Would guess not intentional.
Apple has little financial incentive to spend money on testing new software beyond the minimal on intel macs.
Unlike older iphones where apps are being bought in large volumes so they make money, a lot of Mac apps are web based or downloaded directly/via home brew. Its only apple music and tv etc they would take care not to break
So Apple have an incentive to maximise the number of older iphones in use to sell apps and so subscriptions but less for Intel macs
In my experience, Intel Macs have always been that way. Every one I had was uncomfortably hot. My work Intel MBP’s fans would runs constantly, because everything would send its CPU through the roof. I always felt like I had to treat them with kid gloves to avoid the CPU running away on me. Webex meetings and screen sharing would always spike my CPU and make everything unusable. I’d have to stop sharing to actually do what I was trying to show someone. All this was before Apple Silicon even released, when Intel was the preferred chip. It was garbage.
This never happens anymore with the M1 Pro MBPs I have. I’ve never heard the fan spin up on my work MBP. I have heard it on my personal one, but I was actually pushing it, it wasn’t a random runaway process doing it, as was common on Intel.
I’d take a modern MacBook Air over the highest spec’d Intel Mac Apple ever made.
As long as you use proprietary OSes, do not ever update past what has come with the hardware(reinstall back to it if needed).
That's why there are still machines using windows xp still in use today.
That's where you will get the fastest/best experience.
If your mac came with Catalina(10.15.1), stay there and run that mf into the ground.
Never shut it down(you don't know if it will start back up if you do) and never update.
No, you don't need the latest version of the proprietary system.
It's only getting worse as time goes by and you don't have any way to modify it to improve it.
> I have a macbook pro, 32G ram, lightning fast nvme drive. There is NO REASON to upgrade the hardware.
That is not what Apple wants to hear.
They only want to hear the sound of the money.
You either come to accept that, or you stop buying their products.
It doesn't matter what you want or what you think, only what Apple wants.
As you said: with Fedora, it ran well and it probably isn't even as good as it could be unless optimized specifically for that hardware(Gentoo, or some BSD distro).
When the time comes and you need software that no longer has support for Catalina, then it's time to buy the newest mac that is "optimized" for the lastest version of the proprietary OS.
Otherwise, use the lastest version of the software that still works or try finding something else.
> As long as you use proprietary OSes, do not ever update past what has come with the hardware(reinstall back to it if needed). That's why there are still machines using windows xp still in use today. That's where you will get the fastest/best experience.
This is terrible advice that would cause a TON of people to become exposed to patched vulnerabilities.
One man's terrible advice is another man's amazing advice.
You either use libre software and have great speed while also having patched vulnerabilities(you can DIY if nothing else).
Or you can use proprietary software and never update to get good speed.
Or use patched proprietary software and have poor performance.
But never all three. You just can't have everything in this world.
How's your battery health? A severely degraded battery will not be able to deliver power at the rate your system may be demanding it. I'd replace it asap.
Tahoe seems to have slowed down the OS a bit but I don't think it is as extreme as you're seeing here. I don't have any intel chips to test with myself but personally I'd try running some benchmarks both CPU and GPU to see if your scores match up with other people running your hardware. After that maybe check to see if you're throwing errors in your console. Maybe it'll lead to a hint.
It seems like a bad bug somewhere rather than a purposeful event
I'm confident it isn't purposeful. But no hardware errors can be found.
Virgin install Tahoe: grinds from 74-C up to 100-C within a minute and then throttles.
Virgin install Sonoma: runs fine. No temperature change of note.
This isn't indicative of a hardware problem.
Nothing in dmesg? Maybe try to put some dtrace probes into the sys calls and see if anything is suspicious. Let spotlight index for a day or so first.
I have installed Linux Mint with KDE on an iMac 2015, 16GB RAM. Runs great. The only thing that requires a convoluted script to run because <reasons> is bluetooth. Everything else worked out of the box, apparently.
I have (and still use) a 2019 mbp and it has had CPU thermal throttling issues since very early after I bought it new. Intel macs from that year were notorious for thermal throttling.
It's not an accident. They want you to upgrade to Apple Silicon. This is planned obsolescence, plain and simple.
> There is NO REASON to upgrade the hardware.
> Just for context: prior to upgrading my mac would average around 74°c
If you refuse to use lighter-weight software, then yeah, it's time to upgrade your hardware. An average of 74°c means that you have ~20°c of headroom before hitting the Intel chip's junction temp and shutting off the hardware (or causing permanent damage). Your laptop should be idling much cooler even if it's one of those godawful Intel i9 16" models that runs hotter than Satan's jacuzzi.
Eventually MacOS will switch away from ACPI/UEFI power/temp management to use their custom devicetree drivers. Even the hacky Opencore workarounds won't fix the experience on your laptop, it will likely only be worse-supported from here on out. Backend architecture like libdispatch has probably already begun this process on Tahoe.
You've either got to downgrade macOS, get a new laptop or switch to an Intel-friendly OS. I'll leave the choice up to you.
The point being it works without temp problems in Sonoma. Not Tahoe.
This discrepancy indicates they've changed the software so it works worse.
> This discrepancy indicates they've changed the software so it works worse.
This is what I just said. Apple is switching to devicetree power management in libdispatch, which Intel chips do not support. Processes will eventually stop being efficient on Intel hardware and focus on ARM efficiency, and it's quite possible that this is already happening in Tahoe.
Look at Activity Monitor report when it's overloaded to see what's busy.
MacOS and apps have many kinds of background activity which present large transient loads, for example Spotlight indexing and photo library facial scanning.
Do you have a browser or other app infected with a crypto-miner or other malware?
If you create a new user and sign in using only that new user, do you see the same overload?
Are you running an unsupported Mac for Tahoe via OCLP? Thar be performance hazards. Search Macrumors "unsupported" forums.