- #Native instruments service center harddrive for mac
- #Native instruments service center harddrive install
- #Native instruments service center harddrive update
- #Native instruments service center harddrive upgrade
- #Native instruments service center harddrive pro
Plus there are updated versions of these. I know NI did a lot to support old libraries that were no longer supported by the developers when the old system was discontinued.
#Native instruments service center harddrive upgrade
That said, if you bought a car, drove it around a few miles every week to the grocery store and work, and it lasted you 10 years, could you really complain when it no longer starts? Especially when you didn't upgrade it when you were given a chance? And being just a hobbyist, I will never feel I really get my money's worth out of all the libraries I own. Although you could potentially export all the samples, you can't export the programming that makes them work well, such as the legato scripting. Even the Kontakt libraries could be a problem. Every time I buy a Sine or Spitfire player library, I take the chance it will no longer be supported. I can't help thinking it's going to hurt all users in the long run.This is something I do worry about. But abandoning them in favor of the mobile masses is a move I hate to see Apple make.
#Native instruments service center harddrive pro
I understand that pro users represent a tiny fraction of Apple's market. Sometimes I feel like Mac users are second-class citizens in the Apple universe.and pro users - sheesh, we're barely third-class citizens any more. I think the focus has shifted to mobile stuff. The days when each new version of OS X helped make that happen - quickly, in a user-friendly way - are long gone. It's still in beta, but I suspect it will be out before year's end.Įver since Tiger, I've pretty much skipped ever other version of OS X. I don't even want to think about the new system announced last month - now rebranded as "MacOS", not OS X any more. Nope.so many things were broken in El Capitan that I did a "Recovery" (Reboot+Command-R) and reinstalled Yosemite.
![native instruments service center harddrive native instruments service center harddrive](https://support.native-instruments.com/hc/article_attachments/205448825/KB4897_SearchTheGiantinUpdatesPage.png)
#Native instruments service center harddrive install
I figured that I might as well install El Capitan, right away, since I was going to have to go through the hassle anyway. I presume that Native Access is intended to replace Service Center.Ĭlick to expand.When I first got the new Mac Pro, it came with Yosemite. They're currently in beta testing for Native Access, an online management tool. I'm guessing that NI has no plans to fix the broken things in Service Center. The fix was to run the original Driver_101_Mac.dmg installer, install over the later version (v1.10), and then run the Driver_130U_Mac.dmg installer. I got the same "Failure" screen prompt shown in the first article you linked in your post:
#Native instruments service center harddrive update
That's the problem I encountered when trying to install the Driver plugin update (v1.30). But effects plugins have no such provision. As I mentioned in my initial post, Kontakt instruments can be located/relocated within Kontakt itself. It's particularly problematical when the installation failure occurs with a plugin rather than a Kontakt instrument.
#Native instruments service center harddrive for mac
But they're not there now, in the most recent version of Service Center for Mac (v2.6.0.137). The instructions in Service Center are bogus.Īpparently, at some point in the past, Service Center contained a Relocate button and/or a Locate button.
![native instruments service center harddrive native instruments service center harddrive](https://www.pmtonline.co.uk/media/catalog/product/cache/a1b28cf8fc4652b664c189b33cb20963/4/8/48461-167937---Native-Instruments-Maschine-MK3-2.jpg)
Your statement corroborates my own experience - namely, that the Locate (or Relocate) button doesn't exist. I would appreciate it if someone who knows where the answer is could point me toward it.Ĭlick to expand.So, we're in agreement. If there's an answer to this question, I haven't found it yet. But if anyone ever found an answer, they've never bothered to post it in a follow-up. Well, I've managed to change all the references one by one-at least for the Kontakt libraries-by opening Kontakt 5 in standalone mode and changing the library references as described in this article.īut that still doesn't answer the question, why is there no Relocate button in Service Center? When an installation fails, why does Service Center instruct the user to take action using a feature that doesn't exist?īy the way, I've searched the forum and found that I'm not the first user to notice that the Relocate button doesn't exist. The problem is that the Relocate button doesn't exist.
![native instruments service center harddrive native instruments service center harddrive](https://theme.zdassets.com/theme_assets/762840/7a438f8173d232c54d65ad0ab7ad879a785253e7.png)
Service Center says I'm supposed to be able to do that via a Relocate button, which allegedly is supposed to be accessible via the Overview tab in Service Center. I'm migrating from my Mac Pro 5.1 Quad-Core (mid-2010) "Cheese grater" to a new Mac Pro 6.1 6-Core (Late 2013) "Trashcan", and in the process I've upsized my dedicated Libraries-2TB internal hard drive to an external Libraries-4TB hard drive connected via Thunderbolt.Īs expected, I have to change all the references to accommodate the new name for the libraries HD.