MacOS Sierra

The 13th major release of OSX macOS, Sierra, has been officially out for almost 4 months. As usual, I waited it out this long before attempting to install it in my ‘mature’ (but nonetheless very productive) late 2009 Unibody MacBook White — just to make sure that apple get their shit together before I dive into this major OS update.

TL;DR
MacOS Sierra is running smoothly –it actually feels a little bit faster, but that could be just me– on my machine, but I suppose it’s because it has been decked out with and SSD and 8GB of RAM. Although my Mac is included in apple’s official list of supported Macs, generally I wouldn’t recommend upgrading to MacOS Sierra on a stock late 2009 Unibody Macbook or older models – there’s far too many complaints from people who tried it on their vanilla macs.

So what’s new?
I wouldn’t go through the whole list, you can google that yourself. Sorry. But what really got me to upgrade, aside from not missing out on the latest security updates, is getting Siri on my Mac. Yup, Siri works on this 7+ year old machine and you can change her(or his, but why?) voice.

siri on MacOS

Issues and whatnots
As always, a major OS upgrade comes with bugs and compatibility issues. Thankfully I waited 4 months before upgrading, so the updates for the bug fixes are already available. During the installation, a couple of notable things that came up were driver issues with my Wacom drawing table and enabling Siri.

MacOS-Sierra---Issues

MacOS-Sierra---Siri

Another anticipated issue upon startup was the Java Runtime error. And like in my previous OS upgrade, opening Adobe Creative Suite apps will give you a Java Error message asking you to downgrade to Java SE 6 runtime.

Java SE6

Like before, I didn’t want to downgrade to a legacy Java version so I used this workaround:

  1. Download and upgrade your Java to the latest build
  2. Restart on recovery mode (Command+R on boot)
  3. On recovery mode, launch Terminal, type ‘csrutil disable; reboot’
  4. On normal mode, launch terminal and type the following:
    1. ‘sudo mkdir -p /System/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/1.6.0.jdk’
    2. ‘sudo mkdir -p /System/Library/Java/Support/Deploy.bundle’
  5. Restart on recovery mode (Command+R on boot)
  6. On recovery mode, launch Terminal, type ‘csrutil enable; reboot’

Java SE8

Sierra INstalled

And so far, that fixes and completes my macOS Sierra experience on the late 2009 Unibody Macbook White. I would love to hear other users’ experiences with macOS Sierra, do share yours in the comments section below.

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