![]() Those who are unsure which Mac model they own may find EveryMac and apple-history to be useful sites. You may, however, still be able to buy it by calling 1-800-MY-APPLE in the past, Apple would send a special code via e-mail that would enable Lion to be downloaded from the Mac App Store. If Lion is the newest version of OS X that will run on your Mac, but you never purchased it while it was available in the Mac App Store, you won’t be able to find it for sale there anymore. Mac Pro (original 2006 model, including any bought in 2007).MacBook Air (original model from Early 2008).MacBook (Late 2006, Mid or Late 2007, or Early 2008).However, if your Mac has a Core 2 Duo processor (one of the models listed below), and as long as it has at least 2 GB of RAM and 7 GB of free hard drive space, it should still be able to run Lion (which, although increasingly less safe to use now, is at least better than Snow Leopard or earlier because it had been getting security updates until recently): If your Mac isn’t new enough to run Yosemite, then unfortunately it’s not capable of running an Apple operating system that’s still fully supported. If you still have an earlier version of OS X on your compatible Mac, you will need to download Yosemite on another compatible Mac with 10.6.8 or later, create a bootable Yosemite flash drive or external hard drive (using Apple’s official instructions or the third-party tool DiskMaker X), and do a clean install overwriting the hard drive on your Mac-so be sure to carefully back up all of your files first. You can do a direct upgrade from Snow Leopard v10.6.8, Lion, Mountain Lion, or Mavericks. MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer).Yosemite, like its predecessors Mavericks and Mountain Lion, requires one of the following Macs with at least 2 GB of RAM and 8 GB of available hard drive space: If your Mac is older than the ones listed, read on for suggestions on what you can do to upgrade to a supported system. The good news is that most new Macs sold within the past several years can be upgraded to Yosemite.įollowing is the list of Macs that can run a supported version of OS X. Unfortunately, nobody knows for certain how long Apple will continue to release security patches or XProtect updates for any given operating system.Īlthough Microsoft publicly announces its support timetables for Windows, and the Ubuntu Linux company Canonical does likewise, Apple has never given any official word to the public regarding how long each version of Mac OS X or iOS will continue to receive security updates, and Apple consistently ignores press inquiries about when levels of support will be dropped for its operating systems. Although the same could be said for iTunes updates, Apple has a financial incentive to keep iTunes updated: the iTunes Store and the iOS App Store, both of which are accessible via the iTunes Mac app, bring in a lot of revenue for Apple. Development of OS patches costs Apple money and developer resources. ![]() However, these will likely be just about the only things Apple continues to update for Lion over the next year. Meanwhile, the now three-generations-old Lion operating system is currently still getting both XProtect and iTunes updates. That’s not a good thing, because not only does it mean there won’t be any more security patches from Apple, but many third parties have already stopped releasing updates compatible with these operating systems as well.įor now, the only security-related update Apple is still releasing for Snow Leopard is its XProtect “Safe Downloads List,” but there’s no way of knowing for sure how much longer Apple will continue to update it. Still older Macs can’t even be upgraded to Lion, meaning they’ll be stuck with Snow Leopard (version 10.6.8) or some earlier version of OS X. In recent history, Apple has only patched operating system vulnerabilities for the current and two previous versions of OS X. However, some Macs are still limited to Lion (version 10.7.5), which is evidently no longer getting security patches now that Yosemite has been released the lack of a Lion version of the recent Security Update 2014-005 is a harbinger of things (not) to come. This means that if your Mac was compatible with Mavericks or even its predecessor Mountain Lion, you’ll be able to upgrade to Yosemite. Like last year with the release of Mavericks, Apple chose to continue supporting all the same Macs as the previous release of the operating system. ![]() Apple recently released a new version of its Mac operating system, OS X Yosemite (version 10.10).
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