![]() However, I never liked it as much as I do Snow Leopard, and I hadn’t booted up from it for nearly two years until last week. I’ve also had OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion installed on the MacBook’s second hard drive partition for several years now, and it got some use before the MacBook Air replaced the MacBook as my number one Mac. ![]() Up to now I’ve stuck mainly with OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard on the MacBook, a rock-solid stable OS, and the last OS X version that supports Carbon applications ported from Mac Power PC days - including several software tools for which I’ve never found satisfactory OS X native substitutes. The old MacBook is still amply fast for most of my needs, I don’t mind the 1280 x 800 resolution display, and I like the keyboard better than the one in the Air. However, my late-2008 Core 2 Duo aluminum MacBook still gets a lot of use. I was a fan of the Mac as digital hub concept. ![]() My 13-inch MacBook Air is my main anchor Mac these days - my “digital hub” to borrow out-of-date Steve Jobsian terminology. ![]() Should You Upgrade Your Older Mac To El Capitan? – The ‘Book Mystique ![]()
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