A more "primitive" or manual USB patcher developed by Barry K. Nathan, which served as the foundation for many early Big Sur installations on older hardware. Compatibility and Performance
Among those staring at that message was a developer known only as . He owned a perfectly functional MacBook Pro from 2012. It had a Core i7 processor, 16GB of RAM, and an SSD. It was faster than some entry-level Macs Apple was still selling. Yet, according to Appleβs firmware list, the machine was βvintage.β Macos Big Sur Patcher
Ben refused to accept the digital graveyard. A more "primitive" or manual USB patcher developed