When you decompress the dmg file, what do you get, the program itself, a
package, or an installer? It should just be the program. Drag it into your
applications folder, then launch it from there. If the system won’t let you,
there’s a work around. Let me know.
Ross
> On Jan 30, 2019, at 4:22
Yes, then I go to my security settings and say ok and it will open but not
install. So I have to run the dmg everytime.
Mark Martin
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jan 30, 2019, at 3:14 PM, Ross Martinek wrote:
>
> Are you getting a message that says the software is from an unrecognized
> developer
Are you getting a message that says the software is from an unrecognized
developer?
Ross
> On Jan 30, 2019, at 11:52 AM, Mark Martin wrote:
>
> I have the dmg downloaded and it will run and open but not install on my
> MacBook Air, High Sierra. Any suggestions?
>
> Mark Martin
> Associate Pa
Rick,
GIMP 2.8.x is 8-bit not 16-bit capable. To get 16-bit capability you
need the new 2.10.x version. That's what I have and it does, in that
dialog, have options for bit-depth (including Endian options).
Guy
On 1/30/2019 1:35 PM, Rick Kline wrote:
Hi,
Starting a new thread instead of ge
Hi,
Starting a new thread instead of getting this one lost in the last conversation.
Thanks for the suggestions, Liam and Guy. I was at least able to access the PDS
(NASA’s Planetary Data System) .img image in GIMP 2.8.20 (!) by changing the
image file type to .data.
Unfortunately, there’s no
Thanks, Guy.
Ha ha. No big deal re: the job. I only did it for 30 years.
I’m capable of doing command line stuff, but not a huge fan. Ran into an error
trying to install UFRaw and ground pretty quickly to a halt.
I did send Emily an email telling her that I was able to open the Phoenix .img
i
LOL
It pays to make no assumptions about folks one meets online (in forums,
Twitter, etc.)
Rick Kline
Data Manager (ret.) <-- !
Spacecraft Planetary Imaging Facility, Cornell University <--
Indeed :-)
I followed Stave Liam's method and it does mostly work (using Emily
Lakdawalla's test ima
Thanks, Liam,
I like the “change the file type” method best, because there’s no messing with
the contents. Easy enough to find header size (offset) - look at the file info,
Lines x Samples x bytes (16 bit image = 2 bytes). Subtract result from actual
file size and you have the header size.
In
I have the dmg downloaded and it will run and open but not install on my
MacBook Air, High Sierra. Any suggestions?
Mark Martin
Associate Pastor of Children and Family Ministries
*Memorial Baptist Church*
1634 Paris Rd
Columbia, MO 65201
573-443-1408
___