This seems very promising since we usually have to wait some time for Avid to approve a new operating system. It is also possible that these issues were unique to my experience. This, of course, was easily fixed by changing the settings back to what they were pre-Yosemite. The only thing that I’ve noticed is some of the playback engine and hardware settings went awry. All of my plug-ins seem to be working as they’re intended. Hey, isn’t that what backups are for? Unlike some posters that I’ve seen on the web forums, I have had no problems with Mavericks (Editors note:lucky guy) and Pro Tools.Īnyway, I am happy to report that my initial test run with OS X 10.10 Yosemite was a success. I was the guy who jumped right into Mavericks without any regards as to the fact that Pro Tools would function properly or not. Of course no copies are available to the public yet so we don’t even have to tell you not to try this at home, but if they were the we would tell you not to try this at home. So when several years/several versions goes by, every version will always be in your cart.Community member Steven Thompson took his life in his hands and installed the next version of Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite on his Mac to see how Pro Tools would perform. So from now on ANY mac update release I always go to the apple store on my mac and start the download and after literally 3 seconds I stop and cancel it. So the only was to take it physically into an Apple store and have them hook it up to their server and install it. The reason I had to take my tank (cheesegrater) to the apple store to upgrade to Yosemite 10.10.5 is because I was on 10.8.5 and had never installed or even started to install Yosemite and there was no way I could get it unless if I bought some questionable disc off eBay or something. I was told that Sierra works best and far more stable on 2018.1 and to avoid High Sierra.Īny input would be greatly appreciated on how to proceed and what pitfalls to avoid. ![]() And having to either audio suite, but if there's a ton of plug-ins then having to bounce, then create a new track, then re-import, then re-align, then deactivate the track, then take a break from all the stress lol.įrom what I saw at NAMM and talking to one of the Avid heads there, he got me sold on upgrading after 3+ years. And there's always that one vortex of time in the timeline that its either that one audio or plug in that just gets stuck. I am mixing 5.1 with a plethora of plugs and hate playing Tetris with my plugs all the time. The main reason I am even considering the upgrade and paying the 1K price tag of Avid's reinstatement plan is the annoying -9173 error. Then either wipe clean the current SSD and install Sierra 10.12 or just upgrade existing 10.10.5 to Sierra?īut here's the big question. Wipe out and re-format the previous WD Black caviar 1TB drive and then clone my current drive to that as a back up. My question is and please correct or add to this if you may. I have a 2012 5,1 2.44ghz 12-core cheese grater. I'm now looking to get it, but it won't work on 10.10.5.Īnd from personal experience upgrading always has some issue or make the mac run slower. I kept the original drive as a perfect back up.įast forward to NAMM 2018 and after seeing what PT 2018.1 does. But some plugs & other audio software like Compressor required 10.10 min. I hate upgrading anything when PT is running fine. As I am sure this will help a slew of others in the same boat.Ībout a year ago I bought a new 1TB SSD drive and left it blank and took it to apple to install a fresh 10.10.5 ( was running on OS 10.8.5 for years) on PT 11.3.2. on macbook pro and 2012 cheesegrater macpro Yes, been running ot for quite awhile now.
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