![]() ![]() Reverting from Time Machine should restore the earlier version, yes. Updating from the App Store WILL overwrite your version of Logic with the newer one. Just knee-jerking on a pet peeve: A backup can ALWAYS go wrong. I hope it's still available to get it's been a while I think since it came out.ĭoes that overwrite the Logic I have now? hopefully no and I'll first try that OS - Logic Combination. ![]() I'm going to update to that OS I mentioned in the store. The time machine SW creates just one file I believe that can then be clicked on to revert back? That will be on my external drive OK, I'm doing a time machine backup to an external drive. Hey thanks so much I really appreciate it. Just as a reference point of what sort of backwards compatibility you might be able to expect. I've just tested 10.4.8 on a new M1 MacBook Air running Monterey 12.5, and everything appears to be working just fine. Note that saving a file with the newer version generally means that the older one will refuse to open it, so BE CAREFUL AND WORK WITH CONSTANT BACKUPS.Ģ.) You can just copy the Logic Pro X.app to a different machine to test drive it on that system. (I rename the older versions with the version number.) Then you can run the App Store update to get the latest version. Right-click on the Logic icon in Finder and "Compress Logic Pro X.app" to create a. You can keep multiple versions of Logic on a single machine. I need to work with an older Logic version to create files for a stage machine running an older OS. I can't say anything to your specific combination, but I'd like to weigh in:ġ.) You can have multiple versions installed.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |