For anything important that absolutely cannot be replaced, be sure you send it off to the cloud - Dropbox, iCloud, and OneDrive are great for this - or create a hard copy on a flash drive or external hard drive. Late 2013 or newer Mac Pro, and mid-2010 and mid-2012 models with Metal GPU.īefore we go any further, make sure you back up your files.Here’s a complete list of supported Mac models that can be upgraded to MacOS Mojave: Version 1.1 of this book was a minor update to make a few small corrections and bring the book up to date with the shipping version of Mojave. In Full Disk Access, added information about permission changes required to use Backblaze, Terminal, and SSH.Added a sidebar, The 2012 iMac Boot Camp Problem (and several notes throughout the book directing readers to it), to detail an odd compatibility problem with one specific iMac configuration.Version 1.2 of this book includes a few important details that I learned after the publication of version 1.1: Revised instructions for downgrading to your earlier system if that becomes necessary.What to do if you run the Mojave installer, restart, and find your Mac is still running your old version of macOS.What’s new, added, removed, and rearranged in System Preferences.Safari’s revised approach to extensions, and what to do if your favorite extension won’t load.Huge changes to the way Mail handles plugins, and how to deal with them.Adjustments to the ways macOS can look for and install software updates.New, possibly confusing, and definitely annoying alerts asking you to grant accessibility, automation, and full disk access.Changes to Setup Assistant, what the new screens mean, and how to handle them.
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