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Pastimes : Computer Learning

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To: Don Green who wrote (103614)7/11/2019 5:21:13 PM
From: Zen Dollar Round  Read Replies (1) of 110603
 
Yes, that should support the latest macOS until at least 2024 or so. My 2011 iMac and 2010 MacBook Pro got stopped out at macOS 10.13 (High Sierra), which came out in late 2017. Apple has provided security updates for 2 years after the release of any macOS, so you can probably count on a similar compatibility timeline.

That said, if you can find a Mac mini with a true SSD and not a Fusion Drive, I'd go with that instead. A Fusion Drive combines an SSD and a traditional spinning hard drive into one volume, but it makes for two possible points of failure instead of one, and it's slower than an SSD by itself. The one in that listing looks like a custom made one the owner put together. He probably did that as a cost savings measure years ago, but SSDs have come down in price substantially and they're much more reliable than HDs.

I recommending buying the smallest amount of storage you can get if it's a Fusion Drive and then replace it with a true SSD later, or just buy it with an SSD to begin with.
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