Did it magically stop working when Apple made the announcement? Or is it exactly the same machine as it was before this morning?So cool that the MacBook Air I bought my wife less than 5 years ago is no longer supported.
Apple's intel stuff is typically pretty linux-friendly in my experience, especially the older models.I have a pretty old Intel MacBook Air, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD. What could I use this for instead? Any chance to install Linux on it and "do something"? Currently it's a literal paperweight on my very messy desk.
The answer for old hardware (in the realm of x86, at least) is ALWAYS Linux.I have a pretty old Intel MacBook Air, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD. What could I use this for instead? Any chance to install Linux on it and "do something"? Currently it's a literal paperweight on my very messy desk.
I have a pretty old Intel MacBook Air, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD. What could I use this for instead? Any chance to install Linux on it and "do something"? Currently it's a literal paperweight on my very messy desk.
They have not dropped any apple silicon macs yet, right? Would not worry about it just yet.This has me a little nervous. I have a M1 Max MacBook Pro I bought in 2022. I feel like this is so close to mine already becoming obsolete.![]()
The only thing I've had trouble with in my playing is getting the camera working. Everything else works just fine.Apple's intel stuff is typically pretty linux-friendly in my experience, especially the older models.
They're being a bit more aggressive in the Intel to Apple Silicon then they were from the PowerPC to Intel era. There was a 6 year window between the release of the first Intel Mac OS, Tiger, and the first one to drop PowerPC, Snow Leopard.Not hugely surprising. Apple did something similar I believe when they moved from PowerPC to Intel.
I don’t think you should draw any conclusions about long-term support of Apple Silicon chips, from Apple’s step-wise move away from a completely different architecture.This has me a little nervous. I have a M1 Max MacBook Pro I bought in 2022. I feel like this is so close to mine already becoming obsolete.![]()
Check your math... The first Intel iMac came out in January 2006, and Snow Leopard was released in August 2009.They're being a bit more aggressive in the Intel to Apple Silicon then they were from the PowerPC to Intel era. There was a 6 year window between the release of the first Intel Mac OS, Tiger, and the first one to drop PowerPC, Snow Leopard.
I feel for you if you were one of the last Intel MacBook Air buyers in 2020 right before the M1 came out, but 5 years of feature updates and still another 2 to go of security patches isn't that bad. There's also OpenCore Legacy Patcher that will very likely allow you to run macOS 26 just fine (and future versions too as long as they still have x86 architecture support)So cool that the MacBook Air I bought my wife less than 5 years ago is no longer supported.
For apple’s ARM machines too, Asahi works greatThe answer for old hardware (in the realm of x86, at least) is ALWAYS Linux.
Or FreeBSD -- as I'm using a MacBookAir running FreeBSD 14.2 in order to read this.The answer for old hardware (in the realm of x86, at least) is ALWAYS Linux.
Uh no, there's still too many things that don't work yet in Asahi to legitimately claim with a straight face that it "works great".For apple’s ARM machines too, Asahi works great
It doesn't stop working, but the lack of security updates, or eventual lack of them, is concerning.Did it magically stop working when Apple made the announcement? Or is it exactly the same machine as it was before this morning?
You can always use for, two years more? OpenCore to update to macOS 2028So cool that the MacBook Air I bought my wife less than 5 years ago is no longer supported.
Asahi won't even boot on M3 or M4 Macs. It's experimental and suggesting anything but is a disservice.For apple’s ARM machines too, Asahi works great
My 2015 air 8/256 is running sequoia as of now using OCLP. You could do that too. Tutorials abound.I have a pretty old Intel MacBook Air, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD. What could I use this for instead? Any chance to install Linux on it and "do something"? Currently it's a literal paperweight on my very messy desk.
My 2015 air 8/256 is running sequoia as of now using OCLP. You could do that too. Tutorials abound.
or, you could use bootcamp to run Win10/server2019/server2022 and be supported for a few more years.
Linux is also an option, but installing it without nuking MacOS is... tricky
I can see an argument for requiring XCode to be on the latest OS. As for everything else, I usually stay a major version behind on my Macs and I've never had a problem. I wouldn't call that "aggressive about requiring the latest OS."Apple is very aggressive about requiring the latest OS.
For example, XCode requires 15.2 or later.. which came out in December.
Agreed but it works surprisingly well. The main issue for me is the lack of Thunderbolt/USB4 support. But I'm sure that'll come before long.Uh no, there's still too many things that don't work yet in Asahi to legitimately claim with a straight face that it "works great".
But it's getting there. Hopefully by the time Apple drops support for first gen hardware, Asahi will have everything working.
Your OSes are off, but your timing is correctThey're being a bit more aggressive in the Intel to Apple Silicon then they were from the PowerPC to Intel era. There was a 6 year window between the release of the first Intel Mac OS, Tiger, and the first one to drop PowerPC, Snow Leopard.
Win10 + esu will be supported until 2026. Server19 until ~2030 and server22 until ~2033, and OCPL can put you on sequoia today, giving you until at least 2027...I have a 2013 Retina MacBook Pro that unfortunately has such an old i5 that can’t be upgraded to Windows 11, so even Bootcamp isn’t an option for me once October rolls around unless I go Linux.
I'd wipe all personal information and sell it. I've never liked the idea of having unsupported OS's in my house connecting to the internet. I don't know that linux would add to its usefulness if you have much more powerful computing hardware at your disposal already.I have a pretty old Intel MacBook Air, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD. What could I use this for instead? Any chance to install Linux on it and "do something"? Currently it's a literal paperweight on my very messy desk.
Final Cut Pro requires 14.6 which came out July 2024. Logic Pro requires 14.4, which came out March 2024.I can see an argument for requiring XCode to be on the latest OS. As for everything else, I usually stay a major version behind on my Macs and I've never had a problem. I wouldn't call that "aggressive about requiring the latest OS."
Yes, I know that it's been six years, but I spent like $2000 on my Intel Mac Mini (which, in retrospect was a gigantic mistake - but that's a story for another time) and it would be nice to know that it's going to last forever. So that I can OBVIOUSLY get my money's worth.Given that it's been five years since Apple Silicon debuted, I think the cliff for the Intel Macs is fair. I think this year's cliff was pretty steep as it looks like a number of Macs that had the T2 chip got the axe this year. I'm betting the CPU and GPU power to draw all those transparent glass material interface elements would have caused performance dips that Apple would never allow (as I feel they learned a LOT about the performance of Aqua in the early days of OS X on less capable hardware and how negatively viewed it was through the first 2-3 iterations of the operating system). At least most of those old Intel Macs should run some flavor of *nix pretty well without a ton of effort. They've come a very long way to fully supporting the hardware Apple was putting in their Intel products over the years.
I still have a 2014 5k iMac around and it works just fine. Obviously I wouldn't want to use it as my development machine, but for doing emails and writing LaTeX it's totally OK...Apple is very aggressive about requiring the latest OS.
I assume OCLP is basically doing a trick to get the latest intel-builds of MacOS, e.g. the ones intended for the 4 remaining models, to work on 'unsupported' models.My 2015 air 8/256 is running sequoia as of now using OCLP. You could do that too. Tutorials abound.
or, you could use bootcamp to run Win10/server2019/server2022 and be supported for a few more years.
Linux is also an option, but installing it without nuking MacOS is... tricky