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Oct 11, 2018 ↳ Mac OS Beta Testing ↳ Vanilla Gamers ↳ Hard Truck: 18 Wheels of Steel ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: Across America ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: Pedal to the Metal ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: Convoy ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: Haulin' ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: American Long Haul ↳ 18 Wheels of Steel: Extreme Trucker. I cannot understand why the fork of mac-playground cannot be merged here.NET are a great platform, and project mono are something vital for it. Today, we are on 2020, not on 2002, when.net first release go to public and Mac OS and Linux have low market share. Now, yes, windows have a lot of market, but Mac OS have their users and Linux too.
Turn on and set up FileVault
Does IDE even registers them (e.g. Maybe they are handled by OS-level actions). Use 'Preferences Keymap' - there is a button next to the search field - it allows to find actions by currently assigned shortcuts - use it and see if IDE will register them and what actions they linked to. OroborOSX is an X11 environment designed for use in rootless mode with XDarwin on Mac OS X. It is currently being used with Mac OS X from version 10.0.x to the latest 10.2.1. It is based on oroborus version 1.14.0, an X11 window manager created by Ken Lynch (now maintained by Stefan Pfetzing). Many people may like the look and feel of Linux over other Desktop Operating Systems (OS). For this reason someone may want to install Linux on a Mac. There are many types of Apple Mac systems available. For this article I used an iMac 6.1 from late 2006. The specs on the iMac are as follows: Intel Core 2 Duo 2.16 GHz.
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FileVault 2 is available in OS X Lion or later. When FileVault is turned on, your Mac always requires that you log in with your account password.
- Choose Apple menu () > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy.
- Click the FileVault tab.
- Click , then enter an administrator name and password.
- Click Turn On FileVault.
If other users have accounts on your Mac, you might see a message that each user must type in their password before they will be able to unlock the disk. For each user, click the Enable User button and enter the user's password. User accounts that you add after turning on FileVault are automatically enabled.
Choose how you want to be able to unlock your disk and reset your password, in case you ever forget your password:
- If you're using OS X Yosemite or later, you can choose to use your iCloud account to unlock your disk and reset your password.*
- If you're using OS X Mavericks, you can choose to store a FileVault recovery key with Apple by providing the questions and answers to three security questions. Choose answers that you're sure to remember.*
- If you don't want to use iCloud FileVault recovery, you can create a local recovery key. Keep the letters and numbers of the key somewhere safe—other than on your encrypted startup disk.
If you lose both your account password and your FileVault recovery key, you won't be able to log in to your Mac or access the data on your startup disk.
Encryption occurs in the background as you use your Mac, and only while your Mac is awake and plugged in to AC power. You can check progress in the FileVault section of Security & Privacy preferences. Any new files that you create are automatically encrypted as they are saved to your startup disk.
When FileVault setup is complete and you restart your Mac, you will use your account password to unlock your disk and allow your Mac to finish starting up. FileVault requires that you log in every time your Mac starts up, and no account is permitted to log in automatically.
Reset your password or change your FileVault recovery key
If you forget your account password or it doesn't work, you might be able to reset your password.
If you want to change the recovery key used to encrypt your startup disk, turn off FileVault in Security & Privacy preferences. You can then turn it on again to generate a new key and disable all older keys.
Turn off FileVault
If you no longer want to encrypt your startup disk, you can turn off FileVault:
Somebody Somewhere Somehow Something Mac Os Download
- Choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Security & Privacy.
- Click the FileVault tab.
- Click , then enter an administrator name and password.
- Click Turn Off FileVault.
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Decryption occurs in the background as you use your Mac, and only while your Mac is awake and plugged in to AC power. You can check progress in the FileVault section of Security & Privacy preferences.
Learn more
- Learn how to create and deploy a FileVault recovery key for Mac computers in your company, school, or other institution.
- If you're using FileVault in Mac OS X Snow Leopard, you can upgrade to FileVault 2 by upgrading to OS X Lion or later. After upgrading OS X, open FileVault preferences and follow the onscreen instructions to upgrade FileVault.
- RAID partitions or non-standard Boot Camp partitions on the startup drive might prevent OS X from installing a local Recovery System. Without a Recovery System, FileVault won't encrypt your startup drive. Learn more.
* If you store your recovery key with Apple or your iCloud account, there's no guarantee that Apple will be able to give you the key if you lose or forget it. Not all languages and regions are serviced by AppleCare or iCloud, and not all AppleCare-serviced regions offer support in every language. If you set up your Mac for a language that AppleCare doesn't support, then turn on FileVault and store your key with Apple (OS X Mavericks only), your security questions and answers could be in a language that AppleCare doesn't support.
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- Thanks William. Great article. A problem I ran into a few weeks back so timely.
I actually solved the problem by using DOSDude1's installer Patcher links... might be worth mentioning him actually as has been massively useful for the community in the past few years. - This may the most useful article posted all year. Thanks for figuring this out and posting the instructions.
- The Tiger downloads are for Updates only - e.g. 10.4.6 and 10.4.11. You still need the Tiger install DVD.
- I think I ran into the installers expiration issue. I happened to be reinstalling High Sierra on my unsupported (thanks, DOSDude1!) MacBook Pro 5,5 (I needed to rearrange its Snow Leopard and High Sierra partitions, and things went kind of sideways... needed to recreate the recovery partition, etc).
Happily, my Snow Leopard install DVD has no such expiration issues. It’s also still the fastest and most bug-free version of Mac OS X. - When I click on the Mojave link listed in the article it does not give me a download button, only a button that says Open but clicking on it doesn't launch anything. I assume it remembers that I downloaded the expired version before. I am currently running Sierra.
I agree on both, article quality and rege Rewe nice to DOSDude - his great support blew fresh life into my 2009 MBP.Thanks William. Great article. A problem I ran into a few weeks back so timely.
I actually solved the problem by using DOSDude1's installer Patcher links... might be worth mentioning him actually as has been massively useful for the community in the past few years.- It’s a shame there’s not a repo somewhere with every disk image from Mac OS 7! I’ve got several original retail disks but I’m missing a few. You can get os 9 disk images from macos9lives.com but OS X images are harder to hunt down.
I thought there were places that archived them but then there is a risk it’s been modified.It’s a shame there’s not a repo somewhere with every disk image from Mac OS 7! I’ve got several original retail disks but I’m missing a few. You can get os 9 disk images from macos9lives.com but OS X images are harder to hunt down.- That 10.4 and 10.5 stuff is just combo updates. You can't download installers for those old versions anymore.
- Is it possible to downgrade a new Macbook Pro 16' to Mojave?
- Does anyone know of a link for a 10.9.5 (Mavericks) installer? I tried the Purchased tab and found Mavericks, but it shows Installed and I can't download it again.
As noted in the article, the Installers I've saved are now dead. If I go to Apple Support and search for Mavericks, all I get are links to update files and not the OS itself. I have 2029 installers for other OSs I might need, but I need one for Mavericks.
Not unless somebody comes up with some trick software to fool the MBP. As you may know, Apple doesn't allow an OS to be installed on a Mac that's older than the OS shipped with it.Is it possible to downgrade a new Macbook Pro 16' to Mojave?
From time to time somebody has a software hack that allows a newer OS to be installed on a Mac precluded because Apple deemed it too old or unsupported.
try this: http://allmacworld.com/mac-os-x-mavericks-10-9-5-free-download/Does anyone know of a link for a 10.9.5 (Mavericks) installer? I tried the Purchased tab and found Mavericks, but it shows Installed and I can't download it again.
As noted in the article, the Installers I've saved are now dead. If I go to Apple Support and search for Mavericks, all I get are links to update files and not the OS itself. I have 2029 installers for other OSs I might need, but I need one for Mavericks.- edited November 2019
I got that too. A 6.3Gb installer will already be sitting somewhere on your system (it was on one of my MacPro 5.1's currently on High Sierra)... Do a Spotlight, find and delete it... the OPEN will change to DOWNLOAD on next opening App Store.When I click on the Mojave link listed in the article it does not give me a download button, only a button that says Open but clicking on it doesn't launch anything. I assume it remembers that I downloaded the expired version before. I am currently running Sierra.
Happily, my Snow Leopard install DVD has no such expiration issues. It’s also still the fastest and most bug-free version of Mac OS X.
100% agree. Still have it running in a production environment in Work on an old MacMini that's still earning its crust. Loved Snow Leopard. When Apple got it right and really only did focus on bugs and cutting the fat.- I have all these and even Leopard Server and Snow Leopard Server all running in VMWare Fusions VMs on a new 27iMac 5K i9. The only snag is most of Apple's own software requires hardware acceleration which VMs can't offer but it's fun and purely for nostalgic reasons I keep all these. To run Apple software I use Screen Sharing to older Macs, a 2010 MBP runs iWeb fine for example and I can operate it from the comfort of the iMac screen. I can also boot OSX beta (the very first one) on a G3 Performa along with OS9. Why? Haha! It's fun. I should add, I have all the original disks and packaging for every version I run.edited November 2019
If you are reinstalling the OS, use terminal to set the date to before Oct 24, 2019 and your old installers will work just fine. Mac OS X will update to the correct date after booting.Does anyone know of a link for a 10.9.5 (Mavericks) installer? I tried the Purchased tab and found Mavericks, but it shows Installed and I can't download it again.
As noted in the article, the Installers I've saved are now dead. If I go to Apple Support and search for Mavericks, all I get are links to update files and not the OS itself. I have 2029 installers for other OSs I might need, but I need one for Mavericks.
date 0712122318
Which would set the system date to July 12 2018 at 12:23pm- Guys, I don't think these links have changed at all. When I download them fresh, MacOS still says something like 'this install file is broken', which I assume is because it thinks the certificate has expired. Guess I'll just have to do the date trick.
- If you ever used createinstallmedia to build a thumb drive installer, you probably found this site:
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201372
Bookmark this page, it has download links for the 5 most recent macOS versions, as well as the syntax needed to build a bootable thumb drive using the Terminal app.