![]() It fails complaining about not being able to write to "tmp". I can't remember which one I ran - sorry!. In my case it was S-VNX2_-021002MF-NSAEN-ALL_.dmg (148.8MB)ģ) Extract Installers/Packages/EN/Contents of ViewNX 2.mpkg to the desktop as "Xtract"Ĥ) Run "one" of the installers within the package. It wasn't easy, and I can barely remember the steps, but it went something like this:Ģ) Use Pacifist to open the DMG archive. My Mavericks to El Capitan upgrade destroyed my hard drive and I only had very old backups, so I just re-installed El Capitan on a freshly formatted drive. Hope everyone can follow this so you can carry on using El Capitan with Nikon software. Nikon needs to redesign the installer to work with El Capitan, but for now this is a work around. I'm sure it has to do with Apple redesigning EL Capitan's USB support. The problem with installing the Nikon software with Nikon's installer is the installer itself. I'm sure ViewNX 2 will probably work doing the same thing but I am using ViewNX-i now so I won't try it. So they work fine once they are resident in the system properly. I then tried CaptureNX-D and it also worked fine. After doing this I tried loading ViewNX-i in El Capitan and it loaded fine and worked without a problem. The next step I needed to do was copy the Nikon folder located in 'Library/Application Support' on Mavericks and place it into the 'Library/Application Support' folder on El Capitan. In order to get these to work in El Capitan I made sure they were working in Mavericks and then proceeded to copy the Nikon folder inside 'Applications' on Mavericks and then placed it into the 'Applications' folder on El Capitan. ViewNX-i is Nikon's newer supported version of ViewNX 2 and has replaced it as such.
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