![]() “iMovie HD” can’t be opened because it is from an unidentified developer. Save it by holding the “command button and while still holding it press the “s” key or click file on the top and clicking on save either way works.Ħ) Now if you click on it you might get this message *Forgot to put this but if you have iMovie HD already installed, uninstall it first by going to the applications folder and finding “iMovie HD” and drag it in the trash OR click on it so that it is highlighted then hold the command button and while still holding it hit the delete key as well (either way works) it will disappear from your apps folder if done correctly.ġ) Download the File provided by clicking on the link (you might have to open a new tab and copy and past the link), once it is done double click on it and it and let it verify DO NOT CLICK SKIP (This verify’s that it downloaded correctly).Ģ) You will now have the “iMovie 6 HD” dmg mounted, click in it and it will have the “iMovie HD” application, “Applications” folder shortcut, “iMovie” folder, and “Application Support” shortcut folder.ģ) Click, hold and drag the “iMovie HD” application into the “Applications” folder shortcut once it has finished copying follow the next step.Ĥ) Now Click and drag “iMovie” folder into the “Application Support” shortcut folder, a message will probably show up with a message just click “Authenticate” if there is a folder already there click “Replace” (you will be required to enter your password) wait for it to finish before advancing to the next step.Ī) Right click “iMovie HD” and click on “Show Package Contents”Ĭ) Right click “ist” and open with Texteditĭ) Look for these two lines next to each other:Ĭhange 6.0.3 to 6.0.5 (simply delete the 3 and put 5) First off I highly recommend reinstalling using the files available, I too had the same problem you had where it would crash when I tried to reopen it later, without further ado Follow these exact steps: Sorry John for the late response but I’ve been kind of busy so let me help you with a step by step. :: Update 4/20/20 – removed this broken link – :: If you like you can download this two-line script file that will launch iMovie HD for you (assuming it is located as /Application/iMovie HD): You’ll get a bunch of warnings about deprecated API calls that will one day be removed (meaning iMovie HD’s days are still numbered). $ /Applications/iMovie HD.app/Contents/MacOS/iMovie HD Solutionįrom the Terminal, launch iMovie HD like so: I tried running iMovie HD from the Terminal to see if I could get any details about the error, and I was pleasantly surprised at the results. With an i386 binary it ought to be fine but apparently it is not. Applications/iMovie HD.app/Contents/MacOS/iMovie HD: Mach-O universal binary with 2 architectures: ![]() $ file /Applications/iMovie HD.app/Contents/MacOS/iMovie HD I am not sure why the Finder in Yosemite will not launch iMovie HD, which was around during the PowerPC and Intel transition and has a fat binary at its core. UPDATE, Nov 2015: Skip straight to Rolando’s comment below for the best solution yet. UPDATE, Sept 2015: Looks like this trick works in El Capitan too. I was delighted to discover a workaround that works, well, for now. The Finder gave me an error saying, You can’t use this version of the application “iMovie HD” with this version of OS X. I was disappointed to see that I could no longer run iMovie HD (available here) after upgrading to Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite. ![]()
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