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A Mac Mini was my first choice, but when I realized I would need the Mac Mini M4 Pro at $1800, it brought me close to the price of a Studio M4 Max from the Refurb Store with a Veterans discount. So, I went with the Studio.

Still, I am toying with getting a Mac Mini for a work bench were I do some testing and developing. There is nothing wrong with the Mac Mini; it is an excellent machine. I am glad the OP has gotten good use out of his.
 
Moved house, currently my desk is in the dining/living room so rather than using my loud PC which would annoy the other half, grabbed a base M4 Mac Mini on Black Friday and have to say pretty impressed with it.

Also getting use to MacOS found fixes for most things and some software niggles, but still got some outstanding, but performance wise more than happy, WoW seems to run fine at 4K I do not really raid so seems fine for me, Steam games and Crossover games work all ok as well.

My plan was when get the garage converted over to my home office was to get a Studio but not sure if I need to get one.

Kimbie
The mini is quite capable. It’s getting to the point where the only people who need a studio know that they need a studio because it’s for extremely demanding workloads. The mini can accomplish quite a bit
 
My friend with the majority of positives about the M4 mini, it is inevitable there will be at least one nay sayer.
The law of averages almost demands it.
I have an M4 mini and I love it. But I don’t game on my Mac, because they suck for it. You’re kidding yourself if you think the Mac’s ever going to be viable for serious gaming
 
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I have an M4 mini and I love it. But I don’t game on my Mac, because they suck for it. You’re kidding yourself if you think the Mac’s ever going to be viable for serious gaming
My friend I have no illusions about playing games on an Intel P/C let alone on my Mini.
If you look back on one of my posts, you will see I have never professed to being a Gamer or the aspirations to become one.

Even at the beginning of my hobby of buying components and then stuffing it all into a P/C case, the closest I have come to playing a game is Windows Solitaire and then Tetris. Those two alone completed my fantasised notion of being a Gamer.
I later progress to installing macOS Snow Leopard onto the same system using the Chameleon boot-loader.

Here on late after installing Tahoe using Open-core, although succeeded, many obstacles has to be overcome with every Update so I decided to call it quits and got the Mini. Now that I'm in my twilight years, my uses (which hasn't changed much) are web browsing, sending the occasional email and editing my Drone (my passion) video footage.

I am contented to leave Gaming to the youngsters and applaud their prowess. I'm very contented with what this little box offers that satisfies my needs which also takes up a minuscule fraction of the space used by the ATX PC Desktop.
Sorry for the long winded synopsis of my computing experience but that's it in a nut shell.
Cheers.
 
I absolutely adore my MacMini M4, especially the Factor that allowed me to upgrade the internal storage with the Aftermarket Storage 2TB for just an additional $250. This resulted in a Base Mini for $500 plus the $250, making it a 16GB/2TB Mini for just $750.

I’ve even gone as far as programming a local LLM Translator that can be used with dedicated audio output from apps or even mic input to translate between and from 90 languages.

It just runs smoothly and efficiently.

The Mini is stuck under the Desktop, so it can blow Air free to the ground, and I’ve never heard the fan. :cool:

@Kimbie

By the way, I think you use the new Outlook version. I still use the old Outlook Legacy version, and there’s a chance we can keep it that way for now on MacOS. It also has calendar sharing, which doesn’t work in the new version.

__________________

How to Switch to Legacy Outlook on macOS via Terminal​

If the option to switch to Classic/Legacy Outlook is no longer available in the Outlook settings, you can force the change using Terminal commands.

Switch to Legacy Outlook​

  1. Open Terminal (Applications → Utilities → Terminal)
  2. Run this command:
    defaults write com.microsoft.Outlook EnableNewOutlook -bool false

  3. Quit Outlook completely (Cmd+Q, not just closing the window)
  4. Restart Outlook - it should now open in Legacy mode

Switch Back to New Outlook​

defaults write com.microsoft.Outlook EnableNewOutlook -bool true

Then quit and restart Outlook.

Reset to Default Setting​

defaults delete com.microsoft.Outlook EnableNewOutlook

Troubleshooting​

If the command doesn't work, you can check current Outlook settings with:

defaults read com.microsoft.Outlook | grep -i outlook

Important Note: Microsoft has been phasing out Classic Outlook in newer versions. If this command doesn't work, it may mean:

  • Your Outlook version no longer supports the Legacy interface
  • You may need to downgrade to an earlier Office/Outlook version
  • Microsoft has completely removed Legacy Outlook support from your version

Verify Current Version​

To check which Outlook version you're running:

  • Open Outlook → Outlook menu → About Outlook
 
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My friend I have no illusions about playing games on an Intel P/C let alone on my Mini.
If you look back on one of my posts, you will see I have never professed to being a Gamer or the aspirations to become one.

Even at the beginning of my hobby of buying components and then stuffing it all into a P/C case, the closest I have come to playing a game is Windows Solitaire and then Tetris. Those two alone completed my fantasised notion of being a Gamer.
I later progress to installing macOS Snow Leopard onto the same system using the Chameleon boot-loader.

Here on late after installing Tahoe using Open-core, although succeeded, many obstacles has to be overcome with every Update so I decided to call it quits and got the Mini. Now that I'm in my twilight years, my uses (which hasn't changed much) are web browsing, sending the occasional email and editing my Drone (my passion) video footage.

I am contented to leave Gaming to the youngsters and applaud their prowess. I'm very contented with what this little box offers that satisfies my needs which also takes up a minuscule fraction of the space used by the ATX PC Desktop.
Sorry for the long winded synopsis of my computing experience but that's it in a nut shell.
Cheers.
Fair enough, I’m not saying it’s not possible, it’s just if you are playing proper games (solitaire doesn’t count haha) the Mac is not what you want to be using
 
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Verify Current Version​

To check which Outlook version you're running:
  • Open Outlook → Outlook menu → About Outlook
And whilst you are there, you check just click 'Legacy Outlook'. This is the latest version from Mac App Store.

Screenshot 2026-01-28 at 20.33.22.jpeg
 
And whilst you are there, you check just click 'Legacy Outlook'. This is the latest version from Mac App Store.
Hey, so I was a bit annoyed by the constant reminders to update the version, so I decided to take matters into my own hands and use the Terminal Command.

I have no idea what the Menu from the New Version is actually looking like :)

By the way, I’m curious, why aren’t you using the Legacy Version if you’re missing out on certain functions?
 
@Kimbie
If you come from PC and missing window previews in the dock and in Alt+Tab etc. Check Dockdoor for Mac. It's free and Open Source.
As an alternative (i.e., window previews but not per app):
I have it set to a Hot Corner.

macOS has keyboard shortcuts too but is a bit of a ballache teaching yourself when moving from windows. I remember the pain but it’s worth the gain!
and some of those key-combinations require a bit of finger gymnastics imo
True, but keyboard shortcuts are typically a great efficiency, and seemingly much more second nature on a Mac.
The keyboard shortcuts on mac are better since the Command key is closer to C and V. Command and space is also invaluable for search. Command is just so natural. Feels awkward now whenever I go back to Windows and use Control.
Could be the/a reason. I think, overall, Mac OS/macOS has focused on the usage. From what I recall, it’s a pastime for anyone introducing someone to a Mac to teach keyboard shortcuts from the very beginning. As I said, it seems second nature for most Mac users.


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