I wholeheartedly agree. I have a handful of developers that require the latest O/S to run Xcode for iPhone app development. Further, that is absurd to even suggest downgrading my operating system to accommodate an application that doesn't even fully work with the previous operation system.
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**Office 2016 is supposed to be a brand new applications suite, yes? Be it known that For some odd and unorthodox reason, Office 2011 and Office 2016 are still 32-bit.
I'm just itching to hear their answer to this one:
***** Microsoft:how could you not been aware that Apple switched their default architecture of all of their computers to 64-bit starting back 5 revisions of the O/S ago (nearly 6 years) at OS X 10.6.8? And if you were aware, why would you not code for the most current, stable release of the Apple Operating System?
We are now on 10.11.0. You have had plenty of time to get this worked out, and yet you still want to bog down and sell buggy code and expect us to accommodate this lack of commitment to quality that Microsoft has toward there Apple products by downgrading or waiting for someone to fixe theses issues?
I have worked with Microsoft for over 16 years throughout my career with various faux pas (Windows NT's Service pack 6 that went to 6a real quick, Windows 'ME' and Windows Vista make me cringe, and then Windows 8.) How, or why, have the Mac's fallen into this lost-cause category? It's a darn shame. I have had an open ticket for over 6 weeks now that has had barely any attention. When Outlook 15.0 was released, I could not send an email to save my life without having Lync (my Fortune 100's main means of online communication) cause both it and Outlook to run processing up the wall at showing both apps cpu usage at 150-160% usage in Yosemite 10.10.0 through 10.10.5. If this were a PC problem, they would have jumped right in and responded immediately.
And then there is Skype for Business, Lync's replacement. Still, no Mac client. But, they just released 14.2.1 for Lynx. BLESS THEIR HEARTS. It fixes the issue with crashing itself with Outlook 15.14.2, but it's a buck short and a day late. Why not spend the time developing a modern, 64-bit Skype for Business client that is fresh, new, and isn't being bug chased all over the Mac universe? When Lync was coded (or office 2011 for that matter), Microsoft also neglected to take into account that the HFS+ unicode file system will allow back-slashes in its file system, so when a mobile user account (roaming AD, essentially), it creates the user's home folder in the context 'DOMAINuser'. I discovered this over a year and a half ago, reported it, and it still remains unaddressed. I ultimately had to go through my entire Apple OS X infrastructure and change the default way that it creates the users home folders so it wouldn't crash each time an end user would try to send an instant message.
Bottom line, I am almost ready to really attempt to convince my company to drop Office for Mac. I am rock-solid stable when I use native Apple Mail, Calendar, etc. instead of Outlook and discuss using an open source Office-like suite, all for free and without headache. I hope there is a solution soon..
Thanks for the comment, Phillip, and sorry if I misread Jim's post.
I don't think that most users will want to downgrade their entire OS just so that Office 2016 can be coaxed into usability. Office 2011 runs fine, if you had it installed already.
For basic word processing and spreadsheets that don't need a lot of bells and whistles, I am using Apple's Pages and Numbers which work really well. Suicide squad movie download hd. For everything else, I have reverted to Office 2011. I just wish I had read the forums and not jumped the gun to spend money on Office 2016.
I'm trying to install OS X Mavericks in VirtualBox on Windows 8.1. I have VirtualBox installed and the VM set up, but I need an ISO file to install the operating system.
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I've searched around and found one result one a website I hadn't heard of, but Google Chrome flagged it as malware. I found a file on CNet, but it's an upgrade file for machines that are running an earlier version of OS X.
Is there an official source for downloading OS X ISO files? If not, is it possible to get the required ISO file without already having access to OS X?
BrianBrian
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4 Answers
Does not work on Mavericks and Yosemite
There is no way to legitimately get the file without having access to a Mac, and a licensed copy of the OS via a purchase (unless you are a member of the Developer Program, for which you can expect to pay far more than the cost of the OS, what with it being free).
But if you can blag some access time on a Mac, then you can download the OS from the Mac App Store (You may need to Option+Click the
Purchased section to force it to reshow them if you have downloaded them at least once already). Once you have the installer downloaded and sat in your dock, you can simply pick it apart and get to the image file that is inside it.
This is the official way to get the file direct from Apple, but there is still work to do to make it into an ISO:
For clarity, you can do the above on any version of OS X from 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard) onwards, so you can use an old image to get hold of a new image for example, if you have access to a different OS version than Mavericks.
user104610
stuffestuffe
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The answer above by @stuffe won't work on Mavericks. Apparently Apple has changed the format of the ESD image and it's no longer bootable.
Looking around I've found a couple of pointers on how to do the necessary conversions to get the result as something you can boot a VM off.
Depending on what's the purpose of the ISO file, if it's to reinstall a computer, it might be more useful to use a Bootable USB- For that, check How to: Create a bootable installation for OS X Mavericks 10.9 and above.
For the ISO file itself, I've mostly used the information found on this post on the InsanelyMac site, augmented with the information/tip on creating a Recovery Partition found on the Apple Support Communities.
Basically the process is to get the ESD image, and rebuild it to include some info that is now packaged as symlinks, and get that out as a ISO file. The author of the InsanelyMac post has automated the process into a bash script, that I'm pasting here for convenience/reference:
I can confirm that the resulting image is indeed bootable within Fusion; it's in the process of being installed so I'm yet to see whether other 'tricks' are needed to make it work (for example, if the result is lacking a Recovery Partition as stated in some of the threads).
UPDATE: The resulting VM boots, and appears to work 'well'. I have used the method described to create a recovery partition, but even though Carbon Copy 'sees' a Recovery Partition on the (virtual) HD, it doesn't appear to work all that well, as booting the VM with Option key pressed doesn't do anything. Will look into it if I have time, but for the time being it appears that the .iso file I got is working.
JJaravaJJarava
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There is no official way to run OS X on a virtual machine in Windows. The Apple EULA clearly states under section 2 B that you're allowed to:
Mac Os X El Capitan Iso Download
(iii) to install, use and run up to two (2) additional copies or instances of the Apple Software within virtual operating system environments on each Mac Computer you own or control that is already running the Apple Software, for purposes of: (a) software development; (b) testing during software development; (c) using OS X Server; or (d) personal, non-commercial use.
Source: Apple Inc. Software License Agreement for OS X Maverics
This means that you can virtualize OS X only inside OS X on Mac hardware. Anything else breaks the license.
onikonik
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32 Bit Mac Os X
The same as given by stuffe.
You can format your flash drive to ExFAT format which allows for access both on Windows and Mac. The file size restriction of FAT is not present on ExFAT.
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