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lostregr123

macrumors member
Original poster
Nov 1, 2019
38
7
I dont really care for the new features of the new os.
But I always had in my mind that new OS slow down my machine without to offering something new?

What the best os for this macbook?
In my mind is Monterey.

I mostly use my machine as an everyday go.
But I also I am a graphic designer using Photoshop and Illustrator.

Half of the day the macbook is hoocked on usb c Dell3219Q
And the half other of day youtube/netflix on the bedside.

Whats your preference or experience with the new OS?
 

Andrey84

macrumors 6502
Nov 18, 2020
343
262
Greater London, United Kingdom
Please don't overcomplicate things and always upgrade to the latest OS, while you can. You don't have do to it instantly, but ideally within 4-6 weeks of it coming out.
M1 Max won't feel any performance difference if you keep doing these upgrades for at least 5 more years.
Past Mac OSs receive security updates later than the current one. Also, past OSs have bugs which apple will never fix, as the focus is always on the latest Mac OS.

Being secure is always more important than a chance (very low in your case) of lower performance.

I also wish there were a stable Mac OS with a locked-down feature list that would receive only security updates. Users, who don't need new features, and who are tired of updating the OS, would've been able use such Mac OS forever, but, unfortunately, it's a fantasy.
 
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Nbd1790

macrumors 6502
Jan 2, 2017
352
278
New York
Currently using Ventura and it's great. I always update one OS behind the current (mainly for 3rd party apps that take a while to catch up). Think you should be fine using the latest OS. I haven't noticed any difference updating from the original OS it shipped with in terms of performance. The M series chips took a huge step forward so I don't foresee it being a problem in the way that it was with Intel based machines.
 

Furka

macrumors regular
Dec 12, 2019
106
50
Some of us have installed Sonoma on 2012 MacbookPros with Intel i 5 or i7 processors. IMHO in my case, the best compromise for my mbps, is the MontereyOS. In your case, with a sooooo more powerfull M1 processor than the old Intel ones, and your high RAM, without any doubts, SonomaOS on the latest version.
 

lostregr123

macrumors member
Original poster
Nov 1, 2019
38
7
Some of us have installed Sonoma on 2012 MacbookPros with Intel i 5 or i7 processors. IMHO in my case, the best compromise for my mbps, is the MontereyOS. In your case, with a sooooo more powerfull M1 processor than the old Intel ones, and your high RAM, without any doubts, SonomaOS on the latest version.

Ι have installed Ventura on Macbook Pro 2019 i7 16" and the machine was lagging at basic things.
I dont get how people with older machines say that its ok...
 
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Furka

macrumors regular
Dec 12, 2019
106
50
Ι have installed Ventura on Macbook Pro 2019 i7 16" and the machine was lagging at basic things.
I dont get how people with older machines say that its ok...
You are right. I play with OCLP por test purposes (I have plans to buy a M1/M2 newer machine and before that I can test the newer OSes). I have installed BigSurOS, MontereyOS, VenturaOS and SonomaOS on it. After some tests with 16Gb of Ram and a Crucial SSD (not the speediest of the world) and Sonoma was not lagging at all, BUT it runs some more background daemons than his last upgradable macos CatalinaOS, and the use of cpu is higher, and it runs hotter. I think the best compromise for this machine is MontereyOS, that has the last security updates, and more software with the last updates on the app store etc., but at the moment I am on CatalinaOS.
 

WilliApple

macrumors 6502a
Feb 19, 2022
984
1,427
Colorado
It doesn't matter as proved by this video:

The only thing is Sonoma is not in bug fix mode, so it uses more ram rn, however I guarantee if this video was tested on the initial version of each operating system, it would show that they were the exact same.

So my answer now is Ventura, until possibly macOS 14.5 or 14.6
 
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halledise

macrumors 68020
I dont really care for the new features of the new os.
But I always had in my mind that new OS slow down my machine without to offering something new?

What the best os for this macbook?
In my mind is Monterey.

I mostly use my machine as an everyday go.
But I also I am a graphic designer using Photoshop and Illustrator.

Half of the day the macbook is hoocked on usb c Dell3219Q
And the half other of day youtube/netflix on the bedside.

Whats your preference or experience with the new OS?
Monterey +1 👌
 

iamMacPerson

macrumors 68040
Jun 12, 2011
3,488
1,927
AZ/10.0.1.1
I have the exact same machine. I stayed on Monterey for a month or two after Sonoma came out because I couldn't afford to troubleshoot issues while in school. During break I upgraded both my MacBook and M1 Mac mini. The speed is the same. I noticed no slowdowns after upgrading. These machines are still so new and powerful I don't think you need to worry about them slowing down for some time.
 
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Isamilis

macrumors 68020
Apr 3, 2012
2,191
1,074
If you prefer stability over new features, get one version behind, which is Ventura. It’s still have security update without any hiccups and compatibility issues from Sonoma.

Bear in mind, new OS version always slower than the old one, it’s only a matter of whether the slowdown is negligible or not (which depends on machine’s spec). I have 15” M2 MBA (Ventura) and 13” M2 (Monterey), both have same RAM/CPU. The Ventura (with better GPU) is slightly slower than Monterey (in everyday tasks) but it’s still very much tolerable.
 
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Shirasaki

macrumors P6
May 16, 2015
16,263
11,764
I don’t know if Appe signs macOS similar to how they sign iOS to prevent downgrade. You may need to check if downgrade is even possible on Apple silicon Mac. If downgrade is not possible, then all you can do is never upgrade past sonoma.
 

headlessmike

macrumors 65816
May 16, 2017
1,439
2,843
I don’t know if Appe signs macOS similar to how they sign iOS to prevent downgrade. You may need to check if downgrade is even possible on Apple silicon Mac. If downgrade is not possible, then all you can do is never upgrade past sonoma.
They don’t. The only limitation is that you generally cannot install an OS version older than the one that came on the machine from the factory.
 

bousozoku

Moderator emeritus
Jun 25, 2002
16,120
2,399
Lard
My M1 MacBook Air was on Monterey and I wouldn't use Ventura because of all the bad reports I'd seen. Sonoma seems much better and will be the best for a while. At this point, it seemed that Ventura was terribly broken, while Sonoma is merely buggy.
 

n-evo

macrumors 68000
Aug 9, 2013
1,909
1,731
Amsterdam
I'm not sure why you expect there to be speed issues on such a high-performance and relatively new device. As others have mentioned you're overcomplicating things without any need to.

I'm running macOS Sonoma on a base MacBook Pro M1 Pro and it's blazing fast.
 
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