Sooooo… a Mac Tech since 1997 and I just finally had to upgrade from my 2012 iMac and bit the bullet on an M3Max MacBook Pro 16", and it has been the most difficult upgrade I have ever done, and I have a lot of clients who upgrade every few years and 3 kids and a wife who all have their own Macs and I do this somewhat regularly so it's something I'm very accustomed to.
My 3 biggest hurdles were finding the right Docking Station for my needs, the CalDigit T4 is excellent in many ways but it lacks Thunderbolt ports so I looked around and bought a Mini Dock with DP ports to connect my 20" Cinema Display and 24" Cinema Display HD because that's the superior connection type for quality video. That didn't have enough juice to power my displays so I did a little digging and found that I'd need USB-C/Thunderbolt adapters in order to get my screens enough juice to power on, so I sent it back and got a different mini docking station and that worked. HOWEVER, not enough juice to the USB ports on the monitor via USB-A so I had to use a USB to USB-C adapter and it solved that issue.
Then my 30+ years of Postscript fonts (I started working in Prepress and Print Shops in the 90's so I have a metric ton of fonts, more than almost anyone on the planet, but I cannot use them in Sonoma 14.5 unless I convert them to OTF format, and that proved challenging! The best and most inexpensive solution is FontConverter in the App Store, but it wouldn't allow me to purchase it (It's advertised as totally Free, but you can't do a thing unless you pay $24.99 to buy it) for some odd reason, so I had to call apple this afternoon to have them clear out whatever issue my account had and it worked! Now I can convert fonts at will so that's solved.
FINALLY… my last issue… I have 2 Intuos 4 Pro tablets that would not work no matter what I tried and Wacom's solution is for their software to TELL YOU the tablet you're using is no longer supported and you'll need to purchase a new one. I also had an Intuos 5 Touch put away and I tried that one and got the same nonsense, so I modified my search and came upon a Reddit thread reporting the same thing. On there someone suggested they try OpenTabletDriver (Open Source & FREE), so I searched it up, went to their website and downloaded the installer. Upon running the installer I entered the password but it then directed me to System preferences with a message populated right in front telling me that in order for it to function properly I need to "Allow the application to Monitor Input from your keyboard even while using other applications."
And wouldn't you know it??!?!?!??… THE WACOM DRIVER IS THERE BUT THAT OPTION IS TURNED OFF!!!
I turned it on just to see if by some miracle that was the issue and UREKA!!! It immediately recognized my tablet with full functionality! I didn't finish installing OpenTabletDriver so all I had to do was allow the Wacom Driver to Monitor Input.
This tells me that Wacom is simply being Opportunistic & Greedy and they only want your money. Since this all started last night, I went online to explore other options and boy was I surprised by the plethora of other brands producing stellar looking tablets, that on the surface seem to do exactly what Wacom's tablets can and then some, for ¼ of the price. Yeah, Wacom has ensured they never get another penny from me!!!!
Now to find a brand that produces Flex Nibs!!!
I sincerely hope this helps the community.