: Architects of shape and form found they could once again move the anchor points of Bézier paths even when they carried text.
In the quiet digital workshops of Flying Meat, a new version of the image editor——was being forged. For the developers, this wasn't just a routine patch; it was a mission to restore balance to the creative process of thousands of users. The Memory Ghost Acorn 6.6.4
For weeks, a specter had haunted the "Data Merge" feature. Users reported that their machines were slowing to a crawl, the software "consuming gobs of memory" as if it were a digital black hole. In version 6.6.4, the engineers finally cornered this ghost. They optimized the code so that even the most complex merges—hundreds of names and photos—would flow swiftly without choking the system. They also fixed a stubborn glitch where the Data Merge palette would simply refuse to appear, like a shy actor failing to take the stage. The Sequoia Shadows : Architects of shape and form found they
: A broken link between the Finder and Acorn’s layer list was repaired, allowing users to simply drop their images directly into the stack once more. The Memory Ghost For weeks, a specter had
The world outside the workshop was changing too. macOS 15 Sequoia had arrived, but it brought a strange curse to the "Edit With Acorn" feature in the Photos app. Images sent to Acorn would return looking "overexposed" or "darker," a victim of shifting color profiles. The 6.6.4 update introduced a clever workaround. By refusing to "upgrade" the color profile and keeping the original "Apple Wide Color Sharing Profile" intact, Acorn ensured that what the artist saw was what the artist kept. Smoothing the Path
Smaller irritations were swept away with the precision of a digital brush:
: A crashing bug that occurred during SVG exports—the digital equivalent of a canvas tearing—was finally patched.