“Trashing prefs can make things worse in one case - plugins are cached and not verified by Pro Tools to speed start-up. On the trashing Preferences, Pete Gates, the maker of the excellent free PT Prefs app responded… Surely not connected? Any ideas? I've trashed prefs (made it worse) and ran first Aid on the boot drive.” A bit of software had to download, which it did. When I plugged it into my Mac I had a message come up saying that to connect my iPhone. The only thing that's changed is I upgraded my iPhone to iSO13. Now I have a few plug-ins that won't load because "they aren't valid 64bit" ? They have worked fine up to this point. Suddenly on booting up a session I had a AAE 7058 unauthorised plugin error. The thread on the DUC was started by Richard Spooner, back on September 21st, who posted… Thank you for your patience as we are working closely with Apple to address this issue with urgency. For the latest updates and information please visit the Knowledgebase.” Alternatively, you may choose to upgrade your macOS to High Sierra (10.13) or later to avoid the issue. If you have upgraded your iPhone or iPad to iOS 13 and are running macOS Sierra on your Pro Tools computer, please be advised to not connect your iPhone or iPad to your Mac until we have resolved this issue. If you connect your iOS 13 device to your Mac running macOS Sierra, certain plugins may become deactivated. “As we continue to work towards full compatibility with Apple’s iOS 13, we wanted to alert you to an issue we’ve uncovered with iOS 13 devices connected to Mac computers running macOS Sierra (10.12). In response to this article Avid has sent us this statement, which confirms the problem and supports our advice… UPDATE: Avid Issue Statement Regarding iOS13 and macOS Sierra There isn’t a definite fix yet but there are solutions that are working for most who try them, which Avid has now confirmed in a statement. If the client system has already updated to High Sierra and has converted to APFS the only way to revert this setting will require a reformat of the disk and a reinstall of the operating system.There is a thread on the DUC which is causing some concern for Pro Tools users running macOS Sierra 10.12 who when they upgrade their iOS device to iOS 13, causes problems with Pro Tools, throwing up an AAE Error -7058. The attached document will detail the process of installing High Sierra and suppressing the conversion of the system to APFS in order to continue to be able to use Deep Freeze on the client system without interruption. Systems running a magnetic disk, or systems configured as a Fusion Drive are not automatically converted and continue to use the existing HPFS+ based file system on the boot volumes. It is important to note that while converting to APFS is the default during the High Sierra install process not all machines are converted during the upgrade. For customers who wish to upgrade to High Sierra, and run Deep Freeze this document will detail a process for performing the macOS upgrade and suppressing the conversion of the file system to APFS While Faronics does intend to support AFPS in a future release of the Deep Freeze product we at this time cannot provide a timeframe for support. Deep Freeze does not support installation on a APFS based system and cannot be used on systems that have been upgraded to macOS High Sierra and converted to APFS at this time. Customers wishing to run Deep Freeze on a system running macOS with a APFS formatted volume should upgrade to Deep Freeze Mac 7.0.Īs of macOS 10.13 Apple systems running Solid State disks are, by default, being converted to use an updated file system called APFS on the boot disk. With the release of Deep Freeze Mac 7.0 this process is no longer required to support a system running macOS High Sierra, or Mohave. Posted by Adam Zilliax, Last modified by Adam Zilliax on 10 April 2019 12:01 PM
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