Sizzleman

Q: I have a 24-inch Mid 2007 iMac. Should I upgrade to Yosemite?

I have a 24-inch Mid 2007 iMac. Should I upgrade to Yosemite?  I was advised by genius bar that it would slow down my iMac.

iWeb '08, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.2)

Posted on Aug 27, 2014 7:54 AM

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Q: I have a 24-inch Mid 2007 iMac. Should I upgrade to Yosemite?

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  • by Carolyn Samit,

    Carolyn Samit Carolyn Samit Aug 27, 2014 7:58 AM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 10 (122,682 points)
    Apple Music
    Aug 27, 2014 7:58 AM in response to Sizzleman

    Upgrading to a newer OS X does not necessarily slow your Mac down unless you are having problems prior to an upgrade.

     

    Yosemite is not available until sometime this fall.

  • by 213JB,

    213JB 213JB Aug 27, 2014 8:14 AM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 2 (380 points)
    Aug 27, 2014 8:14 AM in response to Sizzleman

    Your model Mac barely makes the requirements for Mavericks.

    OS X Mavericks: System Requirements

  • by Csound1,

    Csound1 Csound1 Aug 27, 2014 8:42 AM in response to 213JB
    Level 9 (50,871 points)
    Desktops
    Aug 27, 2014 8:42 AM in response to 213JB

    213JB wrote:

     

    Your model Mac barely makes the requirements for Mavericks.

    OS X Mavericks: System Requirements

    As the system requirements for Yosemite are identical to those for Mavericks it seems that his Mac does meet the requirements.

  • by Kurt Lang,

    Kurt Lang Kurt Lang Aug 27, 2014 8:48 AM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 8 (37,939 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 27, 2014 8:48 AM in response to Sizzleman

    Upgrading is also not required, unless you have some new app which will only run under the latest and greatest OS. And it would be highly unlikely any titles you have now would suddenly fall under that category. Unless there's some new feature which will only be available in Yosemite, there's no need to upgrade. Especially if the setup you have now works, and does everything you need.

  • by Eric Root,

    Eric Root Eric Root Aug 27, 2014 11:56 AM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 9 (72,571 points)
    iTunes
    Aug 27, 2014 11:56 AM in response to Sizzleman

    If you only have 2 GB of RAM, you might want to install more.

     

    The 2 places I’ve seen recommended most to buy reliable RAM are below. I have purchased RAM several times from Other World Computing and have always been very satisfied with the product and service. They have on-line instructions on how to replace the RAM. OWC has also tested RAM above what Apple states is the maximum. I now have 6GB installed on a machine supposedly limited to 4 GB.

     

    Crucial

     

    Other World Computing

  • by K Shaffer,

    K Shaffer K Shaffer Aug 27, 2014 12:22 PM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 6 (14,441 points)
    Desktops
    Aug 27, 2014 12:22 PM in response to Sizzleman

    According to sources such as http://mactracker.ca download database specs for

    the iMac (24-inch Mid 2007) your computer can use more RAM than it has now.

     

    Maximum Memory:    6.0 GB (Actual) 4.0 GB (Apple)

    Memory Slots:    2 - 200-pin PC2-5300 (667MHz) DDR2 SO-DIMM

     

    •iMac: How to remove or install memory

     

    And so it should work better even if you stay with Mountain Lion OS X 10.8.5.

    The hardware upgrade will help the Mac OS + applications, in basic functions.

     

    [This computer is already considered 'vintage' by Apple...]

     

    Depending on the amount of use the computer has seen so far, it may also be

    a candidate for a replacement hard disk drive; perhaps a larger capacity, too.

     

    If you consider an upgrade, also consider a complete backup and a bootable

    clone of the current (if updated to 10.8.5 with its applications updated) OS X

    on an externally enclosed hard disk drive with its own power supply. You can

    see a few of these that do not run on Mac port power, & standalone, at OWC.

    {The company known as OWC is macsales.com, a fair example of mac-centric

    supplier of quality products for Mac community, awhile. Or so people tell me.}

     

    Clone utilities such as superduper, carboncopy cloner, or disk utility can work.

    Test a cloned OS X copy for boot-ability and other function before moving on.

     

    Could be you'd be better off with this computer on Mt Lion than a later OS X.

    And a newer later computer should also have hardware specs and some up-

    ward expandability for use with the expected new & future changes to OS X.

     

    Hopefully you can get some fair use and more years from your iMac 24".

    And that means hope for the best, and plan for the worst. Backup, backup...

     

    Good luck & happy computing!

  • by mkanteck,

    mkanteck mkanteck Oct 26, 2014 10:02 AM in response to Sizzleman
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Oct 26, 2014 10:02 AM in response to Sizzleman

    I did upgrade and then reverted back...... It was too slow and sluggish. Audio didn't work and the beachball kept coming up...

     

    iMAC 2007 4GB RAM, 24 inch model