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Thursday, December 6th, 2018 Author:Apple’s macOS 10.14 Mojave has been available to the world since September, and the Rocket Yard has outlined all. As we’ve reported, the 2010 and 2012 Mac Pro models will support Mojave – as long as they have been upgraded with graphics cards that support Metal.Apple released a that provides a list of graphics cards that are Metal-capable. The document states that “macOS Mojave requires a graphics card that supports Metal, an Apple technology that lets the system and apps efficiently tap into the capabilities of today’s graphics processors (GPUs).”One of the GPUs on the list is an OWC favorite – the. Hello:Just got a 2008 MacPro (3,1) running Mojave and the Graphics Card is a ATI Radeon 5870 HD for Mac.#1 the Mini Display ports do not send a signal to my ASUS monitor with I connect it with a Mini Display to HDMI (60Hz.) cable. I can only get signal with the DVI-I Dual link connected to an HDMI adapter for my monitor but I get no sound eventhough I should because its a dual link cable.#2.
I just think that this graphics card is on its last leg. The playback on youtube vids at 1080 is subpar since I can it doesnt play that smooth when I expand the image to the whole screen. Still not sound just sound coming from the Tower speaker.Question: Should I upgrade get the evga GeForce GTX 680 for Mac edition or will I be worse off. Im highly frustrated with a older mac that I though I would be happy with.
Again, any advice would be much appreciated.Thank you in advance. Hi Duncan, I was able to find a GTX 680 on ebay. Used, and perhaps slightly beat up (one of the video ports may have some damage), but the card I found works fine after I “discovered” a few quirks.1) Be sure to reset the SMC after installing.2) Reinstalled Mojave and installed dosdudes’ patches after installing the card. Do NOT select legacy video.3) Since my card had two DVI ports on it (I think one is DVI-D, the other is DVI-I), I found that I wasn’t able to use a DVI to VGA adapter on my 24″ Acer monitor. Fortunately, that monitor also has a DVI input, so I used a DVI cable instead. The other monitor is DVI only.After doing all of this (do the SMC reset last), both monitors finally came up.
Using an AppleColor Cinema Display (30″) and the Acer 24″ monitor. Boot screens come up correctly, etc.Shawn. My Mac Pro 3,1 (early 2008) with Mojave (using @dosdude1’s Mojave Patcher) runs just great with a GTX 680 card, except for one thing – I can’t get my second display to come up. Yes, I know there’s no Nvidia driver available yet – but I can’t get the second display up on High Sierra either.Have you (or anyone) tested dual monitor configurations with either a GTX 580 or 680 in an older Mac Pro? That would be good info.The GTX 680 I have is a Mac edition, so the boot menu and boot display do appear while starting up.If anyone has a GTX 680 dual display configuration working, I’d like to hear some details.The GTX 680 is on Apple’s list, and System Information does show it to be a Metal-compatible card, which makes the dual display glitch more frustrating. My Mac Pro 5.1 updated from High Sierra to Mojave during the night. (I had left auto-update switched on by mistake) Now, I have lost my second screen, and my graphics card, a Nvidia GTX 980 TI is running an Apple default driver.
It seems no Nvidia driver is available for Mojave, although I am told that one was submitted to Apple for approval soon after Mojave was released. Six months later, this approval is still on hold. A big thumbs down to Apple for treating their customers with such utter contempt. Pity is that the Mac is potentially a very good computer if it wasn’t for Apple’s misguided company policies. I have spent around £500 on the Nvidia card to keep my Mac in top condition, and I wasn’t warned that it is NOT compatible with Mojave before the machine upgraded itself.
It should not be possible to upgrade the operating system unless the hardware is compatible with the upgrade, and Apple needs to address this problem without delay. It would be helpful if update scanned your hardware for compatibility, but sadly. In this case, it didn’t, or at least didn’t find incompatability. As this update happened when I was asleep at night, I was unaware of it until the next day, when I discovered a screen saying ‘welcome to Mojave’, but my second monitor was dead due to the default Apple driver. It may be that the Nvidia GTX 980TI is compatible with Metal 2, but this card is not listed as compatible by Apple and the Nvidia web driver used in High Sierra is not compatible with Mojave. A sorry situation! Nobody knows when the right driver will be released.
You are right that users can’t do anything about it. Some cards have a driver built into the operating system by Apple, but these are usually of moderate performance. I would really like to return to High Sierra, but sadly my backup disk failed! I’ve also updated a MP5,1 with a RX560 (i.e.
Zee tv live online download. Cheap, and no power cables required) from 10.13.6 to 10.14.2This included the latest 140.0.0.0.0 firmware, and afterwards I was able to remove the RX560 and put back the old Radeon 5770 and Mojave still booted up and ran, although at times the screen would go black for a fraction of a second, so I’m not sure how stable it is.The bonus is that I have also been able to install a Samsung EVO 960 NVMe drive as the boot drive (using a PCIe slot with a converter board to hold this M.2 drive). Still need to do some benchmarks to see how much faster it was than the EVO 860 SATA drive I have plugged in below the SuperDrive (i.e. Slow 3G SATA). Unlike the High Sierra upgrade, (and some 10.14 beta installs did the card swap routine), 10.14 upgrade from 10.13.6 apparently doesn’t require a Mac rom card (but metal support yes) – confirmed by several reports of Mac Pro 5.1 owners with only Radeon RX580 (no Mac rom) card installed. Of course no video at startup so requires patience (and w/o video is a downside).See reports atread all reports there (some are more detailed) – one upgraded 2 Mac pros with only RX580 installed. (1 noted even if Mac rom card installed it still had to support metal for FW update to proceed – Mac 7950 of course satisfies both but his Mac OEM GT-120 card didn’t – he swapped GT-120 out and installed RX580 which worked, but again no video until setup screen appears which can take a long time.)I was also leery of the Apple listing of some non-Mac rom GPUs supported for 10.14 upgrade but it seems that is the case. Of course some have problems, even with a modern fully supported Mac, even closed systems listed as supported.
Always happens with a major.0 release. (Apple Mojave forum has threads on 2018 MacBook Pro owner install problems.)As always, keep your working previous boot volume intact – or at least a backup clone. Many will wait for 10.14.x updates before jumping in.Excuse typos, typing on tiny screen/window with autocorrect. Get notified of new posts!Email AddressSubscribe. Recent Posts.Macs last a long time. Don't plunk down your hard earned money on a new Mac when an upgraded Mac can run faster than a new Mac.
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