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Batchmod high sierra
Batchmod high sierra







batchmod high sierra
  1. #BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA HOW TO#
  2. #BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA SOFTWARE#
  3. #BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA PASSWORD#
  4. #BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA FREE#
  5. #BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA MAC#

#BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA MAC#

If upgrading from an earlier release, your Mac needs up to 44GB of available storage. Point # 3 - Empty Space Requirements > If upgrading from macOS Sierra or later, your Mac needs 26GB of available storage to upgrade.

#BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA HOW TO#

Point # 2- > How to upgrade to macOS Monterey Reports indicate the EFI BOOT ROM is Required to Flash the Computer and is a requirement for a Successful Monterey Installation. The EFI Boot ROM included in Monterey is verifying for Original Apple Drive and if not found, may Balk or fail to upgrade to Monterey. Point # 1A - There are reports appearing on the ASC Forums regarding failed installation of Monterey on older Qualifying Apple Computers. In most cases this is related to having a NON Apple Original internal drive ? Point # 1 - Does the > Computer Qualify for the Monterey upgrade Last edit at 10:16PM by C(-)ris.The below points should be consider before attempting the upgrade. In the end it is your decision, but be aware that Apple knows it is a bad situation and is trying to prevent you from causing problems and we are trying to lead you in a better direction.Įdited 2 time(s). Same with why you shouldn't put files on the root. Numerous reasons why you shouldn't leave grocereries on the floor. Do you have any good reason why the files should be there other than that is where you want them? This is akin to leaving your groceries on the floor of your kitchen instead of in the pantry where they belong. There is solid logic behind the way Apple set it up. They are both poor form from a technical perspective. The same with filling you Desktop with thousands of items. There is a slew of technical reasons why you don't want random files and folders on the root level of your drive. You obviously don't care to listen to good advice, but it isn't just our random opinion. Three of the most technically competent people on the forum, along with Apple, all just told you what you are trying to do is a bad idea.

#BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA FREE#

Why so dogmatic and rude? Feel free to put your "crap" where you want to. Only now Apple seems to want to take more charge of telling me what to do and how to do it. All your crap belongs in your users folder, not the root of the hard drive. System, Library, Applications, and Users. Probably 10.2 or 10.3 when that was introduced? There should only be 4 folders visible at the root of the hard drive.

#BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA PASSWORD#

Requiring an admin password to put something on the root level of the hard drive goes back a long long way before High Sierra. So something clearly changed in High Sierra…Īnd as Celliot said, it's a workflow thing. This isn't exactly the same application for shutting SIP down, and for whatever the reason(s), being able to move folders back and forth from desktop to drive was not a problem in Sierra.

#BATCHMOD HIGH SIERRA SOFTWARE#

Did it once before when a piece of software wouldn't authenticate (needed root access - and always had access until Mavericks and SIP came out). Not sure shutting down System Integrity Protection. Seems like a High Sierra "Feature" that not everyone wants. Best advice I can give you is to suck it up and organize your stuff in the home folder hierarchy. I know it sucks to have to pick up new habits, but that's a bad place to save/organize your files on the boot drive. Maybe not a big deal, but we all have our own strategies for HD organization, and that has been a part of mine for years. Even in Sierra I could use Get Info on my hd (root level) and give myself permissions to read & write. Maybe others don't mess with the root level when creating folders or saving files, but I do, and it's harder now in High Sierra. Try to drag it back and it won't go without authentication. If I create a folder at root level and drag it to the desktop, no problem. Can't do that anymore without authenticating. But when sharing files I will often just drag from one Mac to the HD of the other Mac. I can save to almost anywhere else as far as I can determine. I've been saving to the root level of my boot drive all along.









Batchmod high sierra