Your explanation was what I had in mind when using the term ‘reasonable’. I
also have a MacBook stuck at 10.6, but I certainly wouldn’t expect the dev team
to keep supporting a 10+ year old OS. (2.6.x can run on it anyway) Thanks for
the info.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Aug 27, 2019 w35d239, at 4:0
For what value of "reasonable"? Someone who's still running Mac OS X 10.5
thinks it unconscionable that the latest GnuCash doesn't run on it. A user
posted on the user list last week that he's upgrading to a "new" Mac running
10.11 from one running 10.10. On the one hand Apple pushes really hard
Is the goal to support what you reasonably can, or to limit support to the OS
vendor’s lifecycle?
If the latter, El Capitan is already n-3 and out of support. This fall,
Catalina will be released and leave High Sierra (10.13) as the oldest Apple
supported release.
MS has 6-month builds (in Mar
> On Aug 27, 2019, at 10:19 AM, Geert Janssens
> wrote:
>
> Op dinsdag 27 augustus 2019 19:00:59 CEST schreef John Ralls:
>>
>> Win7 goes out of support at the end of the year, meaning only really serious
>> security bugs will be fixed (as happened recently with XP). You really
>> should upg