At 7:47 PM -0800 1/23/2012, Joshua Juran wrote:
(ObQuibble: To support said uninstalls, the developer must hack
into those apps to see what's what. Unless they have permission
from the app's author, that's illegal!).
What do you mean by "hack into", and how is it illegal?
Most licenses pro
As for me and my iMac...
AppCleaner has been great for removing software:
http://www.freemacsoft.net/
AppFresh has been great for updating software:
http://metaquark.de/appfresh
Best Regards,
Patrick B
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On Jan 23, 2012, at 6:00 PM, Dan wrote:
>
> At 6:19 PM -0500 1/23/2012, Amato Michael J. wrote:
>> How about using a search "find" and spotlight
>> I've used both successfully.
Just make sure you search for the app name, publisher's name (keep it simple),
the company domain name (pref files (s
On Jan 23, 2012, at 1:07 PM, Dan wrote:
Cap'n Bob McBurney wrote:
What I want to do is have a reliable and stable updater for 3rd
party software that Apple Software does not update.
No such reliable beast. (see below).
I want software that will fully "uninstall" software I no longer use.
At 5:35 PM -0500 1/23/2012, Amato Michael J. wrote (in the subject
broken thread fork):
AppZapper's info and strong point is that it removes all material
associated with an app.
Insert here all the stuff I said about MacKeeper in the other thread
fork. AppZapper ONLY works on the apps it actu
As Kim requested, here are some of the problems I have with MacKeeper:
Until recently, MacKeeper installed WINE. I was asked to fix a Mac that
was running at a crawl, with frequent SBBOD, etc. Problem turned out to
be that WINE had taken over most of the CPU. This appears to have been a
common
How about using a search "find" and spotlight>
I've used both successfully.
On Jan 23, 2012, at 5:33 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:
There are, as a rule, only five places to look for program remnants
on a Mac:
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AppZapper's info and strong point is that it removes all material
associated with an app. I too have used it for years.
On Jan 23, 2012, at 11:08 AM, Harry A. Freeman wrote:
However if you install MacKeeper and use AppZapper to remove
MacKeeper there will be a lot of pieces of MacKeeper lef
On Jan 23, 2012, at 2:58 PM, Kim wrote:
> Gotta love bureaucrats with nothing to offer!
Dan just gave you a very concise explanation as to why this software a) doesn't
work well and b) isn't likely to.
There are, as a rule, only five places to look for program remnants on a Mac:
(Adobe and
On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 4:07 PM, Dan wrote:
> At 12:43 PM -0500 1/23/2012, Kim wrote:
>
> Kim...
>
> 1) please keep in mind that these LEM lists *require* that you post in
> PLAIN text. Your use of all but unreadable HTML blue whatevertheheck font
> that be is unacceptable.
>
> 2) While we don't
At 12:43 PM -0500 1/23/2012, Kim wrote:
Kim...
1) please keep in mind that these LEM lists *require* that you post
in PLAIN text. Your use of all but unreadable HTML blue
whatevertheheck font that be is unacceptable.
2) While we don't enforce bottom posting on these LEM lists, it is
*extre
I still recommend MacKeeper until I hear what problems Beverly has
encountered. It will, if you ask it to, give you a list of apps that need
updating and provides and provides one click access to download the
updates. It will also list applications from which you can then choose to
uninstall. it w
On 1/21/12 6:07 PM, Cap'n Bob McBurney wrote:
> I want to buy software to use as update and one that has an unistaller
> included. I'm running OS X 10.6 on a Mac Mini 1.86, core 2 duo, and 2 GB
> Ram. Are there any suggestions to software that would be good and stable.
> I have thought abou
• MacKeeper info [4 Updates]
Alex Sciortino Jan 21 04:17PM -0700
Beverly Woods Jan 22 08:11PM -0500
On 1/21/12 6:07 PM, Cap'n Bob McBurney wrote:
> I want to buy software to use as update and one that has an
unistaller included. I'm running OS X 10.6 on a Mac Mini 1.86, core
2 duo
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