I'm leaning towards upgrading to 10.11 El Capitan (from 10.9.5 Mavericks) in order to get IOS 13 support with iTunes.
(I've created a multi-partition SSD with 10.11 El Capitan, 10.12 Sierra and 10.13 High Sierra on my Mac Pro and with a little playing around they don't seem to differ much on my mid-2010 Mac Pro (24GB RAM, SSD for OSX/apps, HDDs for file storage and backups) but from what I've read El Capitan is the best option above 10.9.5 for performance with older Macs).
But for that test-partition I had to go through a LOT of hassle and problems. I finally succeeded, but had to install 10.6 Snow Leopard on the newly partitioned drive, go through all the updates (ending up with 10.6.8 and all the other Snow Leopard updates). From then on I ran the 10.11 El Capitan installer (from a USB stick using Diskmaker X), and keeping in mind to adjust the clock in the Terminal so as to be within its valid certificate date. Finally adding all the El Capitan updates.
Is this the only way to go?
(I've created a multi-partition SSD with 10.11 El Capitan, 10.12 Sierra and 10.13 High Sierra on my Mac Pro and with a little playing around they don't seem to differ much on my mid-2010 Mac Pro (24GB RAM, SSD for OSX/apps, HDDs for file storage and backups) but from what I've read El Capitan is the best option above 10.9.5 for performance with older Macs).
But for that test-partition I had to go through a LOT of hassle and problems. I finally succeeded, but had to install 10.6 Snow Leopard on the newly partitioned drive, go through all the updates (ending up with 10.6.8 and all the other Snow Leopard updates). From then on I ran the 10.11 El Capitan installer (from a USB stick using Diskmaker X), and keeping in mind to adjust the clock in the Terminal so as to be within its valid certificate date. Finally adding all the El Capitan updates.
Is this the only way to go?