To those being worried to wear out internal HDD/SSD (has crypto key):
It's possible for a Mac to boot from external HDD and SSD via USB and Thunderbolt (PCIe).
And there are external enclosures that match the look of the Mac Mini, too.
So you can mirror copy your existing macOS installation to an external drive.
Edit:
KCompRoom2000 wrote on 2024-11-21, 07:33:
Unless Apple goes back to making the ram replaceable in a future Mac Mini/Studio revision, I will not be supporting their Apple Silicon platform. It's bad enough I got ripped off by the M1 Mac Mini not being upgradeable once I found out the model I ordered didn't have enough RAM for video editing, so I resorted to selling it to buy the last Intel Mac Mini model (with replaceable RAM).
I do understand your frustration. 😟
On other hand, ARM seems like a possible migration platform right now. Well, until RISC V catchs up.
The M processors do a lot of things right, I think.
For example, the shared memory concept. It's not new, but the Macs do it differently.
You're using basically using fast graphics card RAM for both CPU and GPU, which both can access simultanously.
The topology inside the Mac is a lot like an efficient network, too.
This reduces bottlenecks.
Anyhow, I don’t mean to sound like an Apple fanboy, because I'm not.
I don’t even like the company very much. I do merely make an exception for Mac and Mac OS.
- And QuickTime 2 on my Windows 3.1x PCs! 😁
Speaking of Windows, I did boycott Windows 10 all the years and do have a copy of Windows 11 (ARM) running via Parallels Desktop 20 right now.
I must say it works like a charm. It's an temporary alternative to those like me, who have lost faith in x86 and Microsoft, but need to run a few Windows applications from time to time.
Because, this virtual Windows 11 is essentially running in a cage and I don’t have to get a new x86 PC anymore that's being a closed platform now anyway (no BIOS/CSM, forced TPM/certificates for booting).
Being in a cage.. I think it's not much different on either side now, except that Macs don’t cause so much headache all the time. Well, at least when they work. 😉
There's no adware or upgrading pressure as there's on modern Windows, I mean.
I'm still a tiny bit traumatized by the pop-ups on Windows 7 from many years ago that tried to trick all of us into upgrading to Windows 10.
And then there's intel which tries to introduce x86S, the castr*ted version of x86-64.
It will break all backwards compatibility, except for i386 user mode code. Or Win32 applications, in short.
So the backwards compatibility of x86S for legacy applications is about good enough to allow Windows x64 to run 32-Bit applications such as IrfanView, Winamp, WinRAR etc. via Windows on Windows (WoW).
And Win64 applications, too, of course, which don’t rely on the old x86-32 registers.
But at this point, Windows on ARM can do almost as good if not better.
It does rely on emulation or dynamic recompilation, but doesn't require a broken x86 silicon.
It can run various binaries, also. Win32 (ARM+x86) and Win64 (ARM+x64).
Edit: Sorry for being a bit off-topic, it just came to mind.
Because, I was stuck on a Raspberry Pi 3/4 as a temporarily solution for years because after Windows 7 went EOL, none of the platforms seemed like a good successor. I was stranded, so to say.
The Raspberry Pi 4 was cheap and also re-usable for other uses (say mt32pi, other projects) at very least!
It was when the M processors came out that I took the opportunity to try out something new.
So far, it's an "okay" solution. But the fact that macOS 15 wants signed applications all the time is annoying. I'll keep staying with 14.50 for a while.
PS: There's a new emulator/virtualizer called UTM.
It can run many old and new operating systems on a Mac and is based on Qemu.
https://mac.getutm.app/
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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