After downloading, instead of clicking the icon (the animal head), drag it into
Applications (on Finder). Then click it to install and open the program.
(Perhaps someone could add a note saying that to show when the icon is first
clicked)
--
yethu (via gimpusers.com)
_
>Computer: MacBook Pro
>OS: Mac OS X 10.6.5 Snow Leopard
>Processor: 2.26 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
>Memory: 2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
>Gimp will not open. I tried reinstalling it, but that didn't help. I tried
>reinstalling X11/XQuartz, logging out of my account, restarting
>my computer, but it still won't
On Sat, Dec 11, 2010 at 4:17 AM, Ofnuts wrote:
> On 12/11/2010 04:30 AM, Phillip Hatfield wrote:
>
> Computer: MacBook Pro
> OS: Mac OS X 10.6.5 Snow Leopard
> Processor: 2.26 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
> Memory: 2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
>
> Gimp will not open. I tried reinstalling it, but that didn't hel
On 12/11/2010 04:30 AM, Phillip Hatfield wrote:
Computer: MacBook Pro
OS: Mac OS X 10.6.5 Snow Leopard
Processor: 2.26 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
Memory: 2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
Gimp will not open. I tried reinstalling it, but that didn't help. I
tried reinstalling X11/XQuartz, logging out of my account,
Computer: MacBook Pro
OS: Mac OS X 10.6.5 Snow Leopard
Processor: 2.26 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
Memory: 2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
Gimp will not open. I tried reinstalling it, but that didn't help. I tried
reinstalling X11/XQuartz, logging out of my account, restarting
my computer, but it still won't open.
Michael Shumaker wrote:
>Drastic measures like this prevent learning. How about removing
>gimp-win-remote. exe from the plug-ins directory first?
neither this seems so useful for learning: ... will not give any hint about HOW
gimp remote went in the plugin directory.
I strongly suppose that