San Francisco, November 6: Apple has resolved an issue that could brick some Intel-based Mac models equipped with T2 chips upon installation of macOS Monterey. The company said that it has identified and addressed an issue with the firmware on the T2 security chip that prevented “a very small number of users” from booting their Macs after updating to macOS Monterey, AppleInsider reported.
In a statement, Apple said that the updated firmware is now included in existing macOS updates. Apple also advises users who have been affected by the problem to contact Apple Support. Earlier in the week, reports began circulating that macOS Monterey was causing some Intel-based Macs to become unresponsive after updating.
The issue appeared to be related to the T2 security chip on Intel-based Macs, which drives features like Touch ID. Mac models equipped with Apple’s M1 were unaffected by this specific issue, since they lack T2 chips, the report said. Instagram, Twitter Settle 9-Year-Old Internet Feud, Roll Out New Feature To Enable Link Previews.
Any firmware update involves some level of risk, though, and the issue can be rectified using Apple’s Configurator utility, if it pops up, it added. In addition to the boot problem, a small number of users have also complained about memory leaks after updating to macOS Monterey.
(The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on Nov 06, 2021 12:12 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).
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