![]() You could also keep your Mojave partition intact and install the new MacOS onto a new partition when it comes out. They’re more recent, have security patches, support 32-bit, and are a lot more stable than Catalina ever will be. I think I'd recommend High Sierra or Mojave for the virtual machine OS. I wouldn’t expect it to be super responsive, but it will definitely work. The short answer is, yes, you can make a Virtual Machine to run a 32- bit compatible version of the operating system. (Also, remember that June is the beta, the public release will be something like September, so you’ve got a while to do all this.) You’ll be able to directly upgrade to MacOS Eureka (or whatever they call it) from Mojave once it’s available. It’s still a mess, and the upgrade would be completely unnecessary.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |