The 2006 Core 2 Duo MacBook officially only supports 2GB, but you can actually put in 4GB and get 3GB usable RAM.Nope it is a 2.0ghz Core2Duo it came with 1gb of ram and it will only take 2gb of ram maximum and it was manufactured in 2006.
Apple is very good about supporting older machines. As I say, as of today you can still put the very latest OS on machines up to seven years old. You can still be unlucky, and buy just before a significant processor bump (such as the jump from 32- to 64-bit), and it may be that's what you managed (I'd need to check dates to be sure).Apple stopped supporting the machine I have quite a few years ago now when it wasn't that old
The 2006 Core 2 Duo MacBook officially only supports 2GB, but you can actually put in 4GB and get 3GB usable RAM.
It depends what version of the kernel your machine runs. If it has to use a 32bit kernel then you're stuck with somewhere between 3.25 & 3.75GB ram. If it runs a 64bit kernel you get all 4GB. Older OSs were 32bit by default & due to Apple not providing certain features in the kernel they were stuck without the software to fully access the full compliment 4GB ram.Well this is what I have found:
Apple officially supports 2 GB of RAM, but third-parties have been "unofficially" able to upgrade it to 3 GB or 4 GB of RAM (it can hold 4 GB but cannot fully utilize the memory beyond 3 GB due to the same limitation that impacts the "Late 2006" MacBook Pro line).
and I am not going to go and get a load of ram for a 8 year old computer to find out but I tend to believe this to probably be the case, either way it wouldn't have been much help back when I bought it considering 1gb of ram was nearly £60 from crutial unless you bought it from apple then it was over £100.
The latest load of hardware updates have introduced a nasty no-upgrade trend in apple laptops. Also they're not built nearly as well as they used to be. At work the number of laptop returns, & it is returns now because everything is soldered onto the motherboard, in the last 18-24 months of machines under 2 years old has really increased noticeably.
+1 (though I got mine in 2008). I would still like to build another PC though.I used to build my own PCs until I got a Macbook in 2011. Never again will I build a PC or entertain Windows.
What he said.Ive had macs since the blue transparent iMac, several powerbooks and i now have ipads and a 27" imac. For personal use i wouldn't entertain any other. I have to use windows for work, the nice thing for me about using a different platform at home is the separation from work/home if that makes sense? low maintenance too, having said that a correctly administered and looked after windows computer shouldn't give any grief but who want to keep on top of computer maintenance?
And if it'll run Windows 8, it'll run Windows 10.I remember Microsoft saying if it will run Windows 7 it'll run Windows 8. I've found that to be more or less true.
Rule of thumb is go up one OS revision at a a time, do that and I've never had any problems with about 35 machines doing this. However the two machines jumping from 10.6 to 10.9 where a total nightmares & I ended up doing clean installs to it working properly again.I did and regretted it. OS X 10.6.8 to Yosemite has resulted in a plethora of library fix warnings requiring my user password to implement, a slowed down computer, email no longer working and refusing to communicated with POP and SMTP, slower to boot up, Microsoft Office being kicked into touch as it no longer works, being caught between demands for Java V6 and Java V7 and trying to resolve whether or not they can operate side by side.
I've not really found any improved functionality with Yosemite.
Having said that when I do buy another computer it will be a Mac. The OS update has been the only problem that I have had with the Mac in four years of ownership.