MacOS Export Artifacts
The truth about exported image files on macOS is more persistent than most realize. Contrary to popular belief, artifacts don’t just vanish with better hardware - they appear in PNG exports even on M1 Macs, no filtering enabled. This isn’t a bug tied to Anisotropic filtering; it surfaces consistently across export runs, regardless of settings.
Here’s the hard reality: exporting the same Spine project from macOS Tahoe 4.3.38-beta yields clear jagged edges in key details - like coin outlines - across frames. Comparing side-by-side, the left frame shows clean geometry, while the right reveals pixelated distortion, even with default export. The problem isn’t new - it’s a bug buried in macOS rendering, not a fixable toggle.
Psychologically, this kind of invisible flaw shapes how creators perceive quality. On Windows, the same export looks pristine, reinforcing a false sense of consistency. But in real workflows, these micro-errors erode confidence - especially when deadlines loom. Socially, it’s a quiet friction point in digital craftsmanship: why does macOS behave so differently at export?
Don’t assume modern rendering is foolproof. The artifact issue isn’t about skill - it’s a system-level quirk. If you spot jagged edges, compare frames immediately. But here’s the catch: no patch exists for macOS Tahoe; workarounds remain theoretical.
Is this a dealbreaker? Only if you demand pixel-perfect fidelity. But awareness is power - use it to set realistic expectations when exporting from Apple platforms.