The 'flood' was nature, (14 inch rain) but my two-1000 gal. Subpump could not 
keep up. Was 4 feet deep out side of my home at 11:30 pm cst when fireman 
carryed me out, had one to 2 feet thru 'ground' floor. 50 mile circle radius 
flood.

Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android 
 
  On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 17:01, Julia Brinckloe<jmbri...@gmail.com> wrote:   
Wow, big thanks for the extensive response. And appreciate reminder of the 
security issue--which Mac users didn't have prior to the whole intel 
partnership. At least it seemed Mac code was better written. 
FYI my main system is the Mac mini and a Dell PC sharing a monitor, mouse and 
tablet on a switch. They share peripherals via a home network. I like your 
solution--to clone Mavericks on an external drive and upgrade the main drive. 
I'd partition my main drive but at 500GB it's not so big these days. (My first 
computer was an IBM Headstart PC with no hard drive at all--everything stored 
on floppies. And my first Mac had a 20 MB HD and 8 or 16 MB RAM. Technology 
flies..)
I'm wondering if I have to install Yosemite before upgrading to El Capitan. But 
I'm sure Apple has an FAQ on that. 
I confess I'm most reluctant to part with Mavericks because I live ten minutes 
away from the real thing, and seeing it on my desktop, I'm home.
Thanks again. You know your stuff.<='o }



On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 10:47 AM, Google <jesco...@gmail.com> wrote:


> On Sep 26, 2016, at 9:51 AM, Julia Brinckloe <jmbri...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I have a query regarding Mac system upgrades.
>
> I am currently running Mavericks (OSX 10.9.5) on my Mac Mini, 2.3 GHz Intel 
> Core i5, 16 GB RAM.
>
> I've been reluctant to upgrade to Yosemite or El Capitan because this works 
> well for me (and my peripherals). I know upgrades use more memory. Not sure 
> about support for older peripherals.
>
> Is there any real advantage to upgrading--enough to override "if it ain't 
> broke, don't fix it"..?
>
> Thanks in advance for opinion on this. jb

The amount of installed RAM in your Mac Mini is more than enough to handle even 
macOS 10.12 Sierra, so that’s not a problem. And the size of the basic macOS 
software has been shrinking, so that’s not a concern either. What is a concern, 
though, is the support Apple provides with security updates. Beginning with OS 
X 10.7 Lion, Apple has settled into a regular 3-year cycle. Mavericks was 
introduced on October 22, 2013 and thus is nearing the end of the cycle during 
which Apple actively provides security and other updates, such as to Safari.

Since macOS updates to new versions have been free since Mavericks, it makes 
sense to take advantage of them, if only to keep the operating system up to 
date with today’s online environment, where security is an ever-growing issue. 
For me, that’s reason enough to upgrade to the newest version of macOS/OS X 
that my Macs will run. Yes, there are niggling concerns about the need to 
update third-party software, and I just went through about a half dozen updates 
of things such as Carbon Copy Cloner, DiskWarrior and SpamSieve to make them 
work with Sierra, but a bunch of other software providers including Apple had 
already automatically provided updates to their software.

As for peripherals, yes, that’s a concern. Printer manufacturers, to pick an 
apt example, are notorious for pushing out new hardware and ignoring operating 
system-compatible driver updates for older hardware. Often, trying to make an 
older printer work with the latest version of an operating system is impossible 
for that reason. But there’s a workaround for all that. What I do — every year 
since Apple’s now on an annual OS update cycle — is to keep a cloned copy of 
the most recent 2 or 3 versions of OS X on an external drive. Right now, for 
example, I’ve got one 4 TB drive loaded with a clone of Sierra which is backed 
up daily by Carbon Copy Cloner. Then I’ve got a clone of El Capitan and 
Yosemite on that same drive. The Sierra clone space was used for the Mavericks 
backup clone. When macOS 10.13 comes out next fall, the Yosemite clone will 
disappear. This setup allows me to reboot into an older OS X version should the 
need arise, whether it’s because of hardware or software. I rarely have to use 
these older clones, but it’s nice to know they’re there if I need them. The 
Yosemite clone helped me get past the drastic changes to Disk Utility that El 
Capitan introduced.

On the other hand, an easier solution for you may be to partition the internal 
drive so that you’ve got a Mavericks partition and a current-macOS partition. 
Another solution would be to use software like Parallels which permits users to 
run multiple versions of Mac operating systems side by side without rebooting. 
Or you can stick with what you’ve got until it no longer can do the job and 
then get all-new everything, which is a strategy a lot of people I know use. 
Since I think you’re running a mid-2011 Mac Mini, you’ve probably got a few 
more years to go on that platform.

Good luck.

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