Imac Intel Core2 Duo Icons 1.1 Free Download For Mac

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Update So with the macOS 10.12.4 beta 1 and beta 2 the iSight camera doesn't work on our 2007 iMacs. It shows up in hardware but won't turn on.

I am working on how to fix this.Also, If you want Night Shift to work on our iMacs you can use clover boot loader with a smbios to trick the iMac into thinking it is a late 2013. You will have to apply a fix for USB because changing it to a late 2013 iMac smbios breaks all but one USB and also bluetooth (which is considered to be on an internal USB port) the patch that I have fixes all this. If anyone is interested let me know and ill make a right up.I’m thinking of making some videos to post on youtube at my channel Nandor690. I do AppleTV stuff right now but I think I'm going to also get into making videos on hackintoshes and unsupported real Macs as well.

Update What I am working on now.As you know, macOS 10.12.4 comes with the new feature Night Shift. But it doesn't work on our iMacs because they don't support Metal. Late 2012 iMac is the first year for that.I used Clover boot loader to make a smbios for a 2012 iMac and now my iMac thinks its a 2012 and night shift works!A few draw backs are. 2 of the 3 USB ports don’t work. Bluetooth doesn’t work. iSight camera doesn’t work.I am working on fixes for these now. (Remember, those things don't work because I made my iMac think it is a 2012 instead of a 2007.

NOT because I updated to 10.12.4. It is safe to update.I’ll report back when I have fixes ready. I plan on setting up a couple threads in different forums and will link them here for you guys. I'm very impressed with your efforts here.Not to be a downer but you do have one problem you can't overcome here which is the systems memory limit of 6 GB. While you got the system too run it will be limited to simple tasks as it just won't have the needed memory to run many of todays Apps and it will be dog slow.You might be able to off set the slowness of the system constantly using virtual RAM (disk) by upgrading the HD to a SSD. But you'll then hit the next bump here on the size of the SSD.

Mac released from 2006 to 2008 with Core 2 Duo CPU and Lion installed - PPC, Core Duo, and Core Solo chips are not supported -MacBook late 2006, 2007, and 2008 -MacBook Air, mid 2007. The vision behind iMac has never wavered: Transform the desktop experience by fitting powerful, easy-to-use technology into an elegant, all-in-one design. The new iMac takes that idea to the next level — giving you even more amazing tools to do just about anything. IMac is packed with the latest processors, faster memory and phenomenal graphics.

You'll need to get at least a 512 GB unit if not larger and the SATA port speed of this series is SATA II (3.0 Gb/s).As to it being worth it? I would say most people wouldn't have the skills to pull it off and at the end it might be more cost effective to buy even a used system which has better bones. I do realize in some countries this system still has value (like India) as its just to costly to get a replacement system for most.by. I have done it last week, and it's worth it. I already installed a 256 Gb SSD 3 years ago, and I have 6 Gb of ram. Here we are talking about people, like me, that was already using this iMac every day for work.

Upgrading to T9300 and new Airport card made it compatible with Sierra and faster. Every function of Sierra works (apart from Night Shift, that I don't care) and 6 Gb and a fast SSD are enough to make the system feel snappy in almost every operation (also, remember that the minimum official ram requirement for Sierra is 2 Gb, and 6 is theee times that).My job is translation work, not graphic design or video editing (even if I can use Photos and iMovie without any problem).The money spent on this was 50 dollars, so FOR ME it was worth it!by. While I do agree with Dan and do appreciate his input, I do also agree that the people that actually find this thread are going to mostly be people like kautame that are looking to do an upgrade like this to begin with.I have 6 GB ram and a 256 ssd that I installed almost 4 years ago.

With the cpu and airport combo card this platform still feels pretty good while running on macOS Sierra.While I use my i5 3750k hackintosh to do most of my work, the 2007 iMac still handles transcoding from Plex, and video editing with final cut pro well.Mostly, this is just a hobby for me but I have found a small niche of people that what to do this. So I decided to get as much info out there that I couldby. Hi, Mark, this is already and old thread.

Nandor had problems because he made his Mac think that it was a 2012 model, just to activate Night Shift. But that's not necessary anymore. After you make the hardware upgrade as Nandor explains in the following answer, you install Sierra on the 2007 iMac using macOS Sierra Patch Tool, from here:Everything should work EXCEPT for the brightness control, that on this Mac is broken from 10.12.4 on. To enable Night Shift you can just use an app called NightEnabler that you can find in this thread from MacRumors:If you need more details you can just read that thread.by. This was a good processor.

I first installed it while using OS X Lion. Other than running a little hot it seemed to run OS X great until I got to OS X Yosemite. There I started to get beachballs and very jittery movements in animations. It wasn't so bad that I couldn't deal with it but I just assumed my time with the 2007 iMac was coming to an end.

With the lack of support for macOS it was really starting to seem real. I just assumed that with an almost 10 year old iMac there wouldn't be any processors that would support sse4.1 and work in my iMac. Pretty much, there are 3 CPU's to choose from;. T9300. T9500.

X9000Those are the only 3 that I found that support sse4.1 AND have an 800 FSB. That is because the 7,1 iMac only supports 800 FSB. Anything higher than that won't boot. I bought an E8135 for $6.00 on Ebay just to try out because it was so cheap.

And the iMac wouldn't completely boot.I decided to go with the T9300. It was $18 USD is pretty much what it came down to. All three of these processors have the same exact specs except for base frequency and also the X9000 TDP is 44W and not 35W like the other 2. Now while the T9300 Benchmarks less than the X7900, the T9300 runs macOS much smoother than the X7900 ran OS X Yosemite and El Capitan. I don't know a whole lot about specs for processors but I think its because the T9300 has the 6MB L2 Cache, it runs at a significantly lower temp due to lower TDP and voltage and because it has over 1 million more transistors than the X7900.One thing to note tho.

The T9300 is recognized as only being a 400MHz base frequency processor. I assumed that with the Geekbench being the numbers that it was, I was pretty sure that it was actually running at a higher frequency than that. But I wanted to make sure and after long hours of searching for a app that would allow me to see frequency I figured out that there must not be a way to do that natively in macOS. So I decided to add the FakeSMC.kext sensor kext that you would use in a hackintosh and installed them into /Library/Extensions and then rebuilt the cache with kext utility. I thought it was a long shot but it actually worked.

I can confirm that at idle the T9300 is at 1.19GHz and at almost full throttle it is at 2.39 GHz. That is just a little lower than the 2.50GHz but if you look at istat menus the cpu is not quite maxed out yet.Next I did research on adding 802.11ac and bluetooth 4.0 support. I found a post from Clemens on here and he listed every thing we need to upgrade our iMacs. I will list it here again but I am giving him all the credit. So if you check this link out please give him the credit. How to edit CoreBrightness:.

First you will need to navigate to /System/Library/PrivateFrameworks. Once you are there, look for the framework named CoreBrightness.framework. Right click on CoreBrightness.framework and 'Open in New Tab'. Next, navigate to /Versions/A.

Now that we are here we need to make a copy of your CoreBrightness just in case something goes wrong. So right click on CoreBrightness and choose 'Copy 'CoreBrightness' and then paste it to the Desktop or somewhere that you will be able to find it later incase you need it. Now right click on coreBrightness again and this time choose 'Open With' and choose 'Other.' The cursor will be on a 09 and that is the start of the string that has all the different Mac models that support Night Shift.The Mac models and corresponding hex number is as followed.0900 0000 0D00 0000 0600 0000 0500 0000 0600 0000 0800 0000. MacBookPro 09. iMac 0D.

Macmini 06. MacBookAir 05.

MacPro 06. MacBook 08These number correspond to the Mac identifier number i.e. And these identifiers correspond to the year of the Mac.

So this is telling the software what the earliest Mac is that it wants to see that will give you the Night Shift optionSo as an example lets look at the iMac in the list. Its position is 0D. If you look up D as a hex number and convert it to a decimal you will see that it corresponds to 13. So the earliest identifier for iMac that the software wants to see is 13,x. Now, if you look up 'iMac 13,1' you will see that that identifier corresponds to the late 2012 iMac. Meaning that the only iMacs that officially support Night Shift are from late 2012 to the most recent. Ok, lets do one more.

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Look at MacBook Pro. The hex number is 09. This DOES NOT mean that Night Shift is supported on 2009 MacBook Pros.

Rather, the 09 hex corresponds to the identifier 9,x. If you look up MacBook Pro 9,1 you will notice that corresponds to the model year mid 2012. See how it works now?NOTE: Notice that the Mac mini and the Mac Pro have the same number. If you are editing for either of these platforms make sure you edit the right location. Also note that I have listed each model in order that it appears so it is easier for you to follow.You need to know the identifier of your Mac for this next part. If you don't know it just look it up in 'About This Mac' 'System Report'.

Now that you have the identifier you need to go to this and type the first number of your identifier and convert it. Now that you have the hex number just add a zero in front of it and we are ready to change it in CoreBrightness.As an example, the identifier of my iMac is 7,1. So I type in 7 in the converter and I get 7 as the hex number.

Now I just add a zero to it and I have 07 now. Now I look at the list of Macs and see that the hex number I need to edit is 0D. So I highlight 0D in the file like this. Now just make sure you save it before you close the application. To make sure you changed it you can reopen it and navigate back to the location and see that the change you made is still there.NOTE: You need to make sure you highlight it like I did or you won't actually change it, you will instead just be adding your hex number to the string and that will cause it to not work.

To check and make sure you changed it right just go back and match up the string of numbers that I provided above and it should be exactly the same EXCEPT for the hex number you changed for your Mac.The last thing we need to do is re-sign the patched framework binary with:sudo codesign -f -s - /S./L./PrivateFrameworks/CoreBrightness.framework/Versions/Current/CoreBrightnessin Terminal. Since we are using 'sudo' you will have to type in your password after you enter this.Once you do this all you need to do now is restart your Mac and you will have the Night Shift option in Display in System Preferences.IF when you click on Display, System Preferences crashes, that means that you didn't edit it right OR you didn't type the command into terminal properly. This is why you must have a backup of the CoreBrightness file like I told you to make at the beginning of this write up.As always, If you have any questions just leave them here and I am always more that happy to help.

I will eventually be making a video on how to do this to go along with my hackintosh videos on youtube. Update Ok, I did it too! I replaced the CPU (from X7900 to T9300), the Wireless card (wi-fi + bluetooth) and even the PRAM battery. Everything went fine (apart from a little problem I had installing Sierra, as described at the end of this post).My iMac (6Gb of ram, 256GB SSD) is now snappier than before, EVEN now that processes like photoanalysisd are still using a lot of the CPU power (but I don't have so many photos to analyse, so it should stop in a couple of days).Thank you very much, nandor690.

Only a couple of months ago I was thinking that my iMac was too old and that I had to buy a new one, but thanks to you, now I have a faster machine, up to date, and that can also do all the pretty stuff like Airdrop, Continuity, Handoff. I'm happy!:-DP.S.I had a problem when I installed Sierra (with the macOS Sierra Patch Tool) on the internal disk, because at the point when I had to reboot once again from the installer drive to use the 'macOS Post install' (to add the specific patch for this machine), the system wasn't able to reboot from the USB stick and just showed the prohibitory symbol (the circle with a slash that means that it's trying to start from the wrong version of macOS). Pressing C at startup didn't do anything, but pressing X worked: I was able to chose the USB stick as the startup volume and after that I applied the patch and now everything is fine. Now I have a new problem. I decided to make the last possible upgrade of my iMac, the graphic card, and bought on Ebay an ATI Radeon HD 2600 256 MB for iMac 7,1, since I had an ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT 128 MB.

But after I installed it, according to System Profiler it's the exact same card: ATI Radeon HD 2400 XT 128 MB. Could this be a System Profiler error (like the 400 MHz one), or they just sent me the wrong card? The seller (100% good reviews on Ebay) just wrote me that for him ther are no mistakes and that the card he sent me is the HD 2600. Is there a way to check this apart from System Profiler? Or it's just the wrong card?by. Hey there - I have been following this thread.

I have a 24” Mid 2007 iMac Intel Duo.2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo. 6 Gigs of RAM and a SSD SATA Drive 500 GB I had a shop put in about 2 years ago.One of the two internal fans burned out a long time ago.

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I am not sure which one.I’m running OS X El Capitan 10.11.6 put can’t go any further than that.One of the two internal fans burned out a long time ago. I am not sure which one.I want put in a new CPU in, the Wifi and every thing mentioned to get another couple 2-3 years out of it if I can - but computer repair shops aren’t interested in helping to upgrade it especially in this way. I would, while I was at it replace the fan as it sounds like a new CPU will run hotter anyway.I am by no means a tech - is this something that I can handle doing? I’ve only ever just replaced the RAM.I have never opened the computer up. I am a complete beginner.

Give me an honest opinion - is this an advanced exercise?The Novice.