
I can find Thanksgiving 2008 in about 5 seconds (go to years, click about 11/12 of the way through 2008. pinch again to get the "years" view (mouse users need to click the back button in the upper left to see this). If you pinch on the trackpad you get the abbreviated "collections" view.

In the "photos" view you'll see all every photo organized by moments of when and where (where iPhoto would've created 7 events out of a week long trip, Photos combines them. Make sure to view the library in the "photos" department rather than the "all photos" album which provides no structure. Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub.If you like your photos organized chronologically, then Photos is awesome. That's why Apple specifically whitelisted it in El Capitan.
Handbrake for mac 10.11.1 install#
usr/local is a perfectly valid location to install shared libraries to. Osxfuse is not in /System, it never has been. Apple's been pushing things out of /System for years now … In almost all cases, the installers shouldn't have been writing there in the first place. You would need to temporarily disable rootless, create the directory, make sure the "restricted" flag ist not set, and re-enable rootless. From the osxfuse end there is nothing that can be done to fix this.

But the fact that the osxfuse installer fails to create /usr/local on your system is, at least from my point of view, not a osxfuse bug. There might be a bug in the El Capitan installer or it could be related to your system. I do not know what went wrong in your case. When upgrading from Yosemite (without the /usr/local directory) to El Capitan, /usr/local is created automatically, I checked. No useful error message, just that I do not have permission for the action.īy default /usr/local does not exist on fresh installs of OS X 10.5 to 10.10. So my conclusion was that there is a permission problem with creating the folders. I still do not have write permission to /usr.

The files are now where they are supposed to be, with SYSTEM being the owner. I did not have any such problems on my other Macs where I installed libdvdcss.pgk and OSXfuse before upgrading to El Capitan. The way I finally solved it was to install Yosemite on an external hard disk, started up from the external, set up Handbrake and OSXfuse on there, and use Migration Assistant to import a user with all his settings from that external hard disk (funnily enough trying to put the user onto the iMac FROM the external did not work). I tried to copy it over from a different Mac but again without success (as expected). I tried to create it via the Finder as well as via the terminal (trying su and sudo) but was told I do not have permission (even as administrator). I tried to directly copy libdvdcss.2.dylib to the /usr/local/lib folder but found that it did not exist. However some apps would no longer install, namely I could not install the libdvdcss.pkg (required by Handbrake to rip my copy-protected DVDs to my Mediathek), nor OSXfuse. Had some problems with Mail and iPhotos but solved them in the end. I upgraded my cousin's iMac which had MacOS X 10.6.8 Snow Leo installed straight up to MacOS X 10.11.1 El Capitan (yes, the new beta, and yes, might not have been the smartest move on my part).
