


- #DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE MAC OS X#
- #DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE INSTALL#
- #DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE UPDATE#
- #DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE UPGRADE#
We’ll have to explicitly deny access to the Software Update pane. This profile by itself is not enough to prevent end users from manually opening the Software Update pane in System Preferences and checking for updates. In macOS Catalina 10.15, it looked something like this: Ignore is no longer an optionįirst, let’s talk about the -ignore option as part of the softwareupdate command, which we’ve used in the past for hiding macOS updates. Depending on your organization, this may be enough. This does absolutely nothing to prevent someone from doing it anyway, but it asserts authority without removing any privileges. Be sure to specify IT’s stance for non-compliance.
#DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE INSTALL#
The easiest method for preventing unwanted installations is to disclose your organization’s policy to end users that states “Do not install major macOS upgrades unless authorized by Information Technology”. That usually means we need to be taking more than just one step. What steps can we take to prevent our end users from installing a new major macOS version? Keep in mind, end users can acquire the installer and run it in multiple ways. Not every administrator is ready to support Monterey, but sometimes our end users get ahead of us and install it themselves.
#DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE UPGRADE#

But they need careful planning and testing before deploying organization wide. Major macOS upgrades are important because every new upgrade brings not only new features but improved security and end user privacy. Mac's at double the footprint compared to 10 years ago are a bigger target today for spyware and ransomware.

However, threats from for-profit malware hidden in apps or tainted downloads quadrupled in 2019 according to a USA Today report. Traditional malware such as viruses and worms are still minimal to non-existent. Today’s macOS is under increased threat from malware and bad actors.Its most recent macOS Monterey 12.0.1 installer weighs in at about 12 GB - nearly triple in size. The OS X Lion 10.7 installer was about 4.72 GB. The size of its Mac operating system installers has grown considerably over those 10 years too.
#DISK INVENTORY X YOSEMITE MAC OS X#
It released Mac OS X Lion (10.7) in 2011 and every year since has released a new major version. Apple has been on a 1-year major release cycle for its Mac operating system for the past 10 years.
