If you read further in the goes on to explain how to install Mojave on some unsupported Apple computer models. How to Download a Full Size MacOS Mojave Installer It explains how you download a patcher tool.and from within the patcher tool.there's an option to download the full installer version of Mojave. To do this.check out the article linked below. So you're sort of stuck at this point.įortunately there's a work-around that allows unsupported Mac's to download the full Mojave installer.so you have it available later in case you ever need it. If you go to the Apple App Store.and try to download Mojave with an Apple computer that is not Mojave compatible.the App Store will not allow you to download Mojave. If your Apple computer is not on this list.then it is not officially compatible with Mojave. * Mac Pro (Late 20 and Mid 2012 models with recommended Metal-capable graphics cards) In this example for Mojave.the following list of Macintosh models are compatible with Mojave: With each release of a new macOS version.sometimes a bunch of Macintosh models are not compatible. Now here's a bit of a wrinkle for some users. If you haven't downloaded the macOS 10.14 Mojave installer already.and you want a copy of the macOS Mojave installer for possible future use.sometime soon would probably be a good time to do this (before macOS 10.15 Catalina is released October 2019). When this happens.if you've never downloaded Mojave will be unavailable to you. When Apple releases a new version of the macOS.the previous/older version is removed from the Apple servers (App Store). We at Mac-Forums always like to remind everyone to download the latest version of the macOS ("Mojave" at this time).if they haven't already.so that even if they aren't going to install Mojave right now.they will have the Mojave installer handy if & when they need it.įor Mac-Forum veterans you know the reason why this should be done.but if you're new to Mac's or the macOS upgrading process (or just aren't sure why this should be done).here's why. Very likely macOS 10.15 (Catalina) will be released sometime October 2019. That OBS and similar software pulls off what it does with H.264 is pretty amazing, but at some point you need to prepare yourself for the need to get a new machineĪgain, not a MacOS user, so hopefully you'll get a better answer than mine.As many of us know.the next version of the macOS is due to be released soon. So hard, that even though AV1 is likely to replace H.264 (H2.65 being a licensing mess so basically skipped) there is no consumer/end-user encoders because it is that demanding (the faster consumer CPUs and GPUs are powerful enough). So I'm certainly not one to push for latest and greatest. With that said, my primary desktop is an even older CPU (by 2 generations) but with HDDs replaced by SSDS, and lots of RAM, but it can handle multiple VMs at same time, and most everything except upper-end photo/video editing tasks just fine. So good luck, but probably time for a new machine. If you are fooling the OS to get it to install, expect to spend time optimizing is to lower default utilization (some driven by the new features). The challenge of a typical Operating System, is that it is designed for a certain resource level. As such, I imagine you are using a pretty simple OBS configuration, optimize as you mentioned for low hardware resource demands. You don't mention exact specs, but I'm guessing that is the 32nm Sandy Bridge 2.2 GHz Intel Core i7 processor (2720QM), right? On laptops, Intel has released 11th generation CPUs (the 2xxxQM indicates a 2nd generation CPU). Having an old CPU, (and without knowing any better), I suspect you are currently using GPU offload, and if you lose that? Your encoding overload is only likely to get (a lot?) worse. That hardware (and Intel CPU) weren't up to the demanding task that is video encoding. However, I tried to stream a non-optimized using a decent Gaming laptop from 5 years ago and failed miserably. I'm not a mac user, so can't comment on OS and OBS performance
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