Eug
Lifer
- Mar 11, 2000
- 23,994
- 1,617
- 126
16 GB is a big limitation for some people. For many others, it is not. For myself, 8 GB is actually the sweet spot, but on occasion for me in a laptop it can be limiting, and I keep my machines a long time, so I got 16 GB in my MacBook. The way I look at it is I now have 4X as much RAM as I originally needed when I bought my last MacBook Pro. It shipped with 2 GB, and now I have 8 GB in it. For light usage 4 GB is actually OK, but for even light-moderate office usage, 8 GB is a big step up. And 8 GB is the sweet spot in 2018, so 16 GB will be the sweet spot in a few years.
OTOH, I'm not a designer. If I were a web designer, I probably wouldn't buy a new MacBook Pro until it got 32 GB. Hell, even as a non designer I went with 24 GB in my iMac (although even for my dual screen setup I'm probably OK with 16 GB as a non-designer).
BTW, I will wade into the Linux discussion by saying Linux-on-the-desktop is finally here! It's just not in the form people were expecting. The form it is in that is consumer friendly IMO is actually Chrome OS. Using Neverware CloudReady, I have revived one of my long dead MacBooks. So my current repertoire is:
2017 27" iMac18,3 24 GB: High Sierra
2010 27" iMac11,3 12 GB: High Sierra
2017 12" MacBook10,1 16 GB: High Sierra
2009 13" MacBook Pro5,5 8 GB: High Sierra
2008 13" MacBook5,1 8 GB: High Sierra
2008 13" MacBook4,1 4 GB: Chrome OS
The last machine can't run any version of OS X viably past 10.7.5, and I don't want to use any version before 10.10, so that's why I stuck Chrome on it. Yes, Chrome is very limited in what it can do, but it runs great on old hardware, and doesn't come with all the pain that the other Linux distros come with. In fact, CloudReady is officially certified to work on MacBook4,1. The install consists of this: Plug in 16 GB USB drive in WIndows PC. Download CloudReady USB installer creater and let the software do its thing. Then plug the drive into MacBook and boot off it. It will boot off the USB drive and you can even use it like that, but there is a button to push to install it on the MacBook. Start the install process and let it do its thing. Then reboot to a fully functional install of Chrome. Easy peasy. No drivers to install.
I also have a 2006 iMac4,1 that was given to me, but that is 32-bit with a 2 GB max and is pretty much junk now. Not supported by any recent OS X version, and not even CloudReady Chrome OS supports it. So, that one has gone into my Mac museum.
OTOH, I'm not a designer. If I were a web designer, I probably wouldn't buy a new MacBook Pro until it got 32 GB. Hell, even as a non designer I went with 24 GB in my iMac (although even for my dual screen setup I'm probably OK with 16 GB as a non-designer).
BTW, I will wade into the Linux discussion by saying Linux-on-the-desktop is finally here! It's just not in the form people were expecting. The form it is in that is consumer friendly IMO is actually Chrome OS. Using Neverware CloudReady, I have revived one of my long dead MacBooks. So my current repertoire is:
2017 27" iMac18,3 24 GB: High Sierra
2010 27" iMac11,3 12 GB: High Sierra
2017 12" MacBook10,1 16 GB: High Sierra
2009 13" MacBook Pro5,5 8 GB: High Sierra
2008 13" MacBook5,1 8 GB: High Sierra
2008 13" MacBook4,1 4 GB: Chrome OS
The last machine can't run any version of OS X viably past 10.7.5, and I don't want to use any version before 10.10, so that's why I stuck Chrome on it. Yes, Chrome is very limited in what it can do, but it runs great on old hardware, and doesn't come with all the pain that the other Linux distros come with. In fact, CloudReady is officially certified to work on MacBook4,1. The install consists of this: Plug in 16 GB USB drive in WIndows PC. Download CloudReady USB installer creater and let the software do its thing. Then plug the drive into MacBook and boot off it. It will boot off the USB drive and you can even use it like that, but there is a button to push to install it on the MacBook. Start the install process and let it do its thing. Then reboot to a fully functional install of Chrome. Easy peasy. No drivers to install.
I also have a 2006 iMac4,1 that was given to me, but that is 32-bit with a 2 GB max and is pretty much junk now. Not supported by any recent OS X version, and not even CloudReady Chrome OS supports it. So, that one has gone into my Mac museum.
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