Chez Apple on liste les machines compatibles selon des dates genre
"mi-2008" etc.
A vrai dire, ça ne me dit pas grand chose et mon Informations système ne
parle pas comme ça.
Exite-t-il une liste avec le type de machine genre "iMac 7,1" ou
MacbookPro 3,1" ?
La recette c'est ici: https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3761 =========================== The following Macs with 10.6.8 or later, 2GB of RAM, and 8 GB of hard space (presumably an additional 15% of free hard disk space will be beneficial as has always arbitrarily been found in the past) will be able to upgrade to Mac OS X 10.8 when it is released in July 2012:
iMac 7,1 and later MacBook 5,1 and later MacBook Pro 3,1 and later MacBook Air 2,1 and later Mac Mini 3,1 and later.
Airdrop will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following model identifier:
MacBook Pro 5,1 and later MacBook Air 3,1 and later MacBook 5,1 and later iMac 9,1 and later Mac Mini 4,1 and later Mac Pro 4,1 and later
Airplay mirroring will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following model identifier:
Mac Mini 5,1 MacBook Air 4,1 MacBook Pro 8,1 iMac 12,1
....Mac Pro...noticeably absent in spite of June 11, 2012's new release. If someone getting a new Mac Pro would care to comment, please feel free to. A similar feature is available to older Macs through third party software and hardware listed on this tip.
Powernap
MacBook Air 3,1 MacBook Pro 10,1 and later.
A very good third party resource for identifying older Macs is on EveryMac.
Tips present for Lion's release are fairly good for Mountain Lion as far as is known as of the date of this tip's posting. People buying new Macs as of June 11, 2012, also qualify for the up to date program. If you should choose to go this path, be sure to backup your data at least twice before installing the up to date program installation, if you want a chance to revert in event some application is Lion compatible and not Mountain Lion compatible. Apple has a history of making Macs only compatible with the operating system available at the time of their refresh date. =========================== Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ... "Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines incompatibles ML ! ...
-- Jean-Pierre
La recette c'est ici:
https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3761
=========================== The following Macs with 10.6.8 or later, 2GB of RAM, and 8 GB of hard
space (presumably an additional 15% of free hard disk space will be
beneficial as has always arbitrarily been found in the past) will be
able to upgrade to Mac OS X 10.8 when it is released in July 2012:
iMac 7,1 and later
MacBook 5,1 and later
MacBook Pro 3,1 and later
MacBook Air 2,1 and later
Mac Mini 3,1 and later.
Airdrop will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following model
identifier:
MacBook Pro 5,1 and later
MacBook Air 3,1 and later
MacBook 5,1 and later
iMac 9,1 and later
Mac Mini 4,1 and later
Mac Pro 4,1 and later
Airplay mirroring will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following
model identifier:
Mac Mini 5,1
MacBook Air 4,1
MacBook Pro 8,1
iMac 12,1
....Mac Pro...noticeably absent in spite of June 11, 2012's new
release. If someone getting a new Mac Pro would care to comment,
please feel free to.
A similar feature is available to older Macs through third party
software and hardware listed on this tip.
Powernap
MacBook Air 3,1
MacBook Pro 10,1 and later.
A very good third party resource for identifying older Macs is on
EveryMac.
Tips present for Lion's release are fairly good for Mountain Lion as far
as is known as of the date of this tip's posting.
People buying new Macs as of June 11, 2012, also qualify for the up to
date program. If you should choose to go this path, be sure to backup
your data at least twice before installing the up to date program
installation, if you want a chance to revert in event some application
is Lion compatible and not Mountain Lion compatible. Apple has a
history of making Macs only compatible with the operating system
available at the time of their refresh date.
=========================== Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ...
"Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after
July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac
OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed
to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for
resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines
incompatibles ML ! ...
La recette c'est ici: https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3761 =========================== The following Macs with 10.6.8 or later, 2GB of RAM, and 8 GB of hard space (presumably an additional 15% of free hard disk space will be beneficial as has always arbitrarily been found in the past) will be able to upgrade to Mac OS X 10.8 when it is released in July 2012:
iMac 7,1 and later MacBook 5,1 and later MacBook Pro 3,1 and later MacBook Air 2,1 and later Mac Mini 3,1 and later.
Airdrop will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following model identifier:
MacBook Pro 5,1 and later MacBook Air 3,1 and later MacBook 5,1 and later iMac 9,1 and later Mac Mini 4,1 and later Mac Pro 4,1 and later
Airplay mirroring will be compatible on 10.8 systems of the following model identifier:
Mac Mini 5,1 MacBook Air 4,1 MacBook Pro 8,1 iMac 12,1
....Mac Pro...noticeably absent in spite of June 11, 2012's new release. If someone getting a new Mac Pro would care to comment, please feel free to. A similar feature is available to older Macs through third party software and hardware listed on this tip.
Powernap
MacBook Air 3,1 MacBook Pro 10,1 and later.
A very good third party resource for identifying older Macs is on EveryMac.
Tips present for Lion's release are fairly good for Mountain Lion as far as is known as of the date of this tip's posting. People buying new Macs as of June 11, 2012, also qualify for the up to date program. If you should choose to go this path, be sure to backup your data at least twice before installing the up to date program installation, if you want a chance to revert in event some application is Lion compatible and not Mountain Lion compatible. Apple has a history of making Macs only compatible with the operating system available at the time of their refresh date. =========================== Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ... "Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines incompatibles ML ! ...
-- Jean-Pierre
Jerome Lambert
Le 30/07/12 21:51, J.P a écrit : (...)
Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ... "Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines incompatibles ML ! ...
Mieux que ça, on peut aussi y installer un Linux, et c'est aussi valable pour des machines PPC, donc bloquées en (Snow) Léopard et incapables de faire tourner Windows.
Le 30/07/12 21:51, J.P a écrit :
(...)
Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ...
"Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after
July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac
OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed
to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for
resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines
incompatibles ML ! ...
Mieux que ça, on peut aussi y installer un Linux, et c'est aussi valable
pour des machines PPC, donc bloquées en (Snow) Léopard et incapables de
faire tourner Windows.
Dans le même article, je trouve ce passage "délicieux" ... "Macs sold with different hardware in the same model name on or after July 25, 2012, may not be able to run Lion, or earlier versions of Mac OS X, though are still able to run Windows. An older Mac may be needed to run software not yet tested with Mountain Lion. See below for resources on telling a Mac's age."
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines incompatibles ML ! ...
Mieux que ça, on peut aussi y installer un Linux, et c'est aussi valable pour des machines PPC, donc bloquées en (Snow) Léopard et incapables de faire tourner Windows.
pehache
Le 30/07/12 21:51, J.P a écrit :
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines incompatibles ML ! ...
Mort de rire !
MS pourrait faire une pub marrante sur ce sujet, genre "Turn your old Mac into a modern machine with Windows" :-)
Le 30/07/12 21:51, J.P a écrit :
Ça rassure, on peut quand même tourner Windows sur les vieilles machines
incompatibles ML ! ...
Mort de rire !
MS pourrait faire une pub marrante sur ce sujet, genre "Turn your old
Mac into a modern machine with Windows" :-)
Oui, je connais, et alors ? qui est compatible avec Mountain ?
Clique sur "My Models" Puis + Puis Change Puis "This Mac"
Tu sauras ainsi quel est précisément le modèle de ton mac et en particulier la date de sortie.
En cliquant ensuite sur le nom du modèle, tu sauras tout sur ce modèle : en particulier Original OS et Maximum OS/ Mais comme dit par ailleurs, pas sûr que la dernière version de MacTracker tienne compte de Montain Lion.
-- JiPaul. / /--/--// Jean-Paul Blanc |/| L | quelquepart en (somewhere in) /|| = ||| FRANCE
J.P <jpp@gmail.com> wrote:
In article <1kntxoy.h965asd0lj7gN%g4fleurot@free.fr>,
g4fleurot@free.fr (Fleuger) wrote:
Oui, je connais, et alors ? qui est compatible avec Mountain ?
Clique sur "My Models"
Puis +
Puis Change
Puis "This Mac"
Tu sauras ainsi quel est précisément le modèle de ton mac et en
particulier la date de sortie.
En cliquant ensuite sur le nom du modèle, tu sauras tout sur ce modèle :
en particulier Original OS et Maximum OS/ Mais comme dit par ailleurs,
pas sûr que la dernière version de MacTracker tienne compte de Montain
Lion.
--
JiPaul.
/ /--/--//\ Jean-Paul Blanc
|/| L |\ quelquepart en (somewhere in)
/|| = |||\ FRANCE
Oui, je connais, et alors ? qui est compatible avec Mountain ?
Clique sur "My Models" Puis + Puis Change Puis "This Mac"
Tu sauras ainsi quel est précisément le modèle de ton mac et en particulier la date de sortie.
En cliquant ensuite sur le nom du modèle, tu sauras tout sur ce modèle : en particulier Original OS et Maximum OS/ Mais comme dit par ailleurs, pas sûr que la dernière version de MacTracker tienne compte de Montain Lion.
-- JiPaul. / /--/--// Jean-Paul Blanc |/| L | quelquepart en (somewhere in) /|| = ||| FRANCE