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Accessing an OS your current Mac cannot itself run…. The App Store will not let you download an OS that is either too old or too new for the Mac you are downloading to - which is an annoying hurdle. For High Sierra & later There are several ways to deal with this - all freeware, but with different approaches.
Apple has a page How to get old versions of macOS which includes a link to download OS X El Capitan 10.11. The next question is going to be how to make a bootable installer. Do you have another Mac available? If so, DiskMaker X would be the place that I would start.
Limit your search to the "OS X" category and you'll see downloads for all versions of OS X from version 10.3 to 10.6. I'm guessing that 10.7 and up are missing because starting with 10.7, the OS was only available via the App store. Unfortunately, that means that you'll only be able to get the installer from the App store, and the only way I ...
I’m using an app that I have download from the App Store on my Mac OS. After updating it to it’s latest version recently, it doesn’t seem to have worked very well on my MacBook. An earlier version worked perfectly well and I want to download and install that particular version back. But I can’t seem to download an older version on App ...
Message To download and restore OS X, your computer's eligibility will be verified with Apple when installing older versions of Mac OS X for me every time meant only one: The certificate which is being used in the OS has expired. This will be correct for every OS later in the future (Sierra, High Sierra, etc).
Mac OS X 10.7 "Lion" & 10.8 "Mountain Lion" This is the real deal! Blueboxd maintains Chromium Legacy , an up-to-date copy of Chromium (the open source variant of Google Chrome) modified to be compatible with Lion and Mountain Lion.
OK, here's my situation : I am a developer needing to debug under different OS X versions I currently own 2 macs : a MacBook Pro and an iMac the iMac has Snow Leopard (10.6) on it - it came pre-
Alternative route If you have access to another Mac running a version of MacOS currently supported by the App Store (As of Jan 2020, that would be 10.14 (Mojave) or 10.15), you could associate your AppleID with an account on that Mac, download (and thus register) the Applications you want to install on your older Mac there, and then use the ...
(iii) to install, use and run up to two (2) additional copies or instances of the Apple Software within virtual operating system environments on each Mac Computer you own or control that is already running the Apple Software, for purposes of: (a) software development; (b) testing during software development; (c) using OS X Server; or (d ...
FYI, if you previously had the old version installed and haven't run brew cleanup (which deletes old versions), you can switch with something like brew switch node 5.7.0. All installed versions of node can be listed by running brew info node or ls -l /usr/local/Cellar/node/