pastrychef
Moderator
- Joined
- May 29, 2013
- Messages
- 19,458
- Motherboard
- Mac Studio - Mac13,1
- CPU
- M1 Max
- Graphics
- 32 Core
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
Catalina will surely put the final nail in the coffin on those old apps...
Catalina will surely put the final nail in the coffin on those old apps...
- Launch Hackintool and click on the USB tab.
- Find a USB 2 device and plug then unplug it in to every single USB port on your computer.
- Find a USB 3 device and plug then unplug it in to every single USB port on your computer.
- Click on the button the bottom of the Hackintool window to generate your SSDT and kext.
- Decide if you want to use the SSDT or the kext. (don't use both)
I just miss the old good days with Snow Leopard, that was great even on a normal hdd.
And I remember when I updated to Lion on my 2009 27" i7 iMac and got spinning wheels all time.
I think I remember that I replaced the dvd to another HDD just to have Snow Leopard to work, and Lion or Mountain Lion to sync iPhone and other stupid stuff.
Isn't it before 1. add USBInjectAll + activate the patches for your macOS version?
- Launch Hackintool and click on the USB tab.
- Find a USB 2 device and plug then unplug it in to every single USB port on your computer.
- Find a USB 3 device and plug then unplug it in to every single USB port on your computer.
- Click on the button the bottom of the Hackintool window to generate your SSDT and kext.
- Decide if you want to use the SSDT or the kext. (don't use both)
Isn't it before 1. add USBInjectAll + activate the patches for your macOS version?
And after 5. in case you're using SSDT keep USBInjectAll and remove the patches and in case you're using kext remove USBInjectAll and the patches?
Thanks, is there a preference between those two methods? I have an older Toshiba laptop which is having issues with waking up from sleep. To my knowledge I think everything is correct but it simply won't work. Wake ups lead always to a shutdown so I thought maybe I should try out the SSDT method...Yup.
Thanks, is there a preference between those two methods? I have an older Toshiba laptop which is having issues with waking up from sleep. To my knowledge I think everything is correct but it simply won't work. Wake ups lead always to a shutdown so I thought maybe I should try out the SSDT method...
Try windows first before breaking the hack. I did the same for weeks now, I really forced myself to use Windows instead of macOS since I dont like how Apple acts. I really tried it over month. Result is that I deleted the Windows SSD and use it as Backup for my Hack since the Hack is easier to maintain and runs better than Windows 10 ...or install or go to Windows.