I don't think that is their area of focus given their recent moves in this area. Apple has never been really focused on accommodating these groups.If Apple want to get a foothold in large company IT infrastructure & education.
I don't think that is their area of focus given their recent moves in this area. Apple has never been really focused on accommodating these groups.If Apple want to get a foothold in large company IT infrastructure & education.
Leopard got a security update at the time lion launched..so that's 3 years..that the current +1 older but that span is three years not 24 ish months. They're dropping the support for 3ish year old HW now. If they drop to two what would be the cutoff? there is no technical reason to drop the newer C2D..
I don't think that is their area of focus given their recent moves in this area. Apple has never been really focused on accommodating these groups.
IT infrastructure back end stuff I'd agree, I should have been more clear. But I'm not so sure about front end, terminals on desks in public places. And I'd have to argue the point with education given Apple's pushing of iBooks and the whole electronic textbook thing.
For me the problem with updating more often is more in the form of the "hidden" costs because 3rd party software needs a paid update in order to support the new system and runs without bugs.
I don't think there's too much of that for OSX. Sure utilities need to be updated, but most apps won't need any update. Vmware provided an update to Fusion, but they also provided an upgrade to take advantage of Lion's features. You still could use version 3 if you wanted too. To that end, I don't think the issue is that bad today.in the form of the "hidden" costs because 3rd party software needs a paid update
I don't think there's too much of that for OSX. Sure utilities need to be updated, but most apps won't need any update. Vmware provided an update to Fusion, but they also provided an upgrade to take advantage of Lion's features. You still could use version 3 if you wanted too. To that end, I don't think the issue is that bad today.
That's true they can..but in the end it's make it more difficult for them unless the drop support for the older OS's too. People aren't going to trade in hardware every two years..or at least I won't
You buy the Mac for the software it has now. Not what it might or might not receive in the future. It will still work as good as the day you bought it, just not have the latest OS. So if Apple decides to drop support for older Macs more often it's their choice. They haven't conned you or given you any guarantees.
Why would they drop to two ? Next year, hardware that is 2 years old today is going to be 3 years old.
You buy the Mac for the software it has now. Not what it might or might not receive in the future. It will still work as good as the day you bought it, just not have the latest OS. So if Apple decides to drop support for older Macs more often it's their choice. They haven't conned you or given you any guarantees.
I think you've somewhat combined 2 different issues. But it all depends on how one reads what is written.Sorry but this misses a huge point. I have a late 2006 iMac 20" which cost me £999 when new. I have upgraded it to the maximum memory and it currently runs Lion perfectly well. When I pay as much for a Mac as I do I neither expect nor can afford to replace it after only 2 years. I'd accept 3 years as a minimum, but to say that you should buy a machine with no thought to how long it would be able to run current software/OS is wrong in my opinion.
In terms of hardware, I expect my computers to last 3 to 6 years. This depends on type of systme. This is in terms of hardware reliability. If my usage changes, that is a different issue.
Software wise, I expect to be able to get OS updates and upgrades for at least 3 years after buying a system and preferably closer to 5. And that software updates from the various companies would still work even if I couldn't use some new features.
So they drop older Macs from the new OS, they drop the older OS. And the world keeps on turning. Dropping support does not mean stuff stops working.
You buy the Mac for the software it has now. Not what it might or might not receive in the future. It will still work as good as the day you bought it, just not have the latest OS. So if Apple decides to drop support for older Macs more often it's their choice. They haven't conned you or given you any guarantees.
You buy the Mac for the software it has now. Not what it might or might not receive in the future. It will still work as good as the day you bought it, just not have the latest OS. So if Apple decides to drop support for older Macs more often it's their choice. They haven't conned you or given you any guarantees.
I buy it now expecting that security patches for my software will be forthcoming for any newly discovered vulnerabilities. I don't expect that level of support to go on forever, but I do expect it for a reasonable time frame.
Which they do... There's a difference between security patches and a brand new OS with new features.
A Security Update? Yes. 10.6.9? No.So you are saying SL might continue to get security patches in software update? Somehow I don't think we will ever see a 10.6.9 or a 10.6.8.1, even if a major vulnerability is discovered in 10.6.8.
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I think you've somewhat combined 2 different issues. But it all depends on how one reads what is written.
In terms of hardware, I expect my computers to last 3 to 6 years. This depends on type of systme. This is in terms of hardware reliability. If my usage changes, that is a different issue.
Software wise, I expect to be able to get OS updates and upgrades for at least 3 years after buying a system and preferably closer to 5. And that software updates from the various companies would still work even if I couldn't use some new features.
Now since you said you have a 2006 system, that makes it over 5 years old. A decent lifespan for a computer.
I'd just be upset if I'd got less than 3 years so my point was that as long as no machines under 3 years can't run the latest OS I'm happy with the 12 to 18 month updates to OS X.
Yes, but I hear this update drops some Carbon API ? I still use Final Cut Studio 2 for example.
I think it needs to be emphasized though is that Apple is not forcing people to upgrade - Apple doesn't even require Lion to get ML. Companies can wait.
If we are to believe that Apple is sincere in its environmental concerns, why isn't it supporting its products for as long as they are reasonably viable? The answer can only be profit driven, which I do understand. But the principles of being environmentally responsible and planned obsolescence are contradictory and any company trying to play the two against each other should be called out on it..