hace lo q quieras a mi no me importa, insultarlo a el, por problemas tuyos no me parecio JUSTO, encima es su primer POST. man, i don´t like people insulting other peoples. no virus, no add, no NOTHING.but you still thinking that the porblems are THEY, and never YOU or your sistem. txt, whitout any porblem, this dont have. look ahead mora than 10 people download de UL. 4) you use some? program to download or APP in your browser or somo software to donwload? some thing its redirection you to download and. 3) scan your system conmplety, and your browser update all your antivirus. exe files!!! were LIKE alwyas people, never have a problem, the problem are THEM. 2) yes man,SCAN YOU BROWSER OR YOUR PC, BECUASE SOME MALWARE OR COOKI it makenig you doneload. I ran into a glitch when attempting to install FCS2 in El Capitan. Two elements were excluded from the install (Compressor and Apple Qmaster - which may be due to the fact that I have not installed iLife '11 on Yosemite and hence iMovie was not available): I can now confirm that HawaiianHippie's method works for Final Cut Studio 2 (Final Cut Pro 6) in Yosemite: (Note that when you get to Installer.app, you will have to Control+click and select "Show Package Contents") System/Library/CoreServices/Installer.app/Contents/Resources/ ist The file, as indicated on Jeremy Johnstone's blog, is You can return it after you're done if you like, I don't know what (if any) possible repercussions might come from leaving it deleted. And I've discovered an even easier way to do this! You don't need to edit the plist file, just move it into the Trash. I have now successfully done this on four computers, brand new iMacs running 10.9.4. One follows your advice at their own risk! So, you are advising people to install a Trojan Horse into their Mac which could potentially result in severe problems months, even years later!įollowing this course appears foolish given the 3 other installation methods, especially the one described earlier by Hawaiian Hippie, which completely disproves that the installation program for FCP 6 is PowerPC based! Once this corruption became active these reports indicated unexplained hard drive crashes and kernel panics rendering these Mac unusable without a complete wipe and reinstallation of software.Ģ) Has Apple fixed this Rosetta-caused corruption problem in Mavericks? Why would Apple go to the bother to make the installation of FCP 6 ineffective in Lion and thereafter, only to later fix the Rosetta corruption problem in Mavericks? Why not just allow FCP 6 installer to just work again?ģ) It is virtually impossible to uninstall Rosetta once it has been installed into OS X Lion and thereafter. The fact that it worked for you only supports the theory that the installation of Rosetta sidetracks the Apple installed "routine" that stops FCP 6 from installing, but with great danger:ġ) There have been reports that the installation of Rosetta into early versions of Lion caused a corruption in Lion that laid dormant until later versions of Lion were released. Furthermore, if it worked for a "PPC program" such as the installer of FCP 6, why does it not work for any other PowerPC app since the release of Lion in 2011? If you know anything about how Rosetta works, it is clear that it cannot work in Lion and thereafter. Apple installed a routine into OS X Lion and thereafter that made it look like the installer was PowerPC and hence triggered the PPC Dialog box. Jeremy Johnstone's research has debunked the myth that the installer of FCP 6 is PowerPC. There are many fallacies in your post that may result in a dangerous situation for anyone following your advice.
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