> On 4 May 2016, at 10:31 AM, Graham Cox <graham....@bigpond.com> wrote:
> 
>> Downgrading the OS (even on a second partition) isn’t actually that
>> simple of a request. If your computer was released after OS X Mavericks,
>> it definitely cannot support running OS X Mavericks.
> 
> In this case it’s a MId-2010 iMac, should be OK...
> 
>> It’s also possible
>> that a firmware fix or disk format change may have shipped in a newer
>> OS, and older OSes are not qualified against that configuration.
> 
> …subject to that of course.
> 



Some progress, more roadblocks…

I was able to create a bootable installer using the createmediainstaller 
command line.

I was able to see this disk when I rebooted with the option key down, and it 
booted into that disk.

I was initially able to run the installer and choose a target disk, but at that 
point it gave an error that the installer could not be verified and ‘may’ be 
corrupt.

I went to the app store (arrgh!!) to redownload the full installer image (why 
oh why is this not available as a developer download from apple dev? Using the 
app store is an abysmal non-choice to force on developers). I could not 
download 10.9 as the button was greyed out with “downloaded” on it.

So now I’m attempting to download 10.8 and see whether I can upgrade to 10.9 
from there.

If Apple had anything other than contempt for their developers they’d surely 
make this process easier. I can understand why they might not want to make it 
easy for a typical user to downgrade (though why not, actually?), but a 
developer has a legitimate reason to set up an older OS for testing. If Xcode 
had some sort of reliable mechanism for detecting problems when targeting an 
older OS that would not matter so much, but it doesn’t - so many uses of API 
that target later than the minimum build OS go unwarned that there’s no 
substitute for running on those older versions to find the bugs. And usage 
statistics show that users are still running 10.8 and 10.9 in significant 
percentages.

Does anyone have a reliable source for a 10.9 full install download that 
doesn’t involve the app store? At this point I’ll try anything, including a 
Pirate Bay torrent if need be. Apple, shame on you for forcing this situation, 
it’s absoutely pathetic.

—Graham



_______________________________________________

Cocoa-dev mailing list (Cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com)

Please do not post admin requests or moderator comments to the list.
Contact the moderators at cocoa-dev-admins(at)lists.apple.com

Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
https://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/cocoa-dev/archive%40mail-archive.com

This email sent to arch...@mail-archive.com

Reply via email to