Antarctic Peninsula, also called Palmer Peninsula, Graham Land, or Tierra de O'Higgins, peninsula claimed by the United Kingdom, Chile, and Argentina. Nov 6, 2018 - The Antarctic Peninsula Ice Sheet is the third ice sheet in Antarctica, but it is particularly dynamic and vulnerable to climate change, with. Antartic peninsula. The Antarctic Peninsula is the northernmost part of the mainland of Antarctica, located at the base of the Southern Hemisphere. At the surface, it is the biggest,.
Macworld reader Arthur is trying to download updates via the Mac App Store, but is stymied, because an Apple ID associated with the previous owner of the machine appears prefilled in the Sign In dialog and can’t be changed. He wonders what to do. IDG Apps purchased or downloaded with another Apple ID will persist in prompting you for that account’s password when they need to be updated. Apple associates app purchases with the account that made the purchase. This includes “free” apps, because such apps can have in-app purchases, which would also be associated. If you bought, inherited, were given, or found on the street a Mac that was previously owned and not wiped clean, you can wind up with apps installed that are registered to a previous user. Because it’s a design feature, not a bug, there’s no way to get rid of this without deleting all the apps that were purchased or downloaded under that other Apple ID.
However, when you update individual apps, the login for an Apple ID other than your own shouldn’t appear unless that app was purchased or downloaded by that other party. That could help you sort out which ones to remove. Or you could ignore updating those apps. This can be a real problem with apps like Pages and Numbers, which are free for everyone with a Mac, but are registered to a specific user. You should be able to delete them and then re-download while logged into your own Apple ID account in the App Store, and the apps should then be registered to your Apple ID. Ask Mac 911 We’ve compiled a list of the questions we get asked most frequently along with answers and links to columns: to see if your question is covered.
If not, we’re always looking for new problems to solve! Email yours to including screen captures as appropriate, and whether you want your full name used. Every question won’t be answered, we don’t reply to email, and we cannot provide direct troubleshooting advice.
When Apple released OS X Lion last year as the first Mac App Store exclusive version of OS X, they put an interesting feature in place that deleted the Lion installer once it had been run. The same is true of. We’ll tell you how to get that installer back – and keep it this time! To re-download Mountain Lion, simply hold down the Option key while launching the Mac App Store. Without letting up on the Option key, click the Purchases tab, and find OS X Mountain Lion in the list, then click the “Install” or “Download” button.
The Mountain Lion installer will now download once more from the Mac App Store. In order to keep the installer from deleting itself again (for instance, if you need to install Mountain Lion on multiple macs, or ), just move the installer out of the Applications folder, and store it anywhere else on your Mac.
How To Download App Store
Personally, I find that it is worthwhile to keep a copy of the installer somewhere accessible. You never know when you might need it! Make sure to for all of the latest updates, or check our category to see all of the latest Mountain Lion features, tips, tricks, and tutorials!