Drag Minecraft to your Applications folder to install it.
For this reason, a DMG is often the file format used to store compressed software installers instead of having to use a physical disc.
A file with the DMG file extension is an Apple Disk Image file, or sometimes called a Mac OS X Disk Image file, which is basically a digital reconstruction of a physical disc. To install from a.dmg file you usually do the following: double click the.dmg to make its content available (name will show up in the Finder sidebar), usually a window opens showing the content as well. A.dmg file is kind of like an USB stick in a file and can be handled more or less the same way. From the Image Format drop-down select read/write then click Save. In the Save As field enter a name for the file like myapp.dmg. File - New - Disk Image from Folder or CMD+SHIFT+N Select the folder myapp.app/ when prompted then click Image. This article on the same issue with Photoshop Elements has instructions: ize-some-devices-mac-os-10-1.Creating a 'DMG installer' for OS X. There is a workaround for some Android-based devices, you can change the device mode from PTP/MTP to USB mode/Mass storage mode (see instructions on how to do this from your device vendor).
Applications and third-party drivers for vendor-specific USB devices may require modification." I know of many alternatives, but it would be nicer if my camera was detected again.Īdobe has discovered that Bridge CC with Mac OS 10.11 (El Capitan) doesn't work with many USB devices to import images (iPhone included): Īpple has stated: "The USB stack is completely redesigned to increase stability and performance compared to Mac OS 10.10. If any expert has any ideas, please shoot. I have reported this to Adobe (Photoshop Family), but wanted to report it here as well.
As I had made a full clone before upgrading from Yosemite 10.10.5 to El Capitan 10.11, I could easily reboot in Yosemite, and try the same. Or Lightroom 6.1.1, that also found my camera immediately.īut I wanted to know where the problem exactly was. Or even the Canon software (EOS Utility).
I know there are alternatives: Image Capture had no issue, neither was the use of a card reader in combination with the same Adobe Bridge a problem. I tried my iPhone, but that was not detected either. That can be Adobe Camera RAW, between Bridge and Photoshop CS6, Lightroom 6.1.1 (I have not yet updated to 6.2, because the import function has been revised), DxO OP10, or even Aperture 3.6 which still functions as designed.Īny way, great was my surprise when I quickly made a few shots yesterday, and wanted to upload (through Bridge CS6/Get Photos from Camera) so I could start working on them. Serious postprocessing will be done starting from the RAWs using a RAW converter of choice. I then separate the RAWs (CR2 files from my EOS 7D) from the JPGs and import the JPGs into Photos, just for quick viewing, etc. As Photos makes no distinction between RAW and JPG (I shoot in both), I changed my workflow to first download all images from my camera to an external HD, using Adobe Bridge CS6/Photo downloader.