If you are running macOS Ventura 13.4 or later: We recommend that you do not run Sonoma on your primary Mac ideally, you run it in a separate volume.We also strongly recommend that you back up your Mac before you upgrade to the Sonoma beta.We strongly advise that if you aren’t a developer you don’t download the developer beta.Now the Public Beta becomes available it will also show up on your Mac in macOS Ventura 13.4, as long as you have signed up for the Public Beta program on Apple’s beta webpage, signed the NDA, and enrolled your Mac. Because of this developers may get to test new features not available in the public beta. The most significant difference is probably the motive of the testers: Developers usually have the aim of ensuring their apps work when the updated macOS is released to the general public, while public beta testers are essentially helping Apple detect bugs and offering feedback on the features. But you should keep in mind that betas are by nature not stable, and because the public beta comes after the developer beta it could be a little safer to install. The public beta is not the same as the beta that is released through the developer program.ĭevelopers get updates to their beta first, and possibly more frequently. There are a few differences between the public and developer betas. Instead, our recommendation was to wait for the public beta, which is here now. We don’t recommend you install the developer beta if you aren’t a developer. Whether you should download the developer beta if you aren’t a developer is another question.
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