I agree with the OP.
Mojave is destined to become the "Windows XP" of the Mac world.
It will remain the ONLY OS that my 2018 Mac Mini ever runs in day-to-day usage.
In fact, that's why I bought the 2018 Mini -- to have one of the last Macs that would run 32 bit software into the foreseeable future...
There are tests that showed that amongst Sierra, High Sierra, Mojave, and Catalina, Mojave is the slowest. Sierra is the fastest, with HS and Catalina going second.
MacPro 5,1 with a 250gb SSD for my Mojave drive...rest are regular 1tb drives and raid 3-4gb Raid 5 external. Rest is in my description.
I agree with the OP.
Mojave is destined to become the "Windows XP" of the Mac world.
It will remain the ONLY OS that my 2018 Mac Mini ever runs in day-to-day usage.
In fact, that's why I bought the 2018 Mini -- to have one of the last Macs that would run 32 bit software into the foreseeable future...
Anyone made a fresh install of Catalina and then downgraded to Mojave? Got a 2015 "13 MBP and sometimes stuff like turning off the laptop takes like 30 seconds, tempted to roll back
Anyone made a fresh install of Catalina and then downgraded to Mojave? Got a 2015 "13 MBP and sometimes stuff like turning off the laptop takes like 30 seconds, tempted to roll back
I downgraded to Mojave in my MacBook Air 2013. I had the same problems as you, minor battery life, iTunes ruined and 32 bit softwares and games out.Anyone made a fresh install of Catalina and then downgraded to Mojave? Got a 2015 "13 MBP and sometimes stuff like turning off the laptop takes like 30 seconds, tempted to roll back
I agree with the OP.
Mojave is destined to become the "Windows XP" of the Mac world.
Well if apple didn't comeout with that garbagecan of a MacPro which ended up to be truly what it is looked like, Im sure more people would have changed to newer MacPro's. But since the latest new one came out at it's outrageous price point, there is still great demand for the 5,1 MacPro's and if you upgraded everything to the max like I pretty much have, then the OS shouldn't be that big of a bottleneck. Unless Apple does it on purpose to force people to abandon their old computers. I myself have mine setup like a server/daw station so upgrading is not practical at this time.Not to cast shade on your system, but any data point using a computer that came out a decade before the OS in question is generally not a great data point.
Is there anything that makes you more inclined to update too big sur. I am also on Mojave, however, the latest security update has been making my screen flicker every now and then.Yes I have to agree. I've have no incentive to install Catalina, and as for Big Sur.......well we'll just have to wait and see. But as these recent OS's appear to keep demanding more and more RAM memory, I reckon in the not too distant future 32GB may just about suffice.
For the moment I'll still very happy and smiling with Mojave, running very well on a mid 2010 MacBook with the DosDude1 patch and 4GB RAM, and another on a MBPro mid-2012 with 8GB RAM. Luvvly-jubbly!
I know some will flame me as a luddite for saying this, but to me, Mojave is the end of a wonderful era of mac system software.
32-bit support, gone.
Soon Windows support, gone.
Now with Big Sur making the big play to become iOS part deux, it feels like the end of the line. A wonderful line of macs and os's that I grew up with and know and love.
So, for me, Mojave represents the last stake in the ground, that last, great representation of what macs have become to me.
I will buy Mojave compatible macs from the refurb store going forward, but after that, its a bleak, sad desert. Either windows ... or 'silicon' macs I have no interest in.
Oh well, woe is me.
Is there anything that makes you more inclined to update too big sur. I am also on Mojave, however, the latest security update has been making my screen flicker every now and then.
Anyone reading this who is still on Mojave, will you stay once big sur comes out or update and why?