The 24" iMac of 2008. |
Typically a large slowdown indicates that the hard drive is starting to fail, but the coincidence of it happening simultaneously with the upgrade left us uncertain. Still, at ten years old, it was beyond time to replace the original hard drive, so we decided to replace the old spinning-disk hard drive with an SSD (Solid State Device) -- no moving parts to fail. Plus that would also help the speed issue ... maybe.
After two months of procrastination, waiting for a slack time in use of the computer, I took the iMac to The Computer Store on a Monday afternoon. It received a fresh install of El Capitan, a 500GB SSD drive transplant (a non-trivial operation on a machine built before SSDs were around), and our old apps were all copied over. In many cases our app versions were frozen: they were so old that the usual upgrade paths weren't available any more, but the new apps in the Apple App Store wanted a later version of OS X than El Capitan. "Pages," the word-processing part of iWork '08, was a prime example of this. No upgrade path, and the program in the App Store wanted OS X 10.13 or higher! All the old programs were copied to the SSD for us.
We got a call late Wednesday afternoon that it was ready. Apprehensive but hopeful, I picked it up Thursday and we turned it on. Wonderfully improved; Joan took some timings:
The right-hand column is the speed-up factor. |
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