![]() ![]() But these type of resources are excellent for working with much older Macintosh computers, whether it’s an original Bondi Blue iMac, a G4 Cube, a Macintosh SE/30, Performa 6220, iBook, PowerBook 2400, or the whole array of pre-Intel Mac computers. ![]() What about locating much older Mac OS software? Say, Mac OS 8 and Mac OS 9 system software, or System 7.5.2 and System 7.6.1? And what about apps for those much older Mac OS Classic system software releases for older PowerPC, 68040, and 68030 processors? The following links may be helpful for that purpose, though keep in mind all of these are not officially supported by anyone, they are not sanctioned by Apple or any other developer, and most of the links are to what is considered abandonware software – meaning it’s old, no longer updated, or supported. Where to Find & Download Much Older Mac OS Software for Classic Mac OS, PowerPC, 040, etc Try looking there first, there’s a lot available! Just search for apps, system updates, and software packages by name. If you’re looking to extend the life of such a Mac, the official Apple Support Downloads page can be quite useful and provide you with older versions of iTunes, Safari, iLife, and much more. The Apple Support Downloads page is most useful for finding software for more recent older Macs, particularly anything that is running a version of Mac OS X, even if it’s no longer a supported or updated system software release, like for Macs running Mac OS X Tiger 10.4 or Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.5. Of course this only includes Apple software, but if you’re looking for old versions of iMovie, Pages, Keynote, the iLife Suite, older Mac OS X system updates, firmware updates and security updates, older versions of iTunes and QuickTime, and similar Apple apps and software, it’s a great place to start. Where to Find & Download Old Mac OS Softwareįirst, Apple offers many downloads of older software on their official Apple Support Downloads page. This post will aggregate a collection of links and resources for finding and downloading old Mac software, including old Mac system software, old Macintosh applications, and more, for everything from older Intel Macs, to PowerPC Macs, to 68040 and 030 Macs. There’s no search function here of course becasue… well you should really buy a new Mac, not use your old current.Whatever the older Macintosh computer is, to make it useful nowadays you’d likely want to find and download some old Mac software for it. We need to navigate to our name at the bottom left (what used to be the Purchased Tab) and find the app manually, then click the little cloud icon. ![]() Thankfully there is a way to download the latest compatible version from the Mac AppStore, it just doesn’t happen by default. I’ve just tried to download iMovie on Catalina and was told to essentially buy a new Mac or get stuffed. On iOS it’s very refreshing to see a dialogue that says “you can download the latest compatibel version of this app”, but by default the Mac AppStore doesn’t do that. Apple remind us of this when we try to install an app that demands the very latest operating system, which of course doesn’t run on older hardware. That’s the least we can do for them, and the environment. Ideally we’d get a new iPhone every week and throw away our Macs every 12 months. Apple seriously dislike it when we use hardware that hasn’t been purchased in the last 5 minutes.
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