Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

Problem with 3.6.22 for US English downloaded disk image: corrupted

  • 2 respostas
  • 2 têm este problema
  • 6 visualizações
  • Última resposta de sfcheri

more options

I am currently running Mac OS 10.3.9 and Firefox 2.0.0.20. I stumbled upon the page

http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/all-older.html

which provides disk images for version 3.6.22. Somehow, my version of Firefox never got switched / updated to this version of Firefox automatically, which I would have expected to happen.

When I click on the link to download the Mac OS X US English version, I get a message that the disk image is corrupt. I thought the British might work, but it fails in the same way.

Is Firefox 3.6.22 incompatible with OS 10.3.9? Maybe that's the problem.

Thanks, Cheri

I am currently running Mac OS 10.3.9 and Firefox 2.0.0.20. I stumbled upon the page http://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/all-older.html which provides disk images for version 3.6.22. Somehow, my version of Firefox never got switched / updated to this version of Firefox automatically, which I would have expected to happen. When I click on the link to download the Mac OS X US English version, I get a message that the disk image is corrupt. I thought the British might work, but it fails in the same way. Is Firefox 3.6.22 incompatible with OS 10.3.9? Maybe that's the problem. Thanks, Cheri

Solução escolhida

Firefox 2.0.0.20 is the last ever release for Mac OSX 10.3.9 and earlier versions. Newer versions aren't compatible.

Ler esta resposta 👍 0

Todas as respostas (2)

more options

Solução escolhida

Firefox 2.0.0.20 is the last ever release for Mac OSX 10.3.9 and earlier versions. Newer versions aren't compatible.

more options

Well, that explains that.

Thanks.