Thanks, Jim, for the Data Memory System tip.
Al Poulin
> On Dec 2, 2016, at 4:06 PM, Google wrote:
>
>
>> On Dec 2, 2016, at 12:45 PM, Al Poulin wrote:
>> I see two ways to have 16GB of memory on a new, 27-inch iMac, with 1TB
>> Serial ATA Drive @ 7200 rpm.
>> Other than the difference in co
On Dec 2, 2016, at 1:25 PM, Al Poulin
mailto:alfred.pou...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hello,
A couple questions.
I have an iMac (24-inch, Early 2009) which runs Snow Leopard OS X 10.6.8 on one
partition and El Capitan OS X 10. 11.6 on another partition.
I have a shrink-wrapped Mac OS X Server V1
> On Dec 2, 2016, at 12:45 PM, Al Poulin wrote:
> I see two ways to have 16GB of memory on a new, 27-inch iMac, with 1TB Serial
> ATA Drive @ 7200 rpm.
> Other than the difference in cost, which memory configuration is better?
> a) Buy Apple’s standard configuration 8GB (two 4GB) and then add tw
How difficult is it to add said memory? The older iMacs (ca. 2005, 2006)
were very easy to upgrade in almost any category (RAM, HD, etc).
On 2 December 2016 at 15:45, Al Poulin wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> I see two ways to have 16GB of memory on a new, 27-inch iMac, with 1TB
> Serial ATA Drive @ 7200
Hello,
I see two ways to have 16GB of memory on a new, 27-inch iMac, with 1TB
Serial ATA Drive @ 7200 rpm.
Other than the difference in cost, which memory configuration is better?
a) Buy Apple’s standard configuration 8GB (two 4GB) and then add two more
4GB in the remaining slots.
b) Buy
Hello,
A couple questions.
I have an iMac (24-inch, Early 2009) which runs Snow Leopard OS X 10.6.8 on
one partition and El Capitan OS X 10. 11.6 on another partition.
I have a shrink-wrapped Mac OS X Server V10.6.3 Rev 1.
Can I install the Snow Leopard server on the El Capitan partitio