On Sun, Dec 18, 2022 at 3:29 AM Thiago Macieira <thiago.macie...@intel.com> wrote: > > On Saturday, 17 December 2022 05:40:48 -03 Tuukka Turunen via Interest wrote: > > at least between versions 10.15 and 11 there does not seem to be a > > major drop in what HW is supported. > > There is a drop, but we're talking about CPUs launched in 2013 and older. > Specifically, 11.0 drops support for Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge Macbooks and > Mac Minis. Whether you count that as "major" or not, I'll leave it up to you. > > What matters to me is that those were the last AVX-incapable CPUs, which allow > us to assume that AVX2 is present.
Dear Thiago and Tuukka, It seems that you are working under an assumption that if the HW allows it, users will upgrade their Mac OS. This is not how it works in reality, sorry. Many, if not most, Mac users are upgrading only once. They upgrade, see how their content-editing, multimedia, etc. software is ruined by their first upgrade; next, they work with software vendors to restore their applications back to some working state, get the lesson and ... do not touch it forever. Try to listen to the people that work with the real, live customers like Nuno and me. Please, add one more old Mac OS release to the supported list to be more realistic, so it will be not a thin three releases but at least four. Please, consider that. Thanks in advance! P.S. Oh, these customers are not security aware? Agree, this is bad. Sorry, but please get it that these people, not computer fricks and sometimes technically challenged, need to run smoothly with their daily jobs rather than work hard on bringing their apps to the working stage after each upgrade. _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest