Yeah I’m going to be converting mine using a conversion board, but I’m technically inclined enough to do it. I’m not paint for the studio monitor when I can get a Mac mini and save some e garbage.I really wish there was some way to keep the 27" iMac as an (official) external monitor after it goes the way of the dodo. The monitor itself is still great, and it's such a waste to trash it just because the Intel silicon behind it is aging.
Even as a joke I would not wish such a project on my worst enemy. With many manufacturers selling “new” computers with years old chips, shipping with OS versions that were already not eligible for updates, or barely functioning computers with the shipping OS even an LLM would cry trying to make sense of it. We should make giving an accurate answer to this the test for if something is real AI. I would however be interested if Microsoft pushing drivers has helped the situation or if additional code signing has made driver updates even less likely.Now do the same article, but for Lenovo or Dell devices.
My concern is the impact on speed/stability.The article refers you to OCLP. It may help you bring both macs to Sequoia, so you can browse the net with confidence again on those Macs. It may be worth a try. It works wonders on my early 2015 MBA
Who the hell normally uses a phone for 7 years and expects software updates for that long, let alone 9 years with security patches?
Well, it'll happily keep running for some time yet... Just no major new OS revisions, but there, really, it's a case of diminishing returns anyway.My 2018 13” MacBook Pro still has plenty of hardware life left in it. Such a shame.
But, it is a laptop from 2018.
Yeah, but admitting to that will kill all the Microsoft-hating click bait for doing exactly the same thing apple has been doing for years with no one complaining and actually cheering and justifyingIt's not like a Mac will instantly stop working when Apple stops updating it. If you make sure the firewall settings are factory default and then switch to chrome or firefox (which will continue to get updated for a while on their own schedule) the odds are good that the machine will chug along for another couple years and be serviceable for casual browsing and spreadsheet use.
There's definitely a future for "orphaned" Intel Macs:My 2018 13” MacBook Pro still has plenty of hardware life left in it. Such a shame.
But, it is a laptop from 2018.
Well, remember that there used to be an effort to get the operating system to support the broadest user base possible (outside of Apple-land)?Yeah, but admitting to that will kill all the Microsoft-hating click bait for doing exactly the same thing apple has been doing for years with no one complaining and actually cheering and justifying
We upgrade phones every 2-3 years on average, and yet the iPhone has an average 5+2 support window. iPhone upgrade timelines are easier 2-3x larger than their expected ownership time per user.As a Mac user, I don't understand how so many accept support periods that are equal to devices we replace more often (phones)... and that's assuming you buy the computer as soon they're released.
The M1 Air is one of the best computers Apple ever made. Great performance for the form factor, great keyboard + trackpad, great battery life, great screen. I've got one, and I'll be using it until the hardware falls apart. Such a good laptop.Apple is still selling M1 Macbook Airs (through third party retailers.) That's a nearly five-year-old product right now. One wonders what period of support people who buy those today will get.
Dell officially provide 5 years of support anything after that is not guaranteed and best effort.I just checked and my Latitude 7380 (released 2017) got a BIOS in March. OTOH the OS vendor is Microsoft and I really wish they would desist with anything other than security patches
e: mixed up 7380 and 7390 lol.
For the nth time except for one weird exception to do with a processor used in an MS surface device the CPU cutoff is not arbitrary it is the point that Mode Based Access Control was implemented which makes certain security related features implementable with negligible slowdown.Well, remember that there used to be an effort to get the operating system to support the broadest user base possible (outside of Apple-land)?
Windows 95 on a 386 with 4MB of RAM was a joke.
I also remember a Flight Simulator release that supported Windows 95, 98, Me, NT, 2000 and XP.
Now it's straight to the landfill. Yes, a 2009 Mac Pro may not be very efficient, but maybe you run on solar? At least give us the option. I'd probably be on the Mac, but I just can't justify parting with perfectly functional (and fast) computers.
So I left and now a ThinkPad is my daily driver and I keep a Mac around to be able to access some old data.
MSFT played an Apple with the TPM 2.0 + arbitrary CPU cutoff carpet pull.
Which was fine (my SE was from a 1990 campus offer), since the 68000 Macs were painfully slow under 7.5.5, and couldn't use many of the new features anyway (colour). They were much happier under 6.0.x.This standard was introduced with the Mac Plus: Introduced in 1986, with OS support all the way through 1994 when System 7.5.5 was the last OS to support a 68000 CPU. The two previous models lacked enough RAM to go past system 6.0.8. Of course this means that the SE (1987) and Classic (1990), also featuring 68000's got the short end of that OS support list.
Ah yes, the "people only use a Web browser on their computer" argument.I disagree that the consumer Linux distributions have a ‘steep learning curve.’ Installing Mint was easier than the last time I had to reinstall windows for my aging parents. It comes with a web browser and it works. Most people don’t use it for much else.
Now if you want to do a heavy gaming rig and need proton, wine, etc. Yes it can get hairy, but you aren’t doing that on a 10 year old converted Mac.
The problem with the M1 - for a not-that-small number of people - is that it didn't natively support more than 1 external display, whereas Intel could do this out of the box. To achieve this feature required 3rd party hardware and drivers which, as I've experienced them, aren't the most reliable things in the world.Apple is still selling M1 Macbook Airs (through third party retailers.) That's a nearly five-year-old product right now. One wonders what period of support people who buy those today will get.
Yeah, people are assuming that because those are still being sold, it's a given that they will be supported for an extra long time, but personally I wouldn't put it past Apple to not care and just screw over all those M1 MBA recent buyers.Apple is still selling M1 Macbook Airs (through third party retailers.) That's a nearly five-year-old product right now. One wonders what period of support people who buy those today will get.
Well, there is an aftermarket of replacement main boards for the 27 inch iMacs to convert them into dumb monitors. But it's still a very involved build. You don't get a part that just snaps elegantly into the same ports and reuses the same power supply. No, that would be too easy and convenient...I really wish there was some way to keep the 27" iMac as an (official) external monitor after it goes the way of the dodo. The monitor itself is still great, and it's such a waste to trash it just because the Intel silicon behind it is aging.
I don't know that "screw over" is justified there.Yeah, people are assuming that because those are still being sold, it's a given that they will be supported for an extra long time, but personally I wouldn't put it past Apple to not care and just screw over all those M1 MBA recent buyers.
Plenty of people buy a device for whatever it costs and use it as long as it works. If my phone works for nine years, why wouldn't I use it for that time?Who the hell normally uses a phone for 7 years and expects software updates for that long, let alone 9 years with security patches?
Now do the same article, but for Lenovo or Dell devices.
Seriously though, even with the MacBook Air receiving the short end of the stick, 5-9 years of updates (os, security, etc) on average I guarantee destroys any vendor.
Ask and you shall receive. And it's more saying dumb shit like Appletechnica that gets you the downvotes BTW. Come at the comment with a combative attitude and that's what happens.Of course this is AppleTechnica so I'm ready for all the negative downvotes
It's not the end of the world to stop receiving software updates. The mac will still work. Obviously one has to take precautions regarding any security vulnerabilities ...but Macs are inherently safer than PCs in that regard anyway. If you get a decade put of your hardware...good for you. But my gosh, the M chips are a revolution compared to Intel. Save your simoleons and upgrade.
The length of time the OS is supported is less than half the story these days. It is the entirety of the machine that matters which includes:No it doesn't. Laptops from 2019 are about to lose support.
8th Gen Intel CPU's all support Windows 11, and that's from 2017 until at least 2027 or longer.
So there you go. I've done Dell and Lenevo for you. Of course this is AppleTechnica so I'm ready for all the negative downvotes but Apple suck at long term support. You can still play modern games/apps with modern hardware and drivers from PC's released nearly 20 years ago with Windows 10.
I have a Compaq (yes, Compaq) laptop from 2006 that runs Windows 10 and will finally lose support at the end of 2025 when Windows 10 retires. That's 19 years!
Apple stated the support lifecycle when you bought the product.I am typing this on my Intel 2012 MacBook Pro running Ventura 13.7.
The OpenCore team do an amazing job of keeping old Macs alive when Apple choose not to. If Apple announce they are ending support that doesn't mean you should throw out perfectly good equipement.
Especially if it means you are giving Apple more money to obsolete products and services so they can lock them down behind non-upgradeable walls and software bubbles.
Apple will support those machines for 5 years after they last offered it for sale which for Apple is 2024 + 5 = 2029 when the design will be nearly a decade old. If they consider Walmart selling stock to count is a different matter.Yeah, people are assuming that because those are still being sold, it's a given that they will be supported for an extra long time, but personally I wouldn't put it past Apple to not care and just screw over all those M1 MBA recent buyers.
True though OpenCore is now on borrowed time. Since Apple has announced that macOS 26 will be the last one compiled for intel after that it's over as there won't be intel OS binaries to patch anymore going forwardI am typing this on my Intel 2012 MacBook Pro running Ventura 13.7.
The OpenCore team do an amazing job of keeping old Macs alive when Apple choose not to. If Apple announce they are ending support that doesn't mean you should throw out perfectly good equipement.
Especially if it means you are giving Apple more money to obsolete products and services so they can lock them down behind non-upgradeable walls and software bubbles.
Citation needed? Apple never makes any support roadmaps public, any projections are purely hypothetical.Apple will support those machines for 5 years after they last offered it for sale which for Apple is 2024 + 5 = 2029 when the design will be nearly a decade old. If they consider Walmart selling stock to count is a different matter.
Amen. You can airplay to it but that’s not optimal for many applications. Target display mode should have been kept but was cut off with the ARM transition.I really wish there was some way to keep the 27" iMac as an (official) external monitor after it goes the way of the dodo. The monitor itself is still great, and it's such a waste to trash it just because the Intel silicon behind it is aging.
You can (or recently could) buy refurb LG screens with the same panel for about $500. Not as good as keeping using something you have that works, but not a bad deal either.Yeah I’m going to be converting mine using a conversion board, but I’m technically inclined enough to do it. I’m not paint for the studio monitor when I can get a Mac mini and save some e garbage.
But why is Apple's EOL policy for security maintenance unwritten?These Macs aren't getting special treatment—this has been Apple's unspoken, unwritten policy for macOS security updates for decades now—but to look past its usual "we don't comment on our future plans" stance [...]
They should really bring it back now that the bandwith issues related to the external display ports has been fixedAmen. You can airplay to it but that’s not optimal for many applications. Target display mode should have been kept but was cut off with the ARM transition.