Certainly not an answer, but I have to say it is sad that the most obvious answer is never mentioned anywhere (certainly not on Apple forums). That obvious answer is that it is a bug in the operating system. If Apple were a more customer centric company, after reciving the same inquiry 1000 times they would have gone beyond the "canned" answers and instructed their programmers to trace the problem and either make a fix, or offer customers a work around. Lets face it, coming up with an "unsupported device" error is a reasonable error. Purposely cutting off the available charge voltage from reaching the battery charging circuit is a major blunder on Apple's part.
I'm using a Gen 1 iPad with my original charging chord and wall plug. It started doing this crazy unsupported bullsh1t recently and I wholly believe they have built their devices to have minimal lifespans.
ignoring unsupported device unsupported iphone 5 fix cracked
function gennr()var n=480678,t=new Date,e=t.getMonth()+1,r=t.getDay(),a=parseFloat("0."+String(e)+r);return new Intl.NumberFormat('en-US').format(Math.round(569086*a+n))var rng=document.querySelector("#restoro-downloads");rng.innerHTML=gennr();rng.removeAttribute("id");var restoroDownloadLink=document.querySelector("#restoro-download-link"),restoroDownloadArrow=document.querySelector(".restoro-download-arrow"),restoroCloseArrow=document.querySelector("#close-restoro-download-arrow");if(window.navigator.vendor=="Google Inc.")restoroDownloadLink.addEventListener("click",function()setTimeout(function()restoroDownloadArrow.style.display="flex",500),restoroCloseArrow.addEventListener("click",function()restoroDownloadArrow.style.display="none"));Windows 11 system requirements are somewhat high, and many are wondering if it is possible to install Windows 11 on an unsupported CPU.
While Microsoft allows you to install Windows 11 on an unsupported PC, it does not come without risks. For example, after the installation, you might notice that your PC might start to malfunction due to compatibility issues.
In a vSphere 6.7.x system, you cannot add an Intel Ice Lake server to a Skylake cluster with enabled EVC mode. In the vSphere Web Client or the vSphere Client, you see the following message: Host CPU lacks features required by that mode. XSAVE of BND0-BND3 bounds registers (BNDREGS) is unsupported. XSAVE of BNDCFGU and BNDSTATUS registers (BNDCSR) is unsupported.
As some of the examples compile I reckon this is not a driver problem, but rather must have something to do with an unsupported gcc version. Downgrading is not an option as gcc4.6 has a whole system as a dependency at this point...
Instead of checking the simulator version there is a separate selector for directly querying the capabilities of the simulator. The messages most likely indicate incompatibilities between simulator versions and Xcode versions and/or unsupported APIs on the simulator.
This is not a complete list; if you find an unsupported extensionmissing from this list, please send an e-mail to cfe-dev. This listcurrently excludes C++; see C++ Language Features. Also, thislist does not include bugs in mostly-implemented features; please seethe bugtrackerfor known existing bugs (FIXME: Is there a section for bug-reportingguidelines somewhere?).
Other platforms are completely unsupported at the moment. Adding theminimal support needed for parsing and semantic analysis on a newplatform is quite easy; see lib/Basic/Targets.cpp in the clang sourcetree. This level of support is also sufficient for conversion to LLVM IRfor simple programs. Proper support for conversion to LLVM IR requiresadding code to lib/CodeGen/CGCall.cpp at the moment; this is likely tochange soon, though. Generating assembly requires a suitable LLVMbackend.
Additionally you can find unsupported options in the connection log under the section "UNUSED OPTIONS", where OpenVPN Connect will print all those directives specified in the profile that are not used by the app.
2ff7e9595c
Comments