This one covers all the hardware that will be capable to run whatever-OS26
This one has a survey. The comments are worth reading too.
This one covers all the hardware that will be capable to run whatever-OS26
This one has a survey. The comments are worth reading too.
So far it looks like my M2 Mini, 25" iMac and our iPhone 15s are ready to move on up… There will be some adjusting required, I’m sure…
Curious to see if/when our '23 Rav4 CarPlay will be updated, by me or the next service appointment in September, not seeing Toyota mentioned in the articles I have found, so far…
Odd that my iPad Pro 11" M2 isn’t in the supported list:
I’d assume that that’s a mistake on the table.
I notice that my 2020 iPhone SE, my 2022 M1 MBP, and my 2020 M1 iPad Pro are all supported, but support for my 2019 27" Retina 5K Intel iMac is finally going. And I just upgraded the SSD less than a year ago.
And still no larger screen Apple Silicon iMac in sight.
My current choices for dealing with my iMac:
– Don’t upgrade yet. By far the cheapest choice, and it will depend also in part on how long I can put up with the interface differences between my M1 MBP running current Macos and my iMac running old Macos.
– Just go with a small-screen iMac, but upgrade the SSD to 2 TB. This is the next cheapest choice. I’ve concluded that 2 TB is my personal minimum for boot SSD, meaning I’ll have to suck up Apple’s prices. And, can I really endure the smaller monitor?
– M4 Pro Mac mini, 2 TB SSD. Then I’ll have to add a good monitor – splurge with Apple, or go with a Dell Ultrasharp.
– M4 Max Mac Studio, 2 TB SSD. And a monitor. While I prefer going with the most capable CPU I can afford, for once, I’m not sure the Pro vs Mac distinction is worth the extra cost for me.
For now, it seems the 1st and 3rd options are most likely.
-awlabrador
I’m leaning toward an oversight at TidBits.
The Apple site says nothing about the chip. It just says “iPad Pro 11 inch (1st generation and later)”