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yjchua95
Feb 27, 2012, 06:12 AM
Hello.
How do I install Lion on a Mac that only has 1GB RAM? It's a school computer and I was asked to install Lion on it, but they point blank won't upgrade the RAM. How do I bypass the 2GB RAM requirement?
Thanks.



KnightWRX
Feb 27, 2012, 06:13 AM
Tell whoever asked you to install Lion that the computer doesn't meet the specified requirements. Anything else is asking for trouble down the line.

r.j.s
Feb 27, 2012, 06:14 AM
You don't want to do that. It will be very slow.

Tell them it is not possible. There has to be at least 2GB RAM.

yjchua95
Feb 27, 2012, 06:24 AM
Ok thanks ;) I'll just tell them that it just isn't possible if they don't want to open up the iMac

r.j.s
Feb 27, 2012, 06:35 AM
Are they worried about voiding the warranty? If so, the RAM is user-upgradeable.

yjchua95
Feb 27, 2012, 06:41 AM
Are they worried about voiding the warranty? If so, the RAM is user-upgradeable.

The warranty has expired already, and they don't want to upgrade the RAM for certain reasons. Yes, I know it'll be slow, but is there any way to bypass it? On my MBP, I originally assigned 2GB (VMware) to a virtual Lion, and then cut it to 1.5GB. So far, it hasn't really slowed down ;)
I'm sure they're aware that it'll be slower, but well, they just want Lion without having to upgrade the RAM

r.j.s
Feb 27, 2012, 06:42 AM
No, there really isn't a way.

KnightWRX
Feb 27, 2012, 06:52 AM
I'm sure they're aware that it'll be slower, but well, they just want Lion without having to upgrade the RAM

Why do "they" want it so bad it's not worth 40$ ?

Anyway, 1st hit on Google :

http://www.insanelymac.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=262437

r.j.s
Feb 27, 2012, 06:54 AM
Why do "they" want it so bad it's not worth 40$ ?


Agreed. Workarounds exist, but they are going to regret it.

yjchua95
Feb 27, 2012, 07:14 AM
Agreed. Workarounds exist, but they are going to regret it.

They will regret it i'm sure, and serves the school management and bureaucracy right for being so unwilling to shell out for an extra GB of RAM :)

maflynn
Feb 27, 2012, 07:17 AM
I use Lion on 8GB of ram, which I specifically upgraded just so that I would not incur any sort of performance issues. Running it on a 1GB of ram - ouch, it will be painful to be sure.

As they say, just because you do it [with a work around], doesn't mean you should ;)

Bear
Feb 27, 2012, 07:21 AM
Hello.
How do I install Lion on a Mac that only has 1GB RAM? It's a school computer and I was asked to install Lion on it, but they point blank won't upgrade the RAM. How do I bypass the 2GB RAM requirement?
Thanks.I agree that telling them the system doesn't meet the requirements is the best way to go.

Also, since it is clearly an older iMac, if it isn't supported under Mountain Lion, I'd let them know that as well.

throAU
Feb 27, 2012, 07:27 AM
As they said, you don't.

"Lion doesn't support this machine"


Even if you could bypass it, you wouldn't want to. 2gb is pretty much the minimum you'd want to try lion with, its slow enough with less than 4gb as it is.


And point blank refusing to upgrade the RAM is probably a sensible idea for them. If the machine is that old it is off-lease, out of warranty, and about time to be replaced. If you look after a lot of machines, keeping stuff that old around is just asking for hardware failure soon.

yjchua95
Mar 1, 2012, 05:24 AM
As they said, you don't.

"Lion doesn't support this machine"


Even if you could bypass it, you wouldn't want to. 2gb is pretty much the minimum you'd want to try lion with, its slow enough with less than 4gb as it is.


And point blank refusing to upgrade the RAM is probably a sensible idea for them. If the machine is that old it is off-lease, out of warranty, and about time to be replaced. If you look after a lot of machines, keeping stuff that old around is just asking for hardware failure soon.

It's a '08 iMac, which I think it does support Lion, albeit after a RAM upgrade. Anyway, no point talking sense into a bunch of academic bureaucrats who are so tight with a buck ;)

h4lp m3
May 14, 2013, 01:48 AM
It's a '08 iMac, which I think it does support Lion, albeit after a RAM upgrade. Anyway, no point talking sense into a bunch of academic bureaucrats who are so tight with a buck ;)


As an experiment... I took an old black MacBook (2.1ghz core 2) and upgraded the RAM to 2GB.
After installing Lion and all the updates, I then downgraded the RAM back to 1GB and now I've been running it for about an hour... I don't see what the big deal is... It runs slow just like it did on Snow Leopard. :cool: