Running Catalina on a 27" iMac 2020 (i9, AMD 5700 XT).
Thinking of finally upgrading but given the threads on Catalina I am reading here am I better off waiting for the next one?
Do you have any compelling reasons for upgrading? Are there apps that you need to use that require Monterey?Running Catalina on a 27" iMac 2020 (i9, AMD 5700 XT).
Thinking of finally upgrading but given the threads on Catalina I am reading here am I better off waiting for the next one?
Thanks for the reply!Do you have any compelling reasons for upgrading? Are there apps that you need to use that require Monterey?
My 2017 iMac is still on Mojave and will continue for the remainder of its life. I've "upgraded" the internal 1TB mechanical harddrive to an external 1TB SSD and the performance difference has been amazing. (it is dramatically faster now than when I first bought it)
Apple is pretty aggressive with developers in getting them to require the latest version of MacOS as a prerequisite for their apps, and I'm not able to update MS Office and iWork apps as a result of remaining on Mojave, but the stability and performance benefits of staying at Mojave are enough justification for me to stay put.
Thanks for the reply!Try Big Sur, it's faster than Catalina and more stable than Monterey.
I have the same machine running 10.15.7 (Catalina). I will not be running any new OS for the life of this computer....."it ain't broke so I'm not fixing it"!!! And just got a new security update for Catalina yesterdayRunning Catalina on a 27" iMac 2020 (i9, AMD 5700 XT).
Thinking of finally upgrading but given the threads on Catalina I am reading here am I better off waiting for the next one?
updating to Big Sewer or Monterey will also update the firmware on your SSD, so it’ll be at risk of Monterey’s drive failure problem for evermore, even if you downgrade back to Catalina afterward.Running Catalina on a 27" iMac 2020 (i9, AMD 5700 XT).
Thinking of finally upgrading but given the threads on Catalina I am reading here am I better off waiting for the next one?
updating to Big Sewer or Monterey will also update the firmware on your SSD, so it’ll be at risk of Monterey’s drive failure problem for evermore, even if you downgrade back to Catalina afterward.
Parallels is great for trying out new upgrades. I was reluctant to upgrade from Catalina to Big Sur, so I ran it on Parallels to see what it looked like. I liked it and upgraded. Then I did the same with Monterey - ran it on Parallels for a while. I did't like it and couldn't see much advantage in upgrading, so I've stayed with Big Sur. Parallels is expensive but it's a brilliant way of trying a new OS without having to upgrade and then downgrade. Bear in mind though, that as you will effectively be running two OS's, everything will be a bit slow.All good advice above. The one new one I'll offer is you can try it by creating a bootable external, copying your Catalina install to it, booting into it and then upgrading it to Monterey. Use Monterey on it for a while and if you don't like it, you can always boot "native" back into Catalina.
Or vice versa: back up your full Catalina install to an external, boot into it to be sure you have a full bootable backup, shut down (to physically eject), upgrade the internal drive to Monterey and use it for a while. If all seems well, stick with it. If you don't like it, you can downgrade by duplicating Catalina from the external backup back to the internal drive.
Generally, it is a good-to-great idea to ALWAYS do this each time you want to hop up a generation or more. It gives you a definite and relative easy way back if the "upgrade" doesn't actually seem like one when you do it. And/or even after the update and decision to stick with it, maybe you find something that doesn't run well (or at all) but need to be able to use it again. One bootable backup can let you step back and use whatever it is.
The only catch to this is that during the trial period, be more sensitive to new files you create that you would want to preserve if you want to switch back. Also note that if you open an important file(s) in a newer version of some apps (like Apple's Pages/Keynote/Numbers) and then save them, going back may make them unable to be opened in the older version of the same app. So in a scenario like that, you may need to export new file creations to older formats so you can have access again in Catalina.