Just make sure your USB drive is already formatted correctly before proceeding. If you're more comfortable with Terminal commands, this is the method for you. If it's more toward the latter, you might get a " AppleEvent timed out" error, but it should still work, according to the developer (it worked for me). It could take anywhere from 15 minutes to to 45 minutes to finish, depending on your USB flash drive. Because it can be very expensive and time-consuming to remove program code, those functions are only deactivated, not deleted, and we have another “sleeping” feature.Then just follow the rest of the prompts to start the disk-making process. However, superiors or the marketing division might later decide that a feature is “too advanced”, “not needed by most users”, or “doesn't look right”. In some cases they “play” with some features or need them for temporary testing purposes. For this reason they prepare or implement many features without a direct order.
Those features are documented to developers or to professional users which read the technical manuals of macOS.
the preference to show hidden and system files in the Finder, are official features of macOS but Apple intentionally does not disclose them to normal end users.
Mac OS X Server 1.0, Mac OS X Public Beta, and Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah are no longer supported by current releases of the TinkerTool product series.Ĭould you please add feature “X” to TinkerTool?.
For Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, use TinkerTool Classic Generation 2.For Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, Mac OS X 10.7 Lion and OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, use TinkerTool 4.For OS X 10.9 Mavericks, OS X 10.10 Yosemite, and OS X 10.11 El Capitan, use TinkerTool 5.For macOS 10.12 Sierra and macOS 10.13 High Sierra, use TinkerTool 6.The program with the standard name TinkerTool is always designed to be compatible with the latest official versions of Apple's operating systems. For macOS 10.14 Mojave and macOS 10.15 Catalina, use TinkerTool.However, in order not to overload TinkerTool with dozens of styles for all the different generations of macOS and to be able to support the latest interface features of the OS, there are currently five different applications in the TinkerTool series, designed for five basic product generations of macOS: TinkerTool uses unique technology to automatically adapt its user interface to the operating system version you are currently running. Versions of TinkerTool are not directly related to versions of macOS.