See Benton's comment below if you want a nicely detailed history of those early releases.Īnother special "thank you!" goes to Mads Fog Albrechtslund, who provided updated PR links for all the major releases-most of mine had broken over the years. Ziebell (for providing some size values on very-old minor updates), and to Benton Quest (for providing size info on all the major releases up through Snow Leopard). Feel free to contact me if you can help replace any of the "?" entries.Ī special "thank you!" goes to Mr. The "?" entry for Size on a given release indicates I was unable to find the size.The largest (non-combo, non-main OS release) update was 10.15.1 at 5.3GB. The smallest update was 10.3.1, at only 1.5MB.(Tecnically, it's actually the 192 day interval between the Mac OS X Public Beta and version 10.0, but I'm counting from the official 10.0 release.) The longest time period between any two minor releases is 165 days, which was how long we waited for the 10.4.9 update.The shortest period at all is two days, the gap between macOS 13.2.1 and macOS 11.7.4. The shortest time period between any two releases in the same OS generation is six days, which is how quickly the 10.15.5 Supplemental Update 1 came out after the 10.15.5 release. So on average, we've seen some sort of update every 38.6 days.
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