Hi everyone, I'm trying to install Windows 7 64-bit on my Early 2009 iMac (3.06, 4gb, ATi), and thus far the installation has gone well-I'm writing this from IE8, and things are fine. However, this is the third Windows 7 installation I've done today (tried 64-bit first, then 32-bit, and now 64-bit again). The problems begin once I try to install the Boot Camp drivers.
I get a keyagent/mac HAL error, and then Windows starts blue screening and doing system restores on reboot. Can anyone suggest to me how I should proceed from this point? I know that the iMac doesn't officially support 64-bit Windows, but I also know that it can and that there are people who have made 64-bit Windows 7 work on an iMac. Thanks for any and all assistance, Ben.
Dear Ben, I, too, am suffering at the hands of Windows/Mac software conflicts. I used to run Vista on Boot Camp when I first bought my MacBook Pro in 2007 and then did the 64 bit version on Parallels Desktop.
After I heard of files and desktop sharing, running OS X and Windows side by side, I could not resist and abandoned Boot Camp, at a price. Parallels, with all its aspirations, causes lots of instabilities and crashes and after about two years of putting up with Parallels’ shortcomings, I decided to come to terms with reality and return to BC. (Not the Before Christ thing!) I am now facing the very same issues you are: Key Agent, Mac Hal and the wireless adapter and others. No, Windows, in my case, does not turn ‘blue,’ as if for lack of oxygen, nor try to restore on reboot.
I choose “Ignore” and the installation exits. There is also a message, which follows, that all your Mac drivers have been successfully installed, nothing further from the true!
I do not even see the “Boot Camp control panel for Windows,” nor the “Apple Boot Camp system tray item” that the BC installation setup mentions on page 12. Do you see any of that in your Mac? After having spent so much money on softwares, not to mention time and patience, I have done some serious grow up and ask, what’s the big thing about running Windows software on my Mac? The fact is that one can run anything on the Mac that can be run on a PC thanks to the Core 2 Duo chip, except for one thing: CAD files.
There are not any software yet written for the Mac to run CAD files. If and when I find a solution, rest assured, I will share it with you, unless you beat me to it. I wish that people, on their good intensions, would think before posting what they think would help. For example, if you find that a solution works out perfectly for you, it does not necessarily mean it will for other people. What it does is to raise false hopes and creates confusions instead.
Also, things do not take time to get fixed or to pair up. In machine world, they either work or they don’t. Well, I've got it working now. The trick for me was to install the 64 bit Boot Camp 2.01 drivers BEFORE installing the 2.1 update from Apple. This is a bit sketchy because these drivers only come on fairly recent Mac Pro OS X discs, so the only way for me (and most iMac users, I would imagine) to get them is to use a torrent-just google boot camp 2.01 torrent (a certain well known torrent site has the file). I can't be held responsible if anything goes wrong, but this method did work for me, and Windows 7 is now running swimmingly. Apple Footer.
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Its been a long time coming. Can't see paying for a beta but I will install the demo and see about that.
Are We Alone in the Universe? On 7/19/2016 6:46 PM, Mary Otten wrote: While I personally do not have any plans to purchase a beta, having no clue how long it will take for the actual final product to come outthis is still a welcome development on the Mac braille front. I was delighted with this news and very willing to buy in if it meant I could dispense with my cracked Windows machine. However, my first experience with the demo was not good. The show-stopper was not being able to send the translated document to my old Juliet Classic. DBT recognizes it but will not actually send a document to it. VO navigation is a bit flakey and utterly worthless in a translated document.
I do not have a braille display. That might have made the difference. The real issue for me though was not being able to emboss. I’m glad I tried the demo first. From the email exchange I had with support, I would suggest waiting at least until the next beta version is released before bothering with it, but depending on what you want to do with it and what equipment you have, your results may vary.
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For more options, visit. Mary Otten 22/7/2016, 8:58 น.
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ISSUE Users may see issues with fonts when using version 16.9 of Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook, OneNote and Microsoft PowerPoint on macOS. Symptoms:. Text appears garbled or in a different font. Fonts not appearing in font picker STATUS: WORKAROUND We recommend you check the installed versions of the font. If you have multiple versions, then make sure the latest version of the font is active.
For more information, read about how to fix Need more help? Talk to support. If you have an Office 365 for home subscription, or you purchased a one-time download of Office 2016, click the Contact Uslink at the bottom of this page. Ask the community Get help from experts in our forums: for Mac users Provide feedback in Office app You can send feedback directly to our Office teams.
For Mac users, in Office 2016 for Mac, click the smiley icon in the upper-right corner. Have a feature request? We love reading your suggestions on new features and feedback about how you use our products! Share your thoughts on the site. We’re listening.
Hi, I have installed R and being using R for some cDNA analysis. Red case for western digital my passport for mac 3tb. (Mac OSX) I would like to add the Bioconductor in the R I downloaded the bioconductor package and put the folder in the R folder. However, when i type library(vsn), or library(Biobase) in R session R session said can't find these packages.
Please kindly advise me how I should do it and I try to use getBioC script to run in the R session. And this time they said my R is not configured to run HTTP.:( so would you mind to advise me how I can solve either of the above or below options? Thank you so much Maggie. Hi, I have installed R and being using R for some cDNA analysis. (Mac OSX) I will preface this by saying that I'm not very familiar w/ MacOSX and it's installation procedures. I would like to add the Bioconductor in the R I downloaded the bioconductor package and put the folder in the R folder.
however, when i type library(vsn), or library(Biobase) in R session R session said can't find these packages. please kindly advise me how I should do it What 'bioconductor package' did you download? The MacOSX package bundle? and I try to use getBioC script to run in the R session.
And this time they said my R is not configured to run HTTP.:( Unless OSX registers as a unix under.Platform$OS, I do not think that OSX will work at all under getBioC. The other alternative might be to download Jan de Leeuw's Mac OS X R installation from which contains, among some 200-ish other packages, Bioconductor 1.1 On Wednesday, February 19, 2003, at 04:46 PM, Jeff Gentry wrote: Hi, I have installed R and being using R for some cDNA analysis.
(Mac OSX) I will preface this by saying that I'm not very familiar w/ MacOSX and it's installation procedures. I would like to add the Bioconductor in the R I downloaded the bioconductor package and put the folder in the R folder. however, when i type library(vsn), or library(Biobase) in R session R session said can't find these packages.
please kindly advise me how I should do it What 'bioconductor package' did you download? The MacOSX package bundle? and I try to use getBioC script to run in the R session. And this time they said my R is not configured to run HTTP.:( Unless OSX registers as a unix under.Platform$OS, I do not think that OSX will work at all under getBioC.
-Jeff Bioconductor mailing list [email protected] Byron Ellis ([email protected]) 'Oook' - The Librarian.
John's Blog: Re-Installing Rumpus on OS X April 26, 2016 When there is a problem with a Rumpus server, it's usually best to carefully review, reproduce and diagnose the problem to find a solution. But sometimes, especially after attempting to move a Rumpus server from one Mac to another, a complete re-install of Rumpus makes more sense. In those cases, here's what to do: Step 1: Make A Backup In Rumpus, from the 'File' menu, choose 'Open Config Folder' and make a backup of the entire contents of that folder. Note that later, you will not simply recover the entire folder, but making a backup of everything in that folder is the safest way to start.
Step 2: Uninstall Rumpus In Rumpus, if the service is running, click 'Stop Server'. Next, open the 'Server Daemon' window and click 'Remove Daemon', then follow the prompts to uninstall. On a truly messed-up system, the 'remove' function may fail.
In this case, in the Finder, from the 'Go' menu, choose 'Go To Folder.' And go to '/usr/local/'. Remove the 'Rumpus' folder and then restart the Mac, which should manually uninstall the Rumpus daemon.
Step 3: Run the Setup Assistant Quit and relaunch Rumpus. When it opens, you will be presented with the Setup Assistant. Complete the assistant normally, as if it were a fresh install. Step 4: Confirm Access At the end of the Setup Assistant, local connection instructions are displayed. On another computer on the local network, follow the instructions to confirm that you can connect to the server and log in using the account defined in the Setup Assistant.
Make sure the server can be stopped and started, and that the basic installation performs as it should. Step 5: Recover User Accounts Now that server functionality has been restored, you can begin to carefully recover the configuration from the previous setup. Start with the Rumpus users database. In Rumpus, choose 'Open Config Folder' from the 'File' menu. From the backup made earlier, copy the 'Rumpus.users' file into the config folder. Quit Rumpus and relaunch (to make sure the Rumpus control application picks up the recovered users database) and click 'Stop Server' and 'Start Server' (to make sure the server daemon picks it up, too).
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Connect and log in as one or two user accounts to confirm access. Step 6: Recover Other Files One at a time, in the same manner you recovered the Rumpus.users file, recover other configuration files that will be time-consuming to recreate manually. Never attempt to recover files you don't recognize or that you don't need to restore, including: rumpusd, rumpusprivtool, and rumpusremoted. These aren't configuration files, and are managed by Rumpus. I also don't recommend restoring 'Rumpus.conf', as that configuration file includes options which may be server-specific. For example, configuration problems that were previously causing issues may be replicated on the new installation by recovering that file.
You can try recovering it if you like, but be sure to make a backup copy of the clean 'Rumpus.conf' file first, then carefully testing server accessibility before continuing on. It's usually best, though, to simply run through Rumpus control application setup windows and set needed config options manually. Other key config files you may optionally recover include: Rumpus.notices - This file contains Event Notice definitions.
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Rumpus.fsets - This file contains Folder Set definitions. Rumpus.cert and Rumpus.key - These files contain your SSL certificate and private key. Rumpus.rips - This file contains the Blocked Clients ('Reject IPs') list.
Rumpus.aips - This file contains the Allowed IPs list. Rumpus.types - This file contains File Type definitions. Files Ending in '.domain' - These are the Web Settings appearance definitions for each defined domain, including 'Default.domain'. Again, recover only those files that will be time-consuming to recreate manually.
The fewer files brought forward, the cleaner the new setup and the less chance of accidentally recovering a file with configuration problems. If you use drop shipping, existing drop shipments can also be restored. Recover the 'Rumpus.drops' file and the 'DropFiles' folder. By default, the DropFiles folder is in the Rumpus config folder, but the location is configurable on the 'Web Settings' window, Advanced tab.
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