filemaker pro 14 and mojave? - Apple Community.Filemaker crashing since Mojave update

filemaker pro 14 and mojave? - Apple Community.Filemaker crashing since Mojave update

Looking for:

Filemaker pro 14 os mojave free -  













































   

 

Download FileMaker Pro for Mac | MacUpdate.Compatibility with MAC OS "Mojave"



 

Another strategy, should you buy additional units, or require more storage, is to use external NVMEs Thunderbolt 3 compatible enclosure. Thank you jormond! This is valuable information.

All this is invisible to those who did not attend DevCon. One important learning: you can have problems, delays. Be proactive in your communication. People customers will support you in any way they can. The worst thing to do is keeping silent and leaving people in the dark. They don't have the time to do it in the Roadmap video, though it does show kind of where they are headed.

They are definitely in a hard place. They are being more transparent, and it's been great. At the same time, publishing the info that I was able to glean during presentations, and side conversations with FMI staff, requires a lot of time.

The more people they hire to what is essentially marketing, the fewer people they can have on the engineering team. So, for us, it's a toss up. We want more info, we want it easier to find, but we also want them working on bug fixes and new features to keep the platform moving.

I don't envy that position. We try to help as much as we can. They are open to sharing more with us, and being more involved watch the DIGFM recent meetup , but that won't likely happen until after this next release cycle.

As I'm reading the replies to this discussion, a pop-up appears on the screen:. As mentioned either in this thread or other related ones, we're living in the golden age of FileMaker as far as I'm concerned. They've never been more open about what they're doing now and what they expect to do in the future.

I can imagine that no one has boring days at FMI. Hope they will maintain a reasonable ratio between engineers and marketing workforce. My sports was rowing and we had this joke:. Boat race day. Boat 1 is manned by 8 rowers and one coax. Boat 2 is manned by 8 coaxes and 1 rower. Who wins? I salute them for having opened up. My guess is that communication can still be improved. Good points, I agree, but I wanted to add a few thoughts from how I have managed OSX on networks for companies in the past, mostly because you will be less stressed if you avoid it instead of fighting it.

I have managed MAC's on networks for years, really I do not release the newest OSX until at least 6 to 9 months after it has been released. I do this because I just do not have time to trouble shoot their inconsideration when releasing a platform that will not work with other applications they also own or for that matter a third party may own, not to mention any potential security threats that have not been found yet.

I have often thought that the new OSX releases should be bi-yearly with major updates to the existing ones yearly. Really IT should not be releasing any OSX or iOS major releases yet, they should still be testing them out in their own environment before they hit anyone else.

While I share your frustration that FileMaker Pro 17 isn't yet compatible with Mojave, I would like to make a few points:. I also use FMP 17 with Mojave, and it too seems to work fine. I had some initial issues with older plugins, but updates remedied that. I don't use Mojave on any of my FileMaker Servers, and have always been slow to update server OS anyway, out of caution.

I use high-end digital audio software Pro Tools on one of my Macs, which is still running High Sierra. Every time a new OS is released, Avid Pro Tools' owner company stresses that Pro Tools users shouldn't update until they've had a chance to certify that Pro Tools will work with the new OS, and if necessary, they release an update.

Pro Tools, like FileMaker, isn't yet certified to be compatible with Mojave. A little, but I'd rather know going in, instead of suffering through having to downgrade the OS. My guess is that FMI has hit significant obstacles which have prevented them from releasing a Mojave-compatible update; I assume they're vigorously working on it.

Even though Apple Inc. Having run a FileMaker hosting company for 20 years, and having been a loyal Mac user for 33 years, I've learned to be patient with OS updates and application updates. Nobody's going to die if I don't update a server's OS; nobody's going to be in danger if I don't upgrade a server box Because people spend money and get faster cars, faster internet, faster everything and expect to squeeze more life and action and professional results from a single minute, and this HW-SW combo just does not deliver it.

I think it is a stretch to put it out there as a universal fact, so it'd be good if we qualify these things and provide more specifics. The FM platform is just that: a platform. How it behaves is largely dependent on how we use it.

My experience is not that things are slower than before for instance. I think both you and your clients are really going to like FM on the new Mac minis. Lightyears ahead of the previous models in every dimension. I recommend working with them to upgrade their solution to FMS 17, to ensure maximum stability, security, and performance. Regarding pricing.

On the receipt, Macs and iOS devices are often more expensive than their counterparts, but there are so many other expensive variables in play. OS licensing, reliability, support hours, user satisfaction, etc. Many enterprise customers are starting to realize Apple's significant value for their businesses. Check out this report. Recently, IBM — who have deployed nearly , Macs in the past two years — have provided concrete data to support this claim. Plus, out of those tickets that are opened, only five percent of Mac users end up requiring an in-person visit.

PC boasts a troublesome 27 percent of tickets that require IT visits. While these stats are for the largest Mac deployment in the enterprise, the trend applies to smaller organizations who add Macs to their environment.

Heads are spinning! Apple's focus on security and privacy have a lot to do with the fact that Apple, Inc. Their workforce is massive, and the IP technology they protect is Apple designs it's products for end-users, yes, but at the OS and internal hardware level, they're designing much of the architecture for the enterprise.

Good question. Apple is doing their best to ensure MacOS, and other products offer the best in security, performance, and reliability. FileMaker too! I want to be a little careful because for the most part I thought that the OS wars were over. I get a little antsy when people try hard to convince me that one OS is better than the other.

I'm OS agnostic and will use the one that best fits the task at hand. An OS for me is not a life-style choice. It's a tool. So for me: heads are not really spinning. People tend to use what make sense to them. It's when we get dogmatic that we tend to skew things and use something outside where it fits.

I don't believe that corporations are evil or not evil. I do believe that they all have security front-most in their priorities these days and they all deliver that as best as they can. I may be reading the tone of this thread wrong but it seems to me that it is trying to prove that Apple products are superior in their security focus. Which is not something I subscribe to.

From what I see, all OSes are striving very hard to deliver security first. May be not everyone's cup of tea. It is not coincidental that leisure time became a luxury. The OS and application vendors have no choice but keeping an advantage in the race between system makers and system breakers.

And often enough, they have to catch up. This is live in the age of all things connected. Cranking out a major release every year with a batch of often immature new features is a questionable practise.

Different approaches are possible. In the consumer world this is not much of a problem and keeps sales figures up. In the business world which has significantly longer cycle times this causes problems and headaches. But who dares and makes the first step when the entire industry is riding that train? As a business owner and business consultant, it wouldn't hurt my feelings to slow down the release cycles a bit.

Declaring an annual release feels pushed, and in practice, releases come before they're fully baked. This is true of OS's and the applications we run on them.

I'm pitching for rollouts that are not crippled by artificial time constraints. Let's get the code stable before we throw it to at the users. I'm in agreement, to each his own. If only the millions of developers working on thousands of distributions of NIX, coding different packages all trying to accomplish the same thing could work together a bit more often. Where they do, more innovation, performance, and security, arises. Where they do, true innovation, performance, and security, arise.

That implies that anything else is false innovation, false performance and false security. Not trying to pick a fight here, but let's keep it clean and OS agnostic throughout. We're here to help people with the FM platform features. One of its most powerful features is that it is multi-platform. So we can each have our own favorite platform without being made to feel that we're ignorant because the other platform is supposedly better.

That would create an atmosphere where people do not feel like they can share safely. I edited the true to more as you were writing your reply.

It works much better! There've been discussions regarding Mojave compatibility, concerns about the disparity between MacOS and FileMaker releases, concerns regarding High Sierra compatibility with new Mac devices - all helped by knowledgeable participants, with great ideas, solutions, and opinions.

Do you feel ignorant, or unsafe in this thread's atmosphere? No Wim doesn't. We all have a responsibility to do our best to encourage open, constructive, discussion.

He was simply pointing out that saying one OS is better than the other doesn't do that. It would make Windows professionals who may have a client that is a Mac shop, a touch uneasy to ask a question. There've been discussions regarding Mojave compatibility, concerns about the disparity between MacOS and FileMaker releases, concerns regarding High Sierra compatibility with new Mac devices.

Yep, but none of that made any allusion to one OS being better than the other; which is where the tone of thread was drifting towards beyond the original scope of the thread.

I don't. But these threads serve a wide community of members, most of whom never ask a question or participate in a thread. But these threads get read a lot, so it is important to take a stance to be OS neutral, and if you express a favorite to make sure you qualify it as just that: your own opinion.

It's important not to postulate things in the absolute. And yes, we have opinions; nothing wrong with that. Expect them to be challenged. I think that Wim feeling ignorant or unsafe is one of the signs of the apocalypse. Unlike MS Windows, Apple is willing to rework the basement, release after release, year after year - if it delivers better security and privacy. I hear you, though I believe Apple is highly considerate in their efforts.

I have no qualms about the above statements. When folks have valid frustrations regarding Apple or FileMaker - be they about compatibility, hardware, or pricing, or when more pessimistic views are aired - and there are many, many such views in this thread - I'm going to offer solid solutions, ideas, and language in support of Apple and FileMaker efforts.

But let's be honest. FileMaker is an Apple company, this forum is served from Apple IPs, notification emails being sent from Apple email servers, and this server is probably hosted in an Apple datacenter. I'm sure the folks at FileMaker and Apple are comfortable with the 'tone' of my responses on this thread. This community supports great discussions about Windows and now Linux - which is fantastic. Multi-platform FM is an asset to the FileMaker community, developers and end-users.

It's wise. It's smart. It's probably the best way to leverage the modern enterprise - and encourage iOS device adoption. Same with Linux, my second love. Windows, er, not so much. But don't expect unfair critiques, or comments on Windows related threads. Wim, I respect your extensive contributions, breadth of experience, and standing in the community.

You rock. I'm an Apple technician, a developer, a solutions integrator, a salesman. This is who I am. I'll take your stance into consideration, and ensure my contributions are most meaningful.

Many MacOS improvements are security and privacy related. Unlike Windows, Apple is willing to rework the basement, release after release, year after year - if it delivers better security and privacy. Developer betas are available for a reason. Software developers that dedicate a portion of their resources towards compatibility updates for new MacOS releases make the release dates. MS Office, antivirus companies, Adobe - they really have no other option given the number of users they support, but a lot of the smaller developers, Agilebits, MacPaw, Panic, get it done.

Apple sure does keep the development community working, working, working. Not a bad thing in my opinion, they're always on to the next best thing! I have a personal policy of not trying any new MacOS update until someone else in my office tries it first. I'll pretend like Mojave doesn't exist until at least the first 2 patches. Apple should take note of what Microsoft has done with their developer previews and insiders releases because the risk of upgrading to a poorly tested OS is simply too great for many businesses.

Be polite. Everyone should feel comfortable reading Submissions and participating in discussions. FileMaker will not tolerate flames or other inappropriate statements, material, or links. Most often, a "flame" is simply a statement that is taunting and thus arbitrarily inflammatory. However, this also includes those which are libelous, defamatory, indecent, harmful, harassing, intimidating, threatening, hateful, objectionable, discriminatory, abusive, vulgar, obscene, pornographic, sexually explicit, or offensive in a sexual, racial, cultural, or ethnic context.

Post constructive comments and questions. Unless otherwise noted, your Submission should either be technical support or business question or answer.

Constructive feedback about product features is welcome as well. Just two of the points in "Section 2" of Community Use Agreement. While I do agree with those saying that we should expect problems, and then recommend to the bosses that they do not upgrade which I'm doing , our company is expanding rapidly and requiring new Mac laptops to be purchased. We are forced to be on the latest OS with all of the new people entering.

Our workaround currently is to have them open a Windows Remote session to use FileMaker which they dislike using in Windows , but at least there aren't UI glitches. I think might be a problem that FileMaker is stuck in the Java world. I'm guessing those UI issues are related to Java windowing issues, or is that a bad guess? The individuals concerned are laboratory technicians using two of our more complex database systems hundreds of scripts, some quite long.

We're watching them closely incase we need to move them to 16 or 17, but so far it's been okay. Just to offer a tiny datapoint. I'm somewhat puzzeled by the 'community use agreement', to be constructive. So, having Mac-users to work with remote desktop to a Windows machine is a good and effective way to run FileMaker 17!

We have customers who are happy to run FileMaker 17 on their Mac's under mojave with the workarounds available resetting the dialoges, etc. Let's do an example with Joe Doe, who has an issue with a software that costs him time to resolve. After having this for three times, Joe writes to the local support, in a not so nice way. Support reads that and says 'omg', rephrases Joe's mail and forwards that to the next level of support.

NL support reads that and feels not so happy with the wording, does some corrections and sends that mail to the dev. Dev reads that mail and is somewhat confused, asking a colleague. Colleague reads it and says 'oh, seems that it's an user from europe, he want's to say 'hi''. Plans are afoot to transition away from the Java environment over the next couple of releases. Clay mentioned it in one of his deep dive videos from DevCon.

Server side I believe. Around the 4 minute mark. He indicated that Java and the Tomcat implementation framework. They are moving to Node. Truly maddening. So, great finally Apple releases new Mac minis.

Oh, and great they moved the goal post from November to December. An update is planned for FileMaker Pro 17 Advanced in the December timeframe to address these issues. An update is planned for FileMaker Server 17 in December The timing and scope of these updates are subject to change at the sole discretion of FileMaker, Inc.

Keep in mind, there is a lot under the hood to deal with for this Mojave update. It is not trivial. I agree it is a hassle to deal with, especially if you have to purchase new Macs.

But the whole IT industry is having trouble with some of the changes. Even those companies that did have zero-day support have commented on the complexity and challenge of making the updates to work with Mojave. Much of it is security changes. Then yes, probably best to make a plan to get up to date and purchase v If just a single stand-alone, then is a good idea to keep fairly up to date so that you can benefit from the 'Upgrade' pricing rather than paying the full amount every few years.

You could probably get away with upgrading maybe once every couple of years rather than every year - depending on OS considerations and whatever older products are still eligible for upgrade pricing, as well as whether or not new versions as they come out have features that entice you. I suppose it depends on what you think your own time is worth. They refer to programs like FileMaker as "productivity software".

Success all around! Thank you. I was trying to open my old FMP14 files by directly double-clicking on them. Then I went back to the FMP14 file on my desktop, and double clicked on it.

This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Claris may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Claris can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficiency of any proposed solutions on the community forums.

I strongly suspect that there will be a similar link to High Sierra once Mojave is released, but for now you can find an icon for it in MAS on the Favorites tab and quite often in the header display.

Thanks for the link. I wrote it down, just is case. Note that I said recent versions of macOS. Share Facebook Twitter Reddit. Email Address. Notable Replies. So what are our options to continue running old software in Thanks again, Doug. Sounds like a plan. Many thanks, Doug. Thanks, Curtis. Interesting information. Maybe that would be an option once All of that is true. Screen Shot at Various laws around the world require us to tell you that fact, so consider yourself informed, if not nourished.

When I tried the link it gave me an enquiry to complete. In Code it said to say Hello. I put that in the box and pressed send and got the following reply. You missed a field or made a mistake. Please go back in your browser window and correct. Are you talking about the Link to get the downloads for the free trials of FileMaker Pro 17 Advanced? If so, I will post it again.

Let me know if it fails again. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Claris may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Claris can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficiency of any proposed solutions on the community forums.

Claris disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site.

 


Claris FileMaker Pro - Apple Footer



 

Special offer. See more information about Outbyte and uninstall instructions. FileMaker is one of the most go-to apps for web admins who want to add a database to their website or intranet — with literally one click!

It allows web admins to create customizable databases without any programming skills or third-party apps needed. However, some users have reported Filemaker crashing since the Mojave update. This is what lonestarbuc posted in the FileMaker community:. Since the update, Filemaker Pro filemaker pro 14 os mojave free will not open any files. Still crashes. The program itself will open, but when I try to open files, they crash.

Pro Tip: Scan your Mac for performance issues, junk files, harmful apps, and security threats that can cause system issues or slow performance. V14 seems to crash, V did crash under macOS Other users also reported having the same issue. And this is not a new problem. In a FileMaker community thread, user sccardais mentioned that he was beta testing Mojave The first issue involved importing from a spreadsheet causing the app to crash, and the second problem happened when he was creating new buttons in layout mode.

He also noticed that the FMP Script editor stopped working every time it was launched. Some users have also complained that FileMaker is always so late to the game compared to other developers, considering that FileMaker is a subsidiary of Filemaker pro 14 os mojave free.

While other developers filemaker pro 14 os mojave free already Mojave-ready, FMP is still stuck with the old versions even if the beta has been released for months. FileMaker Pro not working in the recent Mac update is not a new issue. It is also unfortunate that macOS is not designed to be compatible with old versions of applications.

FileMaker Pro /33158.txt and 12 filemaker pro 14 os mojave free totally unusable because the app crashed whenever the user did something with the app and the databases were unreadable. FileMaker Pro 13, on the other hand, was unstable and unreliable. Does FileMaker 14 work with Mojave? No, you need to upgrade again to the latest FileMaker Pro version, which we will discuss below. FileMaker crashing since the Mojave update has affected hundreds of users, prompting the company to release a statement regarding the issue.

According to the statement:. An update is planned for FileMaker Pro 17 Advanced in the November timeframe to address these issues. An update is planned for FileMaker Server 17 in November One sony pro 13 free bit number free the filemaker pro 14 os mojave free reported is when the Send Mail function launches the Mail app instead.

Other issues listed down by FileMaker include slow response when navigating Script Workspace and graphical issues during the button bar setup dialog, customizing the status toolbar and editing a custom value list.

The issues noted in FileMaker Server include the crashing web publishing engine and /33076.txt web server with PHP enabled. FileMaker was not able to provide solutions to these issues, so users have to wait for the promised November update to get everything sorted out. But before you do anything else, make sure to back up your files in case something happens. You also need to make sure that your Mac is performing at its best to avoid further детальнее на этой странице. Take note that some of these solutions might work for others and not for some.

If nothing really works for you, you can either wait for the official November update or upgrade your FileMaker Pro to the посетить страницу источник version to get rid of all these issues once and for all. Image Source: www. Your email address will not be published. Contents hide. Nothing New. Developed for macOS Special offer. Free Scan for Mac Issues. Leave a Reply Cancel reply.

   

 

Filemaker pro 14 os mojave free.FileMaker Pro



   

Thank you. I was trying to open my old FMP14 files by directly double-clicking on them. Then I went back to the FMP14 file on my desktop, and double clicked on it. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Claris may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Claris can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficiency of any proposed solutions on the community forums.

Claris disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the Claris Community Use Agreement. Search Loading. Register Login. Claris FileMaker. View This Post. July 22, at PM.

After upgrading from Mac OS What to do? Download Download. Show more actions. I'm on a Mac, so I have no "right click. And a wide array of templates, tools, apps, and training materials are at your fingertips on Marketplace. To inspire your imagination, here are just a few things you can do with FileMaker Pro:. Your business spans the cloud, on-premise systems, and even devices. And all of it has to work together for your business to thrive. Claris FileMaker Pro Unleash the power of the platform.

Try now with a day FileMaker trial Buy now. Explore our Claris FileMaker purchase options. FileMaker by the numbers. Technology for everyone.

Using FileMaker Pro, any problem solver can: Drag and drop to create layouts. Use built-in templates and add-ons. Run apps on Windows and Mac. Create mobile apps. Share apps on phones, tablets, and laptops. Make instant reports on the fly. Plays nice with others. The low-code platform has allowed someone like me to build a program that our business can actually run on. Got a business problem? Fix it with FileMaker. Campaign management Product catalog Membership manager Event planner Content library.

Case manager Customer surveys Training log Return processing Support contracts. Job tracker Inventory manager Barcode organizer Resource scheduler Equipment maintenance. The power of the platform. FileMaker Pro. FileMaker Cloud.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Windows 10 for Windows - Download it from Uptodown for free.