Friday, February 17th 2012
OS X "Mountain Lion" Drops Support for Several Older Mac Models
Launched yesterday as a developer-preview, Apple's OS X "Mountain Lion" will support fewer Macs than its predecessor, probably because of increases in hardware requirements for smooth operation that older Macs can't quite guarantee. The support list for Mountain Lion looks like this:
Source:
TUAW
- iMac (mid 2007 or later)
- MacBook (13-inch Aluminum, 2008), (13-inch, plastic, Early 2009 or later)
- MacBook Pro (13-inch, Mid-2009 or later), (15-inch, 2.4/2.2 GHz), (17-inch, Late 2007 or later)
- MacBook Air (Late 2008 or later)
- Mac Mini (Early 2009 or later)
- Mac Pro (Early 2008 or later)
- Xserve (Early 2009)
15 Comments on OS X "Mountain Lion" Drops Support for Several Older Mac Models
There is no reason an x86 from 2007 or 2008 device cannot run OS X.lion
That's like Microsoft turning round and saying Windows 8 not compatible with x86 Core 2 or earlier.
Yeah I agree, they are wanting people to dump hardware for new much faster. Which defeats the classical purpose of owning a Mac, as well as takes a crap on resale value. Macs would just work, and work, and be viable for years. Buying a new Mac within 5 years used to be near unheard of. People did it but you had to be either a professional or rich to do it constantly.
I wonder if the old hacking groups are still around. Used to be a group that would make bootloaders to force OSX on Macs that were cut off. I did it on old 604e machines and then later on G3s. Yeah OSX wouldn't be super, but it would work.
Yes, the people who made XPostFacto could probably do the same thing again and fudge the new version to work on it, but really it's not like they are going PPC -> x86 or 68k -> PPC. This is just ridiculous. An original Core based Mac Pro is still a powerful machine and could easily run whatever they are putting into the new version... unless the new version sits in the background running Prime95 or SuperPi or something.
Unsurprisingly I can see Apple would do that...
On a separate note, not much of a surprise to be honest, but then Macs aren't like they were a few years ago. Now they're mostly bought by hipsters to play Farmville on in Starbucks.
I think it probably has more to do with the minimum hardware requirements that they're probably building into their future software suites (Garage band, iEverything, etc).
So, they can say it's all for the good, everything will be better, with no compatibility issues (and minimal tech support needed), and at the same time force some of their user base to spend money on a system upgrade. That's free advertising and good feeling (for many mac users) built in to a money grab to increase quarterly sales numbers and benefit their stock price.
Sounds like typical Apple strategy.
I suspect the reason is dead centre between the two you specified - "Do we support this older chipset? Why bother, it's additional work and we want those customers to buy new Macs not retool old ones".