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Still on Sierra on an MBP early 2011, Mojave on an MBP 2015 and my Hackintosh Z390 and Big Sur/Monterey on another Hackintosh, a Dell XPS 8930 I7 8700. Not sure I’ll keep Monterey as I had a couple of bugs compared to Big Sur.
A: If your Mac had official support in macOS Catalina, it will be able to be patched to run Big Sur with minimal issues. If your Mac was unsupported before the release of macOS Catalina, support remains to be seen as graphics acceleration may not be feasible (as before with Mojave and Catalina) at this time. (OpenGL is deprecated but actually ...
macOS 11 Big Sur on Unsupported Macs Thread WikiPost. dosdude1; Jun 22, 2020; ... iPad, Mac, and other ...
macrumors regular. Original poster. Aug 17, 2010. 167. 27. Apr 1, 2021. #1. Hello, I'm thinking of installing Big Sur on my Mac Pro 5.1 (6 core 3,33GHz, Nvidia GTX 680 Mac Edition, 48GB RAM, Samsung 860 EVO SSD, upgraded Bluetooth/Wi-Fi card). Currently, it's running Catalina with no problem.
Aug 11, 2020. #1. Hi, I happen to have my first ever Mac—the Mac mini 2009, lying around. Thinking of giving it a new life and installing 8gb of RAM + SATA II SSD for some performance gain. The plan is to patch it so that it runs Catalina, or Big Sur whenever that is available. Does anyone have any experience with a similarly aged Mac running ...
macrumors 6502. Original poster. Oct 22, 2015. 338. 64. Nov 10, 2020. #1. I know it’s going to be released to the general public on Thursday but just wondering how Big Sur is running on older macs for all of you out their that have been Beta testing it. My MacBook is a late 2013 MacBook Pro 13 inch.
An iMac A1311 is a 21.5-inch, older than 2012. Can be a 2009, 2010, or 2011 model. It makes a big difference for the capability to boot to internet recovery. 2009 cannot, 2010 maybe, and a 2011 should work for internet recovery. Much more reliable, I think, would be booting to an external USB OS X installer.
Disconnect the device from your Mac, but keep iTunes open. Click on the Spotlight icon (magnifying glass) on the menu bar. Type "Terminal" and press return to open the Terminal app. Enter killall AMPDevicesAgent in the Terminal window, and press return.
The MacBooks are pretty much EoL at this point, Big Sur runs on them but I would bet that the next OS won't. The M1 MacBook Air is a much, much better machine, not too much bigger than the 12" and should be supported for many years to come. I suspect I will upgrade soon. Fair, thanks for your answer.
Open Terminal.app. Rename the existing folder from 2 above to something else like "Backup_old". e.g. in terminal execute this command: Code: mv ~/Library/Application\ Support/MobileSync\Backup ~/Library/Application\ Support/MobileSync\Backup_old. Create a symbolic link in location 2 that points to location 1. e.g.