Technically speaking this system has a SSD not a HDD. You should be able to access the Apple OS recovery server to at least get macOS installed again. As you need to can access to the disk utility tool it offers. Now the tricky part you need to partition the drive into two partitions the first is where macOS sits I would make is around 40GB so you have some space besides the OS and it’s needed virtual RAM space. Then you can create the second partition for Linux and do the install within it. Here’s the needed Startup command ***Option-Command-R*** Here’s the full write up on the commands: ******[https://support.apple.com/en-us/102603|Mac startup key combinations]
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Technically speaking this system has a SSD not a HDD. You should be able to access the Apple OS recovery server to at least get macOS installed again. As you need to can access to the disk utility tool it offers. Now the tricky part you need to partition the drive into two partitions the first is where macOS sits I would make is around 40GB so you have some space besides the OS and it’s needed virtual RAM space. Then you can create the second partition for Linux and do the install within it. The needed Startup command is ***Option-Command-R*** and here’s the full write up on the commands: [link|https://support.apple.com/en-us/102603|Mac startup key combinations]
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To speed up the process you could leverage her new Mac but here we will need to access the OS installer file directly from Apples server here [https://support.apple.com/en-us/102662|How to download and install macOS] but the highest you can run is Big Sur on this older system download it. Then connecting the two systems together via a Thunderbolt cable you can enable Target Disk Mode [https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/transfer-files-mac-computers-target-disk-mode-mchlp1443/mac|Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode] if you don’t have a cable grab a 32GB USB thumb drive and reformat it to GUID and a journaled file system then copy the OS installer to it and then convert it to a bootable installer by following this guide [https://support.apple.com/en-us/101578|Create a bootable installer for macOS]
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To speed up the process you could leverage her new Mac but you will need to access the OS installer file directly from Apples server [link|https://support.apple.com/en-us/102662|How to download and install macOS] but the highest you can run is Big Sur on this older system download it. Then connecting the two systems together via a Thunderbolt cable you can enable Target Disk Mode [link|https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/transfer-files-mac-computers-target-disk-mode-mchlp1443/mac|Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode] if you don’t have a cable grab a 32GB USB thumb drive and reformat it to GUID and a journaled file system then copy the OS installer to it and then convert it to a bootable installer by following this guide [link|https://support.apple.com/en-us/101578|Create a bootable installer for macOS]
Technically speaking this system has a SSD not a HDD. You should be able to access the Apple OS recovery server to at least get macOS installed again. As you need to can access to the disk utility tool it offers. Now the tricky part you need to partition the drive into two partitions the first is where macOS sits I would make is around 40GB so you have some space besides the OS and it’s needed virtual RAM space. Then you can create the second partition for Linux and do the install within it. Here’s the needed Startup command ***Option-Command-R*** Here’s the full write up on the commands: ******[https://support.apple.com/en-us/102603|Mac startup key combinations]
To speed up the process you could leverage her new Mac but here we will need to access the OS installer file directly from Apples server here [https://support.apple.com/en-us/102662|How to download and install macOS] but the highest you can run is Big Sur on this older system download it. Then connecting the two systems together via a Thunderbolt cable you can enable Target Disk Mode [https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/transfer-files-mac-computers-target-disk-mode-mchlp1443/mac|Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode] if you don’t have a cable grab a 32GB USB thumb drive and reformat it to GUID and a journaled file system then copy the OS installer to it and then convert it to a bootable installer by following this guide [https://support.apple.com/en-us/101578|Create a bootable installer for macOS]