input and one composite input. TV-tuner style devices have only one s-video input. If this matches the technical description of your device, it may be a VideoGlide device.
    The first customer to identify any new device about which we are not aware will receive the VideoGlide software for free.

    Videoglide For Mac Catalina 10.15

    * Audio is not supported on the DVC-100. If you do not already own a DVC-100, we strongly recommend purchasing a different device.
    ** LinXcel devices capture only 320 horizontally. The video is interpolated to 640.
    *** s-video and/or composite inputs only. Built-in TV tuner not supported.

    Highlights:

    - supports a wide range of USB 2.0 video capture devices.
    - 640 x 480, 29.97 frames per second NTSC video capture.
    - 640 x 480, 25 frames per second PAL/SECAM video capture.
    - supports composite and s-video formats.
    - high contrast, high quality video -better than DV at the same size.
    - excellent audio/video synchronization.
    - uncompressed YUV format: 66.5 GB per hour for video and audio.
    - compressed JPEG format: 3 GB per hour for video and audio.
    - 640 x 480 single frame capture.
    - audio support up to 48 KHz 16-bit stereo for devices that have audio input.
    - multiple device support for webcam and surveillance applications.
    - Auto-Detect Input And Format, to automatically adapt to the current video source.
    - easy to use, AppleScript enabled capture software with fast full screen playback.
    - software to export movies to any QuickTime supported format, including DV and H.264.
    - compatible with a large number of third-party applications.

    General:

    VideoGlide devices have been sold by various manufacturers since 1998. Manufacturers include Pinnacle, KWorld, LinXcel, VideoHome and many others. Devices originally sold as PC-only are also supported. Compatibility can be checked using the VideoGlide For Mac OS X demo mode. Simply click the 'Download' button on the right, and install and run the software.
    VideoGlide devices allow the capture of video from almost any video source including VCRs, cam-corders, DVD players, personal video recorders, digital cameras, etc.
    VideoGlide devices accept either s-video or composite video sources and will work with the broadcast standards NTSC, PAL and SECAM found throughout most of the world.

    Video from VideoGlide devices can be used in a variety of ways. For example, you can record your favorite home-movies and clips to keep handy on your computer. It can be used with web-cam software to upload an image to the Internet periodically. It can be used with web-streaming software to create online broadcasts of live or prerecorded events. Live-video chat is possible with the appropriate software. Captured movies can be put on a CD or a website for viewing by anyone with a CD player or Internet access. It can be used for motion-detection applications, or by clay-mation hobbyists. For a summary of some of the supported third-party software and where to obtain it, check the 'Applications' page.

    Catalina

    The VideoGlide software is capable of capturing a maximum of 29.97 frames per second for NTSC or 25 frames per second for PAL. The maximum frame size is 640 x 480.

    The captured video quality is extremely good, with brighter colors and better contrast than typical DV captures. Video and audio synchronization is excellent, even with extremely long captures. Captured movies require only 66.5 GB of disk storage per hour of uncompressed yuv video. Using the recommended JPEG compression requires only 3 GB of storage per hour.

    In addition to video, the VideoGlide software is able to capture still images with a resolution of 640 x 480.

    Videoglide For Mac Catalina Island

    Some VideoGlide devices come with audio inputs. These audio inputs are occassionally rerouted to the Mac microphone port, in which case the audio sample rate is as good as the Mac can provide; typically 44.1 KHz 16-bit stereo. In other cases, audio is brought in over USB along with the video. These devices support up to 48 KHz 16-bit stereo.

    Videoglide For Mac Catalina Installer

    The VideoGlide software supports multiple devices, i.e. more than one device can be plugged in and used at the same time. This is particularly useful with security applications like Ben Bird's SecuritySpy. It can also allow multiple simultaneous broadcasts from the same machine using webcam software like Econ Technologies' ImageCaster. Note that one serial number per device will be required, i.e. to enable 3 devices, 3 serial numbers must be purchased. Note that a stock machine with no additional USB 2.0 PCI cards can run only two devices simultaneously, and one of those must be at 320 x 240. Adding USB 2.0 expansion cards can increase the number of devices that can run simultaneously, and the frame sizes at which they can operate.

    Auto-Detect Input And Format allows video sources to be swapped in an and out dynamically without the need to inform the application that a change occurred. The VideoGlide software will automatically select the input carrying the video, as well as its format, for example PAL or NTSC.

    The included VideoGlide Capture software will allow you to capture video from a VideoGlide device. It also has an extremely fast full-screen preview mode. VideoGlide is Apple-scriptable.

    The included VideoGlide Export software will allow the export of QuickTime movies to any other QuickTime format including DV Streams required by iMovie and H.264 or MPEG-4 movies required by iTunes and video-enabled Pods. QuickTime Pro is not required.