Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 14th Jun 2007 15:58 UTC, submitted by Jeremy Fox
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Because eventually Apple will stop supporting 10.4. That means no more security patches or bug fixes.
I'm kind of in the same boat as parent. I have a 17" LCD iMac, 800 GHz G4 processor, circa 2002. I'm thinking that it won't see another OS upgrade from Apple, because it really isn't worth it. When Apple drops support for either the G4 processor, or switches to 64-bit only, I will have to evaluate whether it is "safe" to continue to run OS X on that machine, or whether I will shift it over to Linux or one of the *BSD's.
Because eventually Apple will stop supporting 10.4. That means no more security patches or bug fixes.
Apple still releases security patches for 10.3, so your 10.4 will be supported for a couple of years - at least.
I'm kind of in the same boat as parent. I have a 17" LCD iMac, 800 GHz G4 processor, circa 2002. I'm thinking that it won't see another OS upgrade from Apple, because it really isn't worth it. When Apple drops support for either the G4 processor, or switches to 64-bit only, I will have to evaluate whether it is "safe" to continue to run OS X on that machine, or whether I will shift it over to Linux or one of the *BSD's.
Apple would at least have to wait until 10.6 before going 64-bit, and that is probably not relased until late 2009 at the earliest.
That means that your iMac will be 7 or 8 years old at that time.






Member since:
2006-12-15
If it's working fine for you now with 10.4 as a server why would you upgrade to the new OS anyways?? If it ain't broke...