dorayme <
dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
> In article
> <
MyNameForward-250...@news.eternal-september.org>,
> Ecnerwal <MyName...@ReplaceWithMyVices.Com.invalid> wrote:
>
> > In article <
kk-0FC7D8.12...@167-253-251-66-GOV.emcbc.doe.gov>,
> > kenji <
k...@everyblock.com> wrote:
> >
> > > is there a FAQ for this newsgroup?
> >
> > It appeared on my server (or finally got noticed as a new group by my
> > reader) all of two days ago. Might be a bit soon for a FAQ...
> >
> > Offhand I'd say anything from OS1 to OS10.7 and processors Mot-68K -
> > PPC-G5 for sure, and many an intel is effectively vintage at this point
> > too. When the next thing comes out, the present things become vintage.
> >
> > No need to get all exclusive in the first week...
>
> Surely that is too inclusive?
Ecnerwal's list is certainly too inclusive.
The point of this group is to have a place to talk about older OSes and
Mac models where the details are starting to differ significantly from
current/recent systems, and/or where it is becoming difficult to find
hardware support and compatible software from the original vendors.
PowerPC Macs running Mac OS X certainly qualify. A Mac bought new a year
or two ago which happens to be running 10.7 is not "vintage".
> It would seem more reasonable to make the outer limit something like
> machines that have difficulty going beyond OS9.
As stated in the charter of the group (which D Finnigan has posted in
this thread), on-topic discussion includes Mac OS X versions which are
"no longer supported" by Apple, and for Macs it includes all models
decared vintage or obsolete by Apple.
For those who want to be pedantic about the cut-off:
At present Mac OS X 10.6 and later are off-topic for this group, since
Apple is still selling 10.6 and supplying security updates for it. Mac
OS X 10.5.8 and earlier are definitely on-topic, and 10.6.x will become
on-topic once Apple stops supporting it (probably around the time 10.9
is released).
For hardware, Apple's cutoff for "vintage" is approximately five years
after the model is discontinued, so at present that includes most Intel
Mac models introduced in 2006, and some introduced in 2007, which were
discontinued in April 2008 or earlier. Apple's official list is here:
http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1752
Based on that list, the cutoff isn't exactly five years, since the list
was updated in March 2013 but doesn't include several models that were
discontinued in February 2008.
--
David Empson
dem...@actrix.gen.nz