What happens when Apple decides that M1 Macs are a bit long in the tooth and it's time to obsolete them? Will they throw a kill switch in macOS to make them unbootable to macOS? This is the importance of native ARM based Windows 11 and Linux.
Which iOS devices have they done this to?What happens when Apple decides that M1 Macs are a bit long in the tooth and it's time to obsolete them? Will they throw a kill switch in macOS to make them unbootable to macOS? This is the importance of native ARM based Windows 11 and Linux.
My point is that once Apple stops supporting M1 based macOS then these systems are suddenly unprotected and how will Apple react then. Intel Macs are orthogonal as those can run Bootcamp or Linux permanently. There is no solution for unsupported M1 Macs.
Apple have been slowly extending the support timeframes for their devices, I wouldn't be surprised if they aim for 10 years with M series macs. Hopefully also with another couple of years of legacy OS security updates, 12 years is a very good run for a computer. Yes some people make a hobby of daily driving things longer, but I think that's going to get exponentially harder with the hermetically sealed and fully soldered Macs from 2016 onwards, to virtually impossible for the SoC era of Apple Silicon. A lot of what are currently ~10 year old machine have been kept going by RAM upgrades, new batteries, SSD replacements, swapping out logic boards between chassis etc etc. Once a component goes or is no longer sufficient for use there's no changing it on a 2016- Intel or Apple Silicon machine, this is going to be an acute problem with the glued in batteries once they fall off Apple's hardware service rota.
How do you plan on doing that? 7th-gen Kaby Lake is what you'll need to upgrade to Windows 11.By the way, I'm looking forward to upgrading my 6 year old Lenovo Yoga 3 to Windows11 in the near future. Should be fun!(it originally was on Windows 8)
time will tell, eh?How do you plan on doing that? 7th-gen Kaby Lake is what you'll need to upgrade to Windows 11.
I dunno mate, my several 2009-2010 Macs running Big Sur would disagree with you thereI’d guess that the number of users that run an alternative OS on an old Mac is close enough to zero to be completely dismissed from any meaningful discussion. There are still people who run 10 year old Macs (albeit not with the newest software), so that’s more or less what you will get. Altogether, not any different from other obsolete hardware that stopped receiving driver updates.
Yes, the Mac doesn't stop working. But you will no longer receive security updates for macOS.Apple will treat M1 devices the same way they treat Intel Macs and other Apple devices that are determined to be obsolete. There will be a point in the future where Apple declares the M1 Macs as obsolete. At the point, the Mac's will no longer receive OS update. Thats it. Same with Intel models. There is no "kill Switch" or anything else. No such thing exists.
With macOS in insecure form.That Mac will always boot up and can still be used until the end of time. If it's a MacBook, then keep in plugged in 24/7 to a monitor and your good to go for years.
On Intel Macs, you can install Windows or Linux in this case and still have an up-to-date operating system with security updates.
This is an option you have but don't have to use. You no longer have this option with Apple Silicon (at least at the moment).I don't mean to be funny, but if I were happy with running Windows or Linux why on earth would I buy a Mac?
How's that going to help me with running my Logic X studio?
This is an option you have but don't have to use. You no longer have this option with Apple Silicon (at least at the moment).
The alternative is to continue using the Mac without security updates or ditch it. So I don't understand you question...
Exactly.In all seriousness, how many people go “my 10 year old Mac is not receiving macOS security updates anymore, guess I will install windows and continue using it. So lucky I have this option!”. Exactly, nobody.
I mean, it’s great to discuss options and all, but let’s also not forget about a certain measure of relevance. The simple fact is that a Mac - any Mac - has a limited software support span. If that is something that bothers a potential customer, that customer should simply keep away from Macs.
There are Macs with shorter macOS support. The hardware is often still okay and does its job (depending on the tasks).In all seriousness, how many people go “my 10 year old Mac is not receiving macOS security updates anymore, guess I will install windows and continue using it. So lucky I have this option!”. Exactly, nobody.
From an IT security perspective, this is the worst choice.So I’ll just live with an unsupported OS until I get too frustrated and it’ll be recycled.
For home use, it’s an acceptable trade off.From an IT security perspective, this is the worst choice.
I see it differently for me and many of my data.For home use, it’s an acceptable trade off.