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Is there any drawback upgrading to macOS 14.4 from 12.7 on a 2014 macbook pro?

I know this is not a support channel, but each time I’ve asked you have given me several strategies and ideas to upgrade a 2014 macOS I’m experimenting with. Hope this post doesn’t get nuked:

Stock software was 10.10. With opencore patcher and other packages I upgraded up to 12.7 and just now I received a software update alert to upgrade to 14.4, something that never happened before.

I though my old 2014 macbook pro retina, 2.6 Ghz dual core intel i5 couldn’t support the newest macOS, and if you don’t convince me otherwise, I’d upgrade.

thanks

Reverendender ,

I have OSX Leopard disks. I wonder if I can reinstall that onto the white macbook?

whyNotSquirrel ,
@whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works avatar

I can’t run 32 bits apps anymore since the last update

JCPhoenix ,
@JCPhoenix@beehaw.org avatar

I updated my mid-2014 MBP to Sonoma using OCLP last month from stock Big Sur. And then last week or the week before, Apple pushed Sonoma 14.4. OCLP also had updates related to 14.4, so I did both.

I had no issues, on either upgrade. No more issues than what the OCLP devs already know about, which to me are minor.

This MBP is certainly a little sluggish with Sonoma. But the 14.4 update didn’t make it any worse (or better). Honestly though, it was already sluggish for me on stock Big Sur (the last official version for this machine). Stock Catalina was the last version that ran very well for me. At this point, I’m only using this MBP mainly for web browsing and some basic productivity. I have my M3 Pro MBP and Windows gaming machine for more serious/taxing stuff.

Anyway, I had no issues with the latest update. tunetardis’ suggestion, if you’re worried, makes sense, too.

SmoothLiquidation ,

I would do a full backup of how it is today and then try it out. What is the worst that could happen?

tunetardis ,

Personally, I would get an external SSD and try it on there first. At least it’s new enough to have USB3 ports. If you’re comfortable enough with it under the circumstances, you can put it on your main drive. But you may find you need to upgrade the RAM or that it’s just too much of a resource hog in the end? But even if you back away from 14, it’s always nice to have an external SSD kicking around. :)

SayJess ,
@SayJess@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

It’ll be unusable. A 10 year old Mac cannot run current macOS without significant slow down. Upgrading 2 major releases at once is inadvisable given the hacky nature of opencore patcher. I don’t mean that as a dig at the project, I’ve used open core patcher in the past.

Reverendender ,

In my experience it will slow down so much as to become unusable. I made this mistake with my unibody white MacBook, and 2011 iMac.

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