pipermalibu
Registered
I recently had to purchase a new 17" Macbook Pro Core 2 Duo to replace a Macbook Pro Core Duo that had a cracked screen in an emergency. I had previously upgraded the older Core Duo with a 200GB 7200 RPM drive. To get up and running quickly, I just did a hard drive swap. (it turns out the hd were the exact same model too) - everything runs fine...
When I got the replacement screen for the older MBP, I booted it up (it would boot, but barely functioned). So I put in the NEW DVD that came with the newer MBP instead of my older 10.5 DVD. It said it could not install on this computer... So reinstalled 10.5 off my older DVD. Everything works...
This brings about my question... obviously there is some difference in the OS between the Core Duo and Core 2 Duo - should I do a reinstall on the new MBP too? Am I cheating myself out of some type of performance? Or does the kernel know what to do, and it is 'Universal'?
When I got the replacement screen for the older MBP, I booted it up (it would boot, but barely functioned). So I put in the NEW DVD that came with the newer MBP instead of my older 10.5 DVD. It said it could not install on this computer... So reinstalled 10.5 off my older DVD. Everything works...
This brings about my question... obviously there is some difference in the OS between the Core Duo and Core 2 Duo - should I do a reinstall on the new MBP too? Am I cheating myself out of some type of performance? Or does the kernel know what to do, and it is 'Universal'?