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macOS Monterey is the final version of macOS that supports the 2015–2017 MacBook Air, Retina MacBook Pro, 2014 Mac Mini, 2015 iMac and cylindrical Mac Pro, as its successor, macOS Ventura, drops support for those models. It is the last version of macOS that can run on Macs with 4GB of RAM.
On August 23, 2002, [191] Apple followed up with Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar, the first release to use its code name as part of the branding. [192] It brought significant performance improvements, and an updated version of Aqua's visual design.
Although new versions of iTunes have not been released for Mac computers since May 2019, mobile device driver updates for new iOS releases (i.e iOS 13, 14, 15) have been backported to iTunes 12.8 (for OS X 10.11 El Capitan, macOS 10.12 Sierra, 10.13 High Sierra) and 12.9 (for macOS 10.14 Mojave).
The successor to macOS Monterey, it was announced at WWDC 2022 on June 6, 2022, and launched on October 24, 2022. [2] macOS Ventura was succeeded by macOS Sonoma, which was released on September 26, 2023. It is named after the city of Ventura [3] and is the tenth macOS release to bear a name from the company's home state of California.
As a result, all versions of OS X began with the number 10. The first major release of OS X was given the version number 10.0, but the next major release was not 11.0. Instead, it was numbered 10.1, followed by 10.2, 10.3, and so on for each subsequent major release. Thus the 11th major version of OS X was labeled "10.10".
Edit videos recorded with iPhone 13 in Cinematic mode (requires macOS Monterey). XML 1.10 inside a new .fcpxmld bundle format; Requires macOS Big Sur 11.5.1 or later; 10.6.1 November 15, 2021 Stability and reliability improvements; 10.6.2 April 12, 2022 Filtering of background noise in audio using machine learning (requires macOS Monterey 12.3 ...
MacBook Air (M1, 2020) On November 10, 2020, Apple announced an updated MacBook Air with an Apple-designed M1 system-on-a-chip (SoC), launched alongside an updated Mac Mini and 13-inch MacBook Pro as the first Macs with Apple's new line of custom ARM-based Apple silicon processors. [6]
Mac OS X Leopard (version 10.5) is the sixth major release of macOS, Apple's desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. Leopard was released on October 26, 2007 as the successor of Mac OS X Tiger , and is available in two editions: a desktop version suitable for personal computers , and a server version, Mac OS X Server .