Mid-July looks like the 10.12.6 release date and that's likely the final point release if El Cap is the precedent. Think I'll stick with 10.12.5 for the next month anyway.
At the moment, none but I'll know a little more tomorrow.What kinds of problems are you having?
Realy? How did you made this happen?Got it installed on my MacBook Pro 15 inch late 2008. Very easy.
Full support to Apple File System in Mac OS Sierra 10.12.6?
They are developing the new FS on Sierra... It would make sense to ship the new FS on a mature OS and not with a new OS (10.13).
Yes. But I wouldn't jump to the beta. You should install 10.12.5. Both of my late 2012 Mac mini's (a base i5 and a 2.6GHz i7) are running Sierra (and have been for nearly a year).Should I upgrade this time from El Capitan?
Mac Mini 2012
Wonderful knowledge here.Realy? How did you made this happen?
Sierra for me has being a step down from El Capitan... I miss the ram management, the agile experience, and the classical, everything works, of apple.
Its a heavy thing for my computer, to deal with sierra...
Not to mention a simple thing like connect a mini-plug/audio jack and seeing that the computer is not aware of the action...
[doublepost=1495547949][/doublepost]i can attest to that. my 2008 MBP 17" (MBP 4,1) works effortlessly - thanks to the folks at the forum above, and one dosdude1. if you follow the thread, and the instructions at dosdude1's site, you can run almost any Mac from 2008!Wonderful knowledge here.
https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/macos-10-12-sierra-unsupported-macs-thread.1977128/
I've had my late 2008 MacBook Pro on the Sierra beta since late June of last year. Once one gets the foundation (first time that a Sierra beta is installed in ones Mac) installed, doing build updates is easy.
no, it´s not fixedSupposedly that mini-plug/audio jack thing is fixed in 10.12.5