Toast Titainum 10 problem

LeoTheLion89

Registered
i installed Toast and it is version 10.0 it says update is available so i download it when i go to install it (10.0.9) to the Applications Folder is says its a OLDER version being copied once i install it and reopen TOAST is askes for my product key all over again except when i enter it i am unable to use it as once its entered the continue button is not clickable.
 
When I see that a product key, or registration code, isn't accepted - the greyed out Continue button is a clue - that may mean that the registration code that you have is not valid, or you are typing it incorrectly.
If you got Roxio Toast as a "free" download - you may find that the crack code is only for that download, and doesn't work with a Roxio update, as it would be looking for a legit code.

If you did purchase your Toast software, then you may need to contact Roxio for help with this, or search through Roxio support articles. There may be something there.
 
since Ubuntu on Macs limit me to less software that Mac OS X has i was wondering if its possible to run Mac OS X programs on Linux since Linux and OS X are both UNIX
 
since Ubuntu on Macs limit me to less software that Mac OS X has i was wondering if its possible to run Mac OS X programs on Linux since Linux and OS X are both UNIX

Oh, no you di-int!

Linux and UNIX are about as similar as a banana and the history of dinosaurs during the Jurassic period.

They are not "binary compatible," meaning you can't take a program you compiled on a Linux machine over to a UNIX machine and run it. It won't work, just the way trying to execute a Windows .EXE file on a Mac OS X machine won't work. You would have to recompile the entire program completely, dealing with dependency headaches, differing versions and architectures of libraries, and differing PATH/folder structures. Some things not even ./configure can help you out with.

Mac OS X is FreeBSD UNIX (or was, at some point). Ubuntu is Linux (a mere singular flavor of Linux, that is). The only similarities they share are that there's an 'x' in the name and that people commonly confuse Linux and UNIX (thinking that they're the same), and mistakenly think that Mac OS X is Linux.
 
Install all you like.
You will discover that .exe files have not changed. They continue to be Windows executable files, and cannot run in OS X.
 
well i know OS X aint Linux but actually you CAN install EXE files on Mac OS X

...but that does not mean the two architectures are "binary-compatible," because those exe files must run under some kind of compatibility layer, which simply does instruction-conversion on-the-fly, or if you consider virtualization, which can be done on just about any architecture meaning I can run an exe on anything.

You cannot natively "install" an exe on Mac OS X.
 
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