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kazmac

macrumors G4
Original poster
Mar 24, 2010
10,095
8,630
Any place but here or there....
Hi everyone,

Need help in answering this question as it will determine if I buy another iMac.

I need to continue running macOS Sierra on the new machine.

What is the best and easiest way to accomplish this:

Partition, Dual Boot or VM?

Suggestions and links to apps would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks!
 

Fishrrman

macrumors Penryn
Feb 20, 2009
28,525
12,651
Any new iMac WILL NOT BOOT 10.12 Low Sierra.
Not possible. Can't even do it with another partition.

THE ONLY WAY possible is to run Low Sierra in "a virtual machine".
That means using VMWare Fusion, Parallels, or the free "Virtual Box".

Aside:
Sometimes "the best way" is to keep the older Mac up-and-running for older software...
 
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kazmac

macrumors G4
Original poster
Mar 24, 2010
10,095
8,630
Any place but here or there....
Any new iMac WILL NOT BOOT 10.12 Low Sierra.
Not possible. Can't even do it with another partition.

THE ONLY WAY possible is to run Low Sierra in "a virtual machine".
That means using VMWare Fusion, Parallels, or the free "Virtual Box".

Aside:
Sometimes "the best way" is to keep the older Mac up-and-running for older software...
Thank you,

I've been told I can run a Sierra start up disc on an external SSD.

If I can run Sierra from the external drive, how do I access the Sierra compatible software I use? Do I keep these on the systems internal drive, create a partion on the external SSD? Or something else.

I've never done this before, and VMs are not something I want to deal with.

This older iMac starting to give me issues and if I stay with Apple, running Sierra is a must. I do not have the space for two 27" iMacs.
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,548
7,075
Thank you,

I've been told I can run a Sierra start up disc on an external SSD.

If I can run Sierra from the external drive, how do I access the Sierra compatible software I use? Do I keep these on the systems internal drive, create a partion on the external SSD? Or something else.

I've never done this before, and VMs are not something I want to deal with.

This older iMac starting to give me issues and if I stay with Apple, running Sierra is a must. I do not have the space for two 27" iMacs.
There is no way to run Sierra on a current iMac, except in a virtual machine. Whether you're using an internal or external disk doesn't change that.
 
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