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- #Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite for mac os x
- #Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite mac osx
- #Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite install
#Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite for mac os x
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#Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite mac osx
I think you have to enable ssh and scp on Mac OSX to get it to work. If you are using an older windows box (maybe you need to get some files off it), you can try "putty", which is just a graphic interface for the scp and ssh utility programs. Just google-search "ssh and scp" and read. You will need to spend some time learning Linux stuff (the programs and the various utilities), but it will be time well spent, if you plan to do any work with computers and modern devices. If you get a Raspberry PI or jailbreak an old iPad, you can put the same ssh and scp programs on them, and then share files (including big video and music files) using these same programs. There is a real learning curve here, but it is worth spending the time to climb it.
#Mac desktop video for mac os 10.10.5 yosemite install
Don't just blindly install stuff without understanding exactly what it is doing. I put a link to a site that explains this. You will also need to have the OpenSSH package, which may be installed as part of Cygwin. To get ssh and scp on a Windows-7 machine, you need to install the Cygwin stuff. If not, then maybe you have to download the "command line utilities" from Apple, which you can do, if you install the "Xcode7.2.1" C language compiler from them (it is free.) Google around and you can find a link. I think scp and ssh might be included on the Macbook. Or whatever number you need to use (this example is an IPv4 style number) So then, the 'scp' command becomes: scp myfile_here.txt might be something like 192.168.112.170 OR, start up a "Terminal" window, and enter "ifconfig", and look at what is says for "en1". On the Macbook, you can click the little wifi indicator, then select "Open Network Preferences", click "Advanced", click "TCP/IP", and get the IPv4 address of you Macbook. On a windows machine, you can go to CMD shell, and type: "ipconfig /all" to get the machine's IP address. Instead of SYSTEMname, you can also use the numeric address of the machine (in either IPv4 or IPv6). The little dot just means give it the same name. The syntax for scp looks like this: scp myfile_here.txt above command, which you enter in "cli" (command line interface) mode (basically just a terminal window or a Windows CMD shell), will securely copy "myfile_here.txt" over to the machine called "SYSTEMname", and put it into directory "/home/Myuser/filedir/". You can also use "ssh" (secure shell) to log into one machine from another. To make it seemless and simple, I've put ssh and scp on all of them, and just use "scp" to copy files between any pair if machines or devices. I have to share files among various Windows machines, the Macbook (running 10.10.5), and a bunch of different Linux boxes. I got here researching a floating-point calculation issues I seem to be having with the Mac, running some machine-learning software. I run Yosemite 10.10.5 on a 2013 Macbook.