7680 x 3240 huh ?LG 34WK95U
The best thing about this 8 core iMac is that you can buy it and never have to experience all the T2 chip problems (frequent crashing) that plagues the desktop Macs that currently have one. So, if you've got the money to buy one of these it's likely the last new iMac you'll ever buy that comes without the T2.
7680 x 3240 huh ?
I've seen it reported mostly in the iMac Pros and Macbook Pros. Maybe they're doing something different with the New mini since it's the latest iteration of the T2. Good to hear it's working. Hopefully they've found a fix they can implement in the next iMac refresh. https://venturebeat.com/2018/07/25/apple-t2-chip-blamed-for-2018-macbook-pro-and-imac-pro-crashes/I am a partner at a Recording Studio and one of the rigs is a 2018 Mac mini and we have yet to have any crashes. However, we route most of the audio devices threw the TB3 and the USB ports are often left open. We have yet to see a crash when Live recording, Mixing sessions, or when rendering tracks. I also have a Mac mini that I use for Architectural design, 3D modeling and rendering. IT does not crash either.
The T2 sub-processor manages the image quality of the FaceTime camera, as well as regulating boot safety and boot security, encrypting and decrypting data sent to flash storage, fan speeds, speakers, and secures built-in microphones. It is also used to power "Hey Siri" vocal prompts for Apple's digital assistant.
While the cause of the kernel panics are unclear, with symptoms and hardware setups varying between users, Apple is seemingly aware of the problem and has been working on it since the start of 2018. One user notes the Kernel Version increase from 17.3.0 to 17.4.0 resulted in fewer panics, reducing the count from a daily occurrence to one that happens once or twice a week.
In some cases, Apple has reportedly replaced the hardware, but the issue seemingly continued even on the new unit for a few users, suggesting a software conflict of some sort.
In the posts, Apple support staff suggests iMac Pro users wipe and reinstall MacOS, disable FileVault, and disable Power Nap. For those not willing to perform those, other forum posts suggested crashes could be reduced by not daisy-chaining devices, not using a Thunderbolt 3-to-Thunderbolt 2 adapter, disable Secure Boot, turn off power management options, remove third-party kernel extensions, avoid leaving it to idle overnight, and to not unlock it with an Apple Watch.
In the posts, Apple support staff suggests iMac Pro users wipe and reinstall MacOS, disable FileVault, and disable Power Nap. For those not willing to perform those, other forum posts suggested crashes could be reduced by not daisy-chaining devices, not using a Thunderbolt 3-to-Thunderbolt 2 adapter, disable Secure Boot, turn off power management options, remove third-party kernel extensions, avoid leaving it to idle overnight, and to not unlock it with an Apple Watch.