Photoshop CS2 started freezing upon opening images…now cannot even reinstall…

CH
Posted By
Christine_Holzmann
Aug 3, 2006
Views
131
Replies
2
Status
Closed
Hi all, I am REALLY in a crunch right now. Photoshop suddenly started freezing when I tried top open or save images. I have now removed the program (after deactivation) and am trying to reinstall. But I cannot even get through the installation as a message keeps popping up right at the end of the install telling me that "Am error occurred during the installation process: a required file is missing". I have NO idea what this is as this has never happened before. I am on a G5 Tiger 10.4.7, 4 GB RAM, 160GB HDD with 120GB available. All the latest software is installed. Whatever could be going on? PLEASE advise me….I am on deadline and in a tight crunch…

MacBook Pro 16” Mockups 🔥

– in 4 materials (clay versions included)

– 12 scenes

– 48 MacBook Pro 16″ mockups

– 6000 x 4500 px

CH
Christine_Holzmann
Aug 3, 2006
Okay…I managed to get it working somehow…I repaired permissions on my Mac, and just prayed really hard…then copied my old photoshop app and all the prefs files back (I had made a backup copy onto a 2nd hard drive) and somehow it is working again now (after a painful couple of hours NOT working earlier). I am just completely baffled as to why I was not able to install it. That really worried me. I had even tried 2 differeent Photoshop installer discs in case the one was damaged.
R
Ram
Aug 3, 2006
I still advocate Repairing Permissions before AND after any system update or upgrade, as well as before AND after installing any software that requires an installer that asks for your password.

I have seen software installations go sour because the installer did not find everything as and where it should be.

I have also seen software installations go bad because the installer did not clean up after itself properly and did not leave everything as and where it should be.

This is just my own personal opinion and practice based on my own observations. Others may disagree and that’s OK. I can only base my routines and my advice to others on my own experience and conclusion. I don’t pretend to know why others believe otherwise.

Repairing Permissions after the fact (i. e. not immediately before and after an install) may NOT help.

====

Additionally, if your machine does not run 24/7 so that it runs the daily, weekly and monthly Cron Scripts in the middle of the night as intended by Apple, run Cocktail (shareware) as well.

Cron Scripts are maintenance routines designed by Apple to run on a daily, weekly and monthly basis in the middle of the night.

If you don’t run them, you WILL run into trouble, sooner rather than later.

Here’s an excerpt from the Apple tech doc <http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107388>

Mac OS X performs background maintenance tasks at certain times if the computer is not in sleep mode. If your computer is shut down or in sleep at the designated times, the maintenance does not occur. In that case, you may want or need to run these manually.
Mac OS X periodically runs background tasks that, in part, remove system files that are no longer needed. This includes purging older information from log files or deleting certain temporary items. These tasks do not run if the computer is shut down or in sleep mode. If the tasks do not run, it is possible that certain log files (such as system.log) may become very large.
Also, from: <http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106978>

The disk activity generated by find is a normal part of file system maintenance, used for tasks such as removing invisible temporary files that are used by the system. It is scheduled to occur early in the morning at 03:15 everyday, 04:30 on Saturdays, and 05:30 on the first day of each month.

Must-have mockup pack for every graphic designer 🔥🔥🔥

Easy-to-use drag-n-drop Photoshop scene creator with more than 2800 items.

Related Discussion Topics

Nice and short text about related topics in discussion sections