Apple Mac OS X Mountain Lion

When the Apple Mac OS X Mountain Lion update comes, do I have to buy it or it will be a free updateWhen the Apple Mac OS X Mountain Lion update comes, do I have to buy it or it will be a free update?
If I have to buy it how much will it be?

If you purchased Lion alone, or it came with the purchase of a Mac on or after June 11, it will be free. Otherwise, it will cost $19.99.

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  • Apple mac 21.5 mountain lion 10.8.5

    im trying to update from 10.8.5 mountain lion but i keep getting time out error (102). I have to upodate itnes  safari and other bits and bobs. I recently tried to downlad a driver for a printer and tghe error came up as connection error. All the updates seem to get so far and then nothing. I dont have an issue with donloading large files / updates on my pc. my broadband connection is useless at 250kb yes i havent left a 0 out. i downloaded i photo and the other bits with it before 10.8.5 no problem but since im on this version error code. Any help woylod be appreciated

    If you have an Apple Store nearby or access to another Internet connection, try using that for download.
    If you are trying to download using Wi-Fi, try hooking the computer to the router using an Ethernet cable. That is 2-3 times faster than the speed of Wi-Fi.

  • Is an Antivirus software needed for a Mac OS X Mountain Lion?

    I am relatively new to the Apple Mac OS X Mountain Lion. Could anyone tell me if I need an antivirus program for my Macbook Air? And is there any software to clean my Mac of all unnecessary files. Thanks in advance.

    How to maintain a Mac
    1. Make redundant backups, keeping at least one off site at all times. One backup is not enough. Don’t back up your backups; make them independent of each other. Don’t rely completely on any single backup method, such as Time Machine. If you get an indication that a backup has failed, don't ignore it.
    2. Keep your software up to date. In the Software Update preference pane, you can configure automatic notifications of updates to OS X and other Mac App Store products. Some third-party applications from other sources have a similar feature, if you don’t mind letting them phone home. Otherwise you have to check yourself on a regular basis. This is especially important for complex software that modifies the operating system, such as device drivers. Before installing any Apple update, you must check that all such modifications that you use are compatible.
    3. Don't install crapware, such as “themes,” "haxies," “add-ons,” “toolbars,” “enhancers," “optimizers,” “accelerators,” "boosters," “extenders,” “cleaners,” "doctors," "tune-ups," “defragmenters,” “firewalls,” "barriers," “guardians,” “defenders,” “protectors,” most “plugins,” commercial "virus scanners,” "disk tools," or "utilities." With very few exceptions, this stuff is useless, or worse than useless. Above all, avoid any software that purports to change the look and feel of the user interface.
    The more actively promoted the product, the more likely it is to be garbage. The most extreme example is the “MacKeeper” scam.
    As a rule, the only software you should install is that which directly enables you to do the things you use a computer for — such as creating, communicating, and playing — and does not modify the way other software works. Use your computer; don't fuss with it.
    Safari extensions, and perhaps the equivalent for other web browsers, are a partial exception to the above rule. Most are safe, and they're easy to get rid of if they don't work. Some may cause the browser to crash or otherwise malfunction. Use with caution.
    Never install any third-party software unless you know how to uninstall it. Otherwise you may create problems that are very hard to solve.
    The free anti-malware application ClamXav is not crap, and although it’s not routinely needed, it may be useful in some environments, such as a mixed Mac-Windows enterprise network.
    4. Beware of trojans. A trojan is malicious software (“malware”) that the user is duped into installing voluntarily. Such attacks were rare on the Mac platform until sometime in 2011, but are now increasingly common, and increasingly dangerous.
    There is some built-in protection against downloading malware, but you can’t rely on it — the attackers are always at least one day ahead of the defense. You can’t rely on third-party protection either. What you can rely on is common-sense awareness — not paranoia, which only makes you more vulnerable.
    Never install software from an untrustworthy or unknown source. If in doubt, do some research. Any website that prompts you to install a “codec” or “plugin” that comes from the same site, or an unknown site, is untrustworthy. Software with a corporate brand, such as Adobe Flash Player, must be acquired directly from the developer. No intermediary is acceptable, and don’t trust links unless you know how to parse them. Any file that is automatically downloaded from a web page without your having requested it should go straight into the Trash. A website that claims you have a “virus,” or that anything else is wrong with your computer, is rogue.
    In OS X 10.7.5 or later, downloaded applications and Installer packages that have not been digitally signed by a developer registered with Apple are blocked from loading by default. The block can be overridden, but think carefully before you do so.
    Because of recurring security issues in Java, it’s best to disable it in your web browsers, if it’s installed. Few websites have Java content nowadays, so you won’t be missing much. This action is mandatory if you’re running any version of OS X older than 10.6.8 with the latest Java update. Note: Java has nothing to do with JavaScript, despite the similar names. Don't install Java unless you're sure you need it. Most people don't.
    5. Don't fill up your boot volume. A common mistake is adding more and more large files to your home folder until you start to get warnings that you're out of space, which may be followed in short order by a boot failure. This is more prone to happen on the newer Macs that come with an internal SSD instead of the traditional hard drive. The drive can be very nearly full before you become aware of the problem. While it's not true that you should or must keep any particular percentage of space free, you should monitor your storage consumption and make sure you're not in immediate danger of using it up. According to Apple documentation, you need at least 9 GB of free space on the startup volume for normal operation.
    If storage space is running low, use a tool such as the free application OmniDiskSweeper to explore your volume and find out what's taking up the most space. Move rarely-used large files to secondary storage.
    6. Relax, don’t do it. Besides the above, no routine maintenance is necessary or beneficial for the vast majority of users; specifically not “cleaning caches,” “zapping the PRAM,” "resetting the SMC," “rebuilding the directory,” "defragmenting the drive," “running periodic scripts,” “dumping logs,” "deleting temp files," “scanning for viruses,” "purging memory," "checking for bad blocks," "testing the hardware," or “repairing permissions.” Such measures are either completely pointless or are useful only for solving problems, not for prevention.
    The very height of futility is running an expensive third-party application called “Disk Warrior” when nothing is wrong, or even when something is wrong and you have backups, which you must have. Disk Warrior is a data-salvage tool, not a maintenance tool, and you will never need it if your backups are adequate. Don’t waste money on it or anything like it.

  • TS4001 Bookmarks are not syncing to ONE of my Macs, but showing up on other Mac (work), iPhone 4 and iPad 1. Macs are on Mountain Lion. Tried all of Apple's suggestions - and the one Mac is still not updating/syncing Bookmarks or Reading List. What's goin

    Bookmarks are not syncing to ONE of my Macs, but showing up on other Mac (work), iPhone 4 and iPad 1. Macs are on Mountain Lion. Tried all of Apple's suggestions - and the one Mac is still not updating/syncing Bookmarks or Reading List. What's going on? Do I have to wait to OS update? It seems lots of peolple were having issues before ML, but I as fine. Since ML, I am having all kinds of issues!

    Yeah, I literally have tried everything except deleting my iCloud account (I'm close, but that would require so many changes that it is way too painful to consider at this point).
    I am still waiting to hear back from Apple Support. Hopefully something can be done, or they can do a reset on their end.
    Thanks for taking the time to respond though, much appreciated!

  • Mac OS X Mountain Lion unavailable for download in Nigeria Apple Store.

    My Apple ID is logged into Nigeria Apple Store but Apple says MAC OS X Mountain Lion is unavailable for download.....please advise.

    Thanks for the interest Dah*veed, much appreciated.  However, as you rightly mentioned, I'd successfully purchased the Mt Lion from  Nigeria MAS but paused the download due to low  speed. I'm currently in Europe hoping to resume  download, ONLY to  get the error "...... Mt Lion not available in Nigeria MAS".  I  tried to get the download going without any luck.  Kindly let me know what other options are there, if any.  Thank you.

  • Created three new users without Apple IDs and they can't log into either of my Macbook Pro or Mac Mini running Mountain Lion.

    I have created three new users without Apple IDs and they can't log into either of my Macbook Pro or Mac Mini running Mountain Lion.  These accounts are for my kids and originally were setup with parental controls and time constraints.  Thinking this was the problem I removed the time constraints, removed the parental controls, deleted and re-added them, and made them standard users.  I have reinstalled, used disk utility to repair permissions, and made them admins.   Any help is appreciated.

    Users don't need Apple ID's. That's not the issue. Have you tried repairing permissions their accounts?
    http://osxdaily.com/2011/11/15/repair-user-permissions-in-mac-os-x-lion/
    Repairing User Permissions in OS X Lion
    You’ll need to reboot to perform this, and then use the same resetpassword utility that is used to change passwords in Lion, but instead choosing a hidden option.
    When you use the Disk Utility app and Repair Permissions — it doesn’t actually repair the permission settings on folders and files in your Home folder where your documents and personal applications reside.
    In Lion, there is an additional Repair Permissions application utility hidden away. This tool is located inside boot Repair Utilities. Here’s how to access it.
    Restart Lion and hold down the Command and R keys.    You will boot into the Repair Utilities screen. On top, in the Menu Bar click the Utilities item then select Terminal.
    In the Terminal window, type resetpassword and hit Return.
    The Password reset utility launches, but you’re not going to reset the password. Instead, click on the icon for your Mac’s hard drive at the top. From the drop-down below it, select the user account where you are having issues.
    At the bottom of the window, you’ll see an area labeled ‘Reset Home Directory Permissions and ACLs’. Click the Reset button there.
    The reset process takes a couple of minutes. When it’s done, quit the programs you’ve opened and restart your Mac. Notice that ‘Spotlight’ starts re-indexing immediately.

  • I can not download mac os x mountain lion in the apple store

    ¿No puedo descargar mac os x mountain lion de la apple store, ¿Que hago?
    La mac app store dice: "No se ha podido verificar el archivo de distribución del producto. Puede que esté dañado o que no esté firmado."
    I can not download mac os x mountain lion in the apple store, what should I do? The mac app store says: "Unable to verify file distribution. May be damaged or not signed."

    Carolyn Samit San Francisco Bay Area / Hawaii
    Re: i have tried to up date my OS to mountain lion but i get this messageThe product distribution file could not be verified. It may be damaged or was not signed. Aug 7, 2012 1:24 AM (in response to LiverpoolAdam)
    Quit the App Store if it's open.
    Open the Finder. From the Finder menu bar top of your screen click Go > Go to Folder
    Type this exactly as you see it here:
    /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration
    Click Go then move the NetworkInterfaces.plist file from the SystemConfiguration folder to the Trash.
    Relaunch the App Store and try downloading Mountain Lion.

  • HT1338 I recently purchased a new Mac Pro w/ mountain lion 10.8 and I am using my Apple 30 inch monitor.  When watching video or browsing certain websites, my monitor will flicker grey and sometimes lock up.  I figure it is the grphic crd or I am missn a

    recently purchased a new Mac Pro w/ mountain lion 10.8 and I am using my Apple 30 inch monitor.  When watching video or browsing certain websites, my monitor will flicker grey and sometimes lock up.  I am a video producer so this is quite frustrating...I figure it is the grphic card or I am missn a plugin or driver update? help!

    Maybe this will help:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1573
    PRAM reset: http://support.apple.com/kb/PH11243                       
    SMC reset: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3964  

  • Is there a way to run Internet Explorer on a Mac mini with mountain lion?

    I need to access a professional website that only works with IE (don't get me started on THAT) I need to do billing using this site so need to have full functionality.  Is there a way to run IE on my mac mini with mountain lion?

    The key takeaway here is that yes, you can access Windows 7 (and IE 9) from OS X Mountain Lion.
    The crucial question is about your workflow. If you need concurrent access to both Windows 7 and Mountain Lion, then the Bootcamp solution included with Mountain Lion would not be the right choice. You would need one of the virtualization solutions.
    If you need helpdesk support from a paid product, rather than entirely from a community forum, then the latest Parallel's Desktop or VMware would be a matter of choice, with Parallel's the better decision at this point. Either of these products are under $100, in addition to the cost of a Windows 7 license. You may need the Windows 7 installation media as an .ISO file, rather than on DVD. Check requirements.
    By example, I use Oracle's VirtualBox (free) on Mountain Lion, with a Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit guest. The interactive and network performance of this Windows guest are more than adequate on my 2011 mini. I assigned 3 GB memory and 2 of 4 processor threads to the Windows 7 guest. I also restricted guest CPU use to 80%. VirtualBox is installed on my SSD, but the Windows guest is on an external HDD. That is not a default configuration. There are multiple choices for display; from full-screen 1920x1200 (mine) to an isolated resizeable window, to seamless integration with OS X. The Apple keyboard, bluetooth devices (trackpad/mouse), and printer all are recognized. I also have a shared OS X folder with VirtualBox, and copy/paste integration.
    I use VirtualBox as it meets my support (forum) and functional requirements.
    Best wishes,

  • Mac OS X Mountain Lion Boot Drive Issues

    Dear Apple Users,
    This is my first post here on the Apple Support Communities, so kindly forgive me if I'm repeating a previously asked question.
    I'd like to create a Mac OS X Mountain Lion USB Boot Drive and of course I already have it installed on my MBP.
    My question is whether I need to buy the App from the App Store if I already have it installed on my MBP[in order to create the USB Boot Drive, I need .dmg ]? On App Store, price tag is still appearing, that's why I'm asking.
    Thanks in advance for all your help

    If you purchased OS X Mountain Lion to upgrade your computer, open App Store > Purchases, and download OS X Mountain Lion. When the download finishes, use Lion Diskmaker to create a bootable Mountain Lion drive > http://liondiskmaker.com
    If your Mac came with OS X Mountain Lion, you may not be able to make a bootable Mountain Lion drive until Apple launches a OS X update. That's because your Mac may be using a special OS X version that you can't get from the App Store, so you can only download it starting in OS X Recovery, and you won't be able to create an external drive with Mountain Lion

  • Photoshop elements 5.0 on mac OS X mountain lion?

    Is it possible to install photoshop elements 5.0 on my mac OS X mountain lion? I found a cd with photoshop elements 5.0 on which it said mac but when i tried to install it, some kind of error showed on the screen, but it was only after a little while.

    No way. This would require PPC code which Apple long have removed from OSX.
    Mylenium

  • Adobe Photoshop CS with mac os X mountain-lion?

    Adobe Photoshop CS is no longer running under mac os X mountain-lion. Are there any updates for this? I have the license number.
    Please reply, thank you.
    Greetings
    Angie

    No, there are no updates. It's simply not compatible. It's entirely Apple's decision to no longer support and provide the required system libraries. Signing up for Creative Cloud is pretty much your only reasonably cost-efficient option, if you want the "big" PS. Otherwise Photoshop elements might suffice...
    Mylenium

  • HT4463 Mac OS X mountain lion, its get freeze at 52 mb.

    i'm trying to download the Mac OS X mountain lion, its get freeze at 52 mb. what should i do to solve that please ??

    Assuming it is not a keyboard issue...
    Try to safe boot by holding down the "shift" key after you turn the computer and keep it held until you see an apple logo, spinning gear and progress bar.  Using safe boot will take longer than a regular boot.
    Then navigate to /Library/Prefrences/ and remove the com.apple.loginwindow.plist and lockfile.  For good measure you can remove the com.apple.loginwindow.plist from the ~/Library/Preferences/ folder as well.  Then restart the computer.  If neither of those work, go back into safe boot and enable automatic logon in the Users & Groups.

  • Host-based OpenLDAP Authentication On Mac OS X Mountain Lion

    Hello All,
    I'm sorry if this is the wrong group to post such a question, or if this has been already answered.
    I have openldap (slapd version 2.4.31-1+nmu2ubuntu8) running on Ubuntu Server 14.04. The 'hostObject' objectClass is added in the OpenLDAP directory. The 'host' attribute is added under all ldap users, which allows users to access just those particular hosts. Apple schema has been added as well.
    I have a ubuntu client that authenticates users against the ldap server. The ubuntu client is configured to perform host-based authentication via pam modules. Only users that have access to the Ubuntu client can login, and others are denied access. I also have a Mac OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.5) client that authenticates users against the same openldap server. All network users can login through the login window. I would like to restrict access to the Mountain Lion client based on hosts, as I've it on the Ubuntu client.
    I tried to search for documentation on this, but didn't find any good one. Most of the documentation suggest that network user access be controlled on the Mountain Lion client. I'd really like to have that control on ldap server and not on client. Also, restricting network user access using 'Users & Groups' settings in System Preferences fails. All ldap users are blocked from login.
    I have successfully tested host-based authentication on a Ubuntu Server 10.04 client that is connected to the same ldap server. So, I know host based authentication works. I would really appreciate if anyone could shed some light on this, or point me to a document that talks about host-based authentication on Mac OS X Mountain Lion client.
    Thanks,
    Amit

    I just found the anwer to my own issue. The installation failed on Jam Pack Content 3 disk. To finish the installation I need to go to the Logic Pro Main menu under the item Download supplemental content

  • HT1338 problem with the mac os x mountain lion update.

    i tried to install the update of mac os x mountain lion for macbook air 1,5 but it keeps saying waiting and i'm not doing anything else or can restart or shut down the mac.what do i do?

    Delete the applications for the rogue account prompting the updates. Delete the following file:
    ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.appstore.plist
    Triple click the path to select it. Right click (or control + click) the highlighted path and from the dropdown menu select services > reveal.
    Delete the file. Reboot. See if the problem persists.

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