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Is the Mac dying?
But rather than use that to continue to power a separate desktop experience, Macs are beginning their transformation to an experience that is familiar to iPhone and iPad users. But with the shift to macOS 11, the Mac as we know it is dead, much as the smartphones that we once knew were dead when the iPhone landed.
What is the future of macOS?
The first and most visible sign of the Mac’s future is that Macs running Apple Silicon (such as the Macbook Air and Mac mini) M can now run almost any app written for iOS. The latest version of macOS, Big Sur, already looks more like iOS, and you can expect the two to continue to converge even more in future versions.
Is Mac Imaging dead?
With the release of macOS High Sierra, Apple has finally confirmed that imaging is dead. Apple doesn’t recommend or support monolithic system imaging for macOS upgrades.
Is Mac Pro dead?
With the Mac Pro and an impressive lineup of iMacs, Apple just doesn’t need the iMac Pro anymore, and neither do consumers. Apple has officially confirmed that, after just three years on the market, the iMac Pro is being discontinued.
Is my MacBook Pro dying?
If your MacBook Pro reports an error during startup or is generally slow, it could be a sign that the computer is about to die. Apple Support suggests trying a safe boot by holding the shift key as soon as you boot your computer.
Can Macs be imaged?
When you have full control over the macOS version installed on the Mac and its firmware and the image matches that version, then you can image.
What does imaging a Mac mean?
macOS imaging involves replacing the operating system on the Macs hard drive, which requires you to boot from another boot disk. So with no option to boot to an external drive or network volume, imaging is off the table.
Is Mac gaming dead?
Unfortunately, the answers are still no — and no. Mac gaming is still dead, and it’s time we opened an investigation as to who killed it. Let’s bring in the suspects one at a time to find out who pulled the trigger, and why.
Does macOS have a future as a gaming platform?
Between the performance differences and release date problems, Apple has given zero reasons for developers or gamers to use MacOS to play games. It might feel like a handy solution now, but it’s killing any sort of future for MacOS as a real gaming platform.
Which force has killed Mac gaming?
The strength of the competition is an obvious choice as the force that not only killed Mac gaming, but prevented it from ever standing a chance. As our Steam statistic shows, Windows has always been the PC platform of choice for gamers.
Does Apple care about gaming on the Mac?
This all provides the more damning evidence that Apple doesn’t, and probably never will, care about gaming on the Mac. There are plenty of reasons why gaming on MacOS is dead, but Apple itself pulled the trigger.