• OpenCore Legacy Patcher?

    From Chris Schram@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 4 12:45:02 2023
    XPost: comp.sys.mac.vintage

    Las night while I was rotting my mind browsing YouTube, I stumbled upon
    a tutorial for installing OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection of
    utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura, Sonoma
    on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by Apple. I
    had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if anyone in this
    group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to be true?

    I have am early 2025 MacBook Air that is not supposed to go beyond
    Monterey, so it's entering its final year of macOS updates. It's not
    that the newer macOS versions have major features that would compel an unauthorized upgrade. At this point I'm just asking out of curiosity.

    HISTORY: One-upon-a-time I had a G4 iMac that wasn't supposed to go
    beyond Tiger, and using a hack managed to get it up and running in
    Leopard. It ran flawlessly, with no known incompatibilities, but was
    noticeably slower, which took some getting used to.

    MORE HISTORY: I still have an old plastic MacBook that I keep around for
    a few legacy apps. It topped out at El Capitan, which made it unusably
    slow. I put an SSD in it for a time, which got the speed back, but I
    eventually sprung for a newer Mac, and reverted the old MacBook back to spinning rust. At a later time I downgraded from El Capitan back to
    Yosemite, and performance improved.

    --
    ATTN Google Groups users: I filter out your posts and will not see them. chrispam1@me.com is an infrequently monitored address. Email may get lost.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tyrone@21:1/5 to Chris Schram on Mon Dec 4 15:14:15 2023
    On Dec 4, 2023 at 7:45:02 AM EST, "Chris Schram" <chrispam1@me.com> wrote:

    Las night while I was rotting my mind browsing YouTube, I stumbled upon
    a tutorial for installing OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection of
    utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura, Sonoma
    on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by Apple. I
    had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if anyone in this group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to be true?

    I have am early 2025 MacBook Air that is not supposed to go beyond
    Monterey, so it's entering its final year of macOS updates. It's not
    that the newer macOS versions have major features that would compel an unauthorized upgrade. At this point I'm just asking out of curiosity.

    If you have an "early 2025 MacBook Air" it is REALLY "early". :-)

    But seriously, these kind of hacks have been going on for many years. The change from PowerPC Macs to Intel Macs started the "OS X86" hacking era. I
    used to have OS X running on various non-Apple PCs over the years. They ranged from "did not work at all" to "mostly worked but something was broken due to
    no drivers" to "everything worked fine", but updates from Apple would break
    the system. You usually had to wait for the next "OS X86 distro" to update
    the OS to a newer version. There were dozens of OS X86 distros back then, almost as many as Linux distros.

    So this is basically a "try it, it might work" thing. No guarantees at all. I finally got tired of it all just bought real Macs.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jolly Roger@21:1/5 to Chris Schram on Mon Dec 4 17:37:57 2023
    On 2023-12-04, Chris Schram <chrispam1@me.com> wrote:
    Las night while I was rotting my mind browsing YouTube, I stumbled
    upon a tutorial for installing OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection
    of utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura,
    Sonoma on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by
    Apple. I had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if
    anyone in this group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to
    be true?

    I've used it on multiple Macs. It's great. Generally, it lets you run unsupported macOS versions on older Macs without issue. The website
    lists which Mac models are most compatible as well as which things may
    not work well (or at all) on other Mac models.

    I have am early 2025 MacBook Air that is not supposed to go beyond
    Monterey, so it's entering its final year of macOS updates. It's not
    that the newer macOS versions have major features that would compel an unauthorized upgrade. At this point I'm just asking out of curiosity.

    I have a 2012 Mac mini running macOS 12.6.3 through OCLP. I only use it
    to encode music from CD to AAC, but as far as I can tell, everything
    works on it. Its stable and zippy. I've used OCLP (and its predecessors)
    on older Macs in the past. OLCP is quite a big improvement over the
    older tools from DosDude

    --
    E-mail sent to this address may be devoured by my ravenous SPAM filter.
    I often ignore posts from Google. Use a real news client instead.

    JR

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Chris Schram@21:1/5 to Tyrone on Mon Dec 4 20:44:59 2023
    On 2023-12-04, Tyrone <none@none.none> wrote:
    On Dec 4, 2023 at 7:45:02 AM EST, "Chris Schram" <chrispam1@me.com> wrote:

    Las night while I was rotting my mind browsing YouTube, I stumbled upon
    a tutorial for installing OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection of
    utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura, Sonoma
    on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by Apple. I
    had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if anyone in this
    group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to be true?

    I have am early 2025 MacBook Air that is not supposed to go beyond
    Monterey, so it's entering its final year of macOS updates. It's not
    that the newer macOS versions have major features that would compel an
    unauthorized upgrade. At this point I'm just asking out of curiosity.

    If you have an "early 2025 MacBook Air" it is REALLY "early". :-)

    That's what I get for Usenetting when I should be asleep. Make that 2014.

    --
    ATTN Google Groups users: I filter out your posts and will not see them. chrispam1@me.com is an infrequently monitored address. Email may get lost.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan Browne@21:1/5 to Chris Schram on Tue Dec 5 20:07:33 2023
    On 2023-12-04 07:45, Chris Schram wrote:
    Las night while I was rotting my mind browsing YouTube, I stumbled upon
    a tutorial for installing OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection of
    utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura, Sonoma
    on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by Apple. I
    had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if anyone in this group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to be true?

    I have am early 2025 MacBook Air that is not supposed to go beyond
    Monterey, so it's entering its final year of macOS updates. It's not
    that the newer macOS versions have major features that would compel an unauthorized upgrade. At this point I'm just asking out of curiosity.

    I'm too tired to digest the , but realize that such patchers could
    breathe new life into my i7 iMac as this new iMac is pretty much the
    prime machine.

    ... the rest goes too far back ...
    HISTORY: One-upon-a-time I had a G4 iMac that wasn't supposed to go
    beyond Tiger, and using a hack managed to get it up and running in
    Leopard. It ran flawlessly, with no known incompatibilities, but was noticeably slower, which took some getting used to.

    MORE HISTORY: I still have an old plastic MacBook that I keep around for
    a few legacy apps. It topped out at El Capitan, which made it unusably
    slow. I put an SSD in it for a time, which got the speed back, but I eventually sprung for a newer Mac, and reverted the old MacBook back to spinning rust. At a later time I downgraded from El Capitan back to
    Yosemite, and performance improved.


    --
    “Markets can remain irrational longer than your can remain solvent.”
    - John Maynard Keynes.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Henry@21:1/5 to Chris Schram on Wed Dec 6 13:58:13 2023
    XPost: comp.sys.mac.vintage

    Chris Schram <chrispam1@me.com> wrote:

    ... OpenCore Legacy Patcher, a collection of
    utilities to facilitate installation of macOS Monterey, Ventura, Sonoma
    on Intel Macs too old or otherwise ineligible, as determined by Apple. I
    had never heard of this hack before, and I'm wondering if anyone in this group has had experience with it. Or is it too good to be true?


    I have a 2011 MacBook Pro that was retired a couple of years ago. I
    heard about OCLP and thought 'why not?' I installed the hack -- pretty straight-forward -- and ran Big Sur for some time. Then I upgraded to
    Monterey. Works like a charm. Yes, it is slow. But this old boy now sits
    in a corner of my LAN running 24/7 as a file server and all is well.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)