<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2">Hi team.</font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2"><br></font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2">I see in the section 'Installing OpenLP on Mac OS X' of the new </font>OpenLP 2.2 manual that users are advised to change the Security & Privacy setting related to running apps to 'Allow apps downloaded from: Anywhere'.
<br>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2">This is not a good thing to do — you are advising users to change (lower) security settings on their Mac OS X machines (and not telling them to change it back) and it is not necessary to make the change to run OpenLP.</font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2"><br></font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2">One can keep the default setting of 'Mac App Store and identified developers' and still launch the newly installed OpenLP.</font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2"><br></font>
<font face="Arial, Verdana" size="2">All the user has to do is: </font>
Go to the Applications folder<br>
Right click on the OpenLP application icon (don't double click it)
Choose 'Open' from the context menu
OS X will say something like "This application is from an unidentified developer, do you still want to open it?" The user says "Yes" and that's it. Also — this only happens once, on first running of the app. So the user will not be bothered anymore after this.
<br>
I really think the documentation should be changed as, currently, you are putting Mac users machines at risk by — permanently — and unnecessarily changing a security setting.