2. You also want to update your Logic Pro to a higher version, but not the latest version of Logic Pro, which requires an OS that's later than the one you upgraded to. Example: I had Logic 10.6.3, and I updated my OS from Catalina to Monterey. The latest version of Logic is 10.8, which requires Ventura. So I just want to update to Logic 10.7.9, the latest compatible with Monterey.

3. You went to the App Store, and there's no update option, because only version 10.8 is offered, and you need Ventura for that. And you're thinking, "is it too late to get 10.7.9? Am I stuck with 10.6.3 until I update to Ventura?"


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Also I have noticed the following "quirk" about the App Store. If you have some application installed that requires a newer version of MacOS in order to update it to the latest, but the version you actually have installed is not the very last possible version that you are able to install, the AppStore will not tell you that. It will not have an update button available at all. but if you remove the app and then check the App Store, the "get" button will be shown and if you click it, it will then tell you that you can' get the latest version, but do you want the last known good version for you, and if you say yes, then it will update the last version that will work for you. The key is to remove that app from your system first (or compress it into a zip file) and then check App Store to install it as new.

For Example, Let's say you have currently installed LogicPro 10.7.8 on your system and your system is Monterey. You go into App Store and it basically doesn't have update option for you because Monterey doesn't support LogicPro 10.8. But you know 10.7.9 is up there somewhere. If you remove LogicPro and then go to App Store to get it as a new install, it will ask you if you want the last known update for you is and confirm that then 10.7.9 will be installed.

I think App Store is just smart enough to know that your older MacOs can't update to the very latest and greatest version, but not smart enough to know that you currently don't have the latest and greatest for your version of MacOS. But do as I suggested and you'll have it.

All updates have been solid up until now. Mixing a couple of songs and one keeps giving me crackles in some spots when bouncing, can't figure out why, and the other has an issue with one of the Unfiltered plugin which is kinda crucial.

Just keep a copy of the older app version until you're sure you won't want to go back. Or restore it from your backups. If you want to keep a particular version of a file, or app, just save a copy somewhere, or rename it to include the version number before upgrading. It takes seconds to do, and then you have the power to run whichever version you want, at any time.

It's flaky. My most-used third party plug-in stopped working which took down the whole program; took me hours trying to work out which plug-in it was that was borking it and still isn't working. There are so many weird things like when you click on a MIDI note, the editor part of the screen shuts down, the snip tool randomly works then doesn't for no clear reason, it crashes even more than usual, I regularly have to reboot it because it slows down to a snail's pace until you reboot the program. 10.7.3 worked basically OK other than ocassionally just shutting down with no warning.

I strongly recommend having system backups, as otherwise, if your computer fails to work or something is broken (or dies), you can't quickly get back up and running without having to basically trash the system and reinstall everything from scratch.

I launch programs with that pop up menu at the bottom of the screen that appears when you hover the mouse over it. I think you can also launch by using file explorer and clicking on the applications shortcut the left hand side to bring them all up as if they're in a directory. Maybe you can do that and make a copy from there?

I think it has to be, was working fine until I updated to 10.7.4, so I fail to see how it can be anything but. What hardware are you running on? You on Intel still? I'm on ARM, so it's possible it's only crappy on that I suppose!

I think it has to be, was working fine until I updated to 10.7.4, so I fail to see how it can be anything but. What hardware are you running on? You on Intel still? I'm on ARM, so it's possible it's crappy on that I suppose.

I don't know what pointing device you are using. With a mouse, you click the right button. With a trackpad, it depends on how you have it configured. Either way, you can also do a control-left click instead of a right-mouse button click, which will give you the same menu, or use the key commands command-C and command-V as an alternative.

I also have zero problems with 10.7.4 (also on ARM), and find it to be better overall than 10.7.3. I also don't recognise the problems you are having, but by all means, try out the previous version and if that's better for you, stick with it...

I was meaning, on that animated GIF thing you posted above, how did you get to that screen. I realise how to right click :D, it was just I couldn't work out how to get to that, but I think it's this:



I'll try running in native mode and see how it goes, but previously, with 10.7.3 I was finding that as soon as you ran any plugin that needed Rosetta the system and therefore the music would stutter and it became unuseable.

Sorry, I was just responding with "how do you get to that right click thing". It's difficult to know what to assume about someone's knowledge. Applications are stored in your Macs applications folder, as you've seen, and that's where your Logic application is.

I am currently collaborating with someone who is working on an older version of Logic (10.4.4, running on OS Sierra) and we are looking for a way to transfer Logic projects easily back and forth. Since we are in the middle of a big project so a complete upgrade is out of the question, so I was thinking if there is a way for me to have two versions of Logic on my computer (my current one and an older one which would open on his computer), and use the older version when we are working on a joint project.

Just for clarity: I hope you are not copying the 10.6.3 version of the app, renaming that to 10.4.8, and expecting it to magically turn into the 10.4.8 app. You do actually need the 10.4.8 version of the app. (This may seem obvious, but sometimes it's difficult to know whether someone is following along or not...)

Also remember that double-clicking a Logic project will continue to open it in whatever the default Logic application is, likely the latest version on your system. You need to actually manually run an old version, and load the project into it, as the OS doesn't know you have multiple versions of Logic and correctly pick the one you want it to open in.

When you say "You do actually need the 10.4.8 version of the app" - how can I "have a version of it" on my computer if I am already on 10.6.3? I don't assume that simply copying the app icon from my collaborator's computer would work... and if not, is there anywhere to get download links for previous versions?

The standard practice is to keep your old versions as you upgrade (or retrieve them from your backups), as Apple don't easily allow you to download old versions. I choose which versions to keep, and which to archive away, and always make a copy and squirrel away a new version update.

I have used GIT in programming and it works very well, and is easy to use too. It works great for collaboration, which I find interesting as I may send a song to someone to do some work on and it would be a handy way of merging sessions and being able to jump back easily to a previous session. Also it would be awesome to be able to work with teams of people in remote locations ... but I have read somewhere that it doesn't work well with audio and this has put me off the experiment myself so I thought I'd better ask for other peoples experiences first. 152ee80cbc

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