- Mountain lion trim enabler update#
- Mountain lion trim enabler driver#
- Mountain lion trim enabler upgrade#
- Mountain lion trim enabler mac#
What is for sure is that 10.10.5 and all versions of El Capitan (10.11.x) allow you to enable TRIM for any SSD by running a simple command line on terminal. That has changed since 10.10.4 if I'm not mistaken.
Mountain lion trim enabler driver#
What happened with Yosemite was a new Kext signing driver that would force users to hack the system in order to enable trim for 3rd party SSDs. Apple wants you to use their SSDs regardless of the OS. I've got 16GB, though, so I can take advantage of the new feature.Ībout TRIM support, third party SSDs were not supported on Mavericks either.
Mountain lion trim enabler mac#
It does allocate more RAM to the integrated GPU (in my case a 2012 quad core i7 mac mini), but that's a benefit, because now Logic is snappier than on Yosemite or Mavericks. Regarding resources, I've never noticed any bump in memory usage because of El Cap. Maybe it is down to 10.2.2 instead of the OS, but for sure LPX works very well with El Cap. I cannot make a direct comparison with 10.2.2 because I've upgraded long before that, but Logic was sluggish before when it just came out and I was using Mavericks back then. I'd jump straight at least to 10.10, but believe me: El Capitan is a better OS.ġ) El Cap doesn't run Logic 10.2.2 any better than Mavericks but has the potential for Logic to run worse (incompatible plugins etc).Ģ) Why dedicate precious system resources (RAM, CPU) for El Cap's unneeded "social" features (eg Notifications, Hand Off etc)?ģ) El Cap may not support TRIM function for 3rd party SSDs as well as Mavericks (due to security limitations).Well, I can vouch that it does run Logic better on my system. So, if you are going through the hassle of an OS update, why sticking to Mavericks? Unless you've got a great reason (PT 10 for instance), I fail to see the point. When the final revision of El Capitan reaches us, it will probably be even more stable than 10.11.3, but one thing I can say: Yosemite is not going to get any better than it already is.
Mountain lion trim enabler upgrade#
Of course, I do not run any software that is still incompatible with El Cap, so I am not saying that everyone should upgrade by now.
I know that because I am currently running El Capitan and my system is as good as it's ever been.
Mountain lion trim enabler update#
Why isn't it good enough by now but will be by 2017? Just because software developers will force you to update in order to keep running the latest versions of their plugs?Įl Capitan introduced metal and 10.11.3 is already better than 10.10.5. Well, 10.10.5 has been around for at least a year and that's the final iteration of Yosemite. Going with that reasoning, it seems that in 2017 you might move do Yosemite because then it will be "stable". One could say that you could've upgraded back in 2014 if you wanted to. Well, 10.9.5 has been out for around two years now. I'm sure 10.9.5 will be fine, but mostly myself am in a "if it ain't broke don't fix it" scenario, and some of my friends are in the same boat. small things that contribute to a multi-system work flow mess. (I believe one has an older line of Apogee convertors whose firmware cannot reach compatibility with 10.9.5 etc.). but I personally have 3 different locations I work at, and with the different hardware configurations/software configurations, ML has been the prudent choice in that department for different reasons I can't even recall or list all of right now. Mavericks has definitely come a long way since it's inception, and I haven't heard that many people complaining about it of late. so haven't even bothered to update myself.) (I have not used Logic as much lately, except for tracking certain things. Does the latest version of LogicX even work on Mavericks? Or does it require Yosemite or ElCapitan. (Native Instruments for instance.), and obviously, newer iterations of LogicX. Why not just upgrade to Mavericks?I myself have personally held onto 10.8.5, (and tried to hold onto 10.6.8 as long as possible) for different reasons, but I know I will have to up to Mavericks pretty soon as most devs are pushing that hand.