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All replies
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Helpful answers
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Nov 28, 2015 5:59 PM in response to Terence Devlinby Karen in VA,Thank you Terence Devlin. I had the same problem and struggled for two hours before I came across your quick fix. All is well now.
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Nov 30, 2015 11:02 AM in response to Huxly647by Sarina915,Deleting GoogleMap files worked!
SOOOOO sad that we had to find out this way!
Amazing that you found out how to fix the problem
Thank you Huxly647
Huxly647 wrote:
I found a fix that works for me..
1. goto /Applications/iPhoto.app/Contents/Resources
2. delete the files ' googlemap.html ' and googlesearch.html
Iphoto no longer crashes, places doesn't work but it doesn't bother me too much.
Let me know if it works for you guys...
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Dec 6, 2015 2:53 PM in response to Sarina915by peaksea,the other thing that worked for me:
Open iPhoto Preferences.
Go to Advanced tab across top.
Go to "Look Up Places"
Select "NEVER" (and "uncheck" include location information for published photos)
Places still won't work, but you don't have to delete any files, and you don't need to migrate your older iPhoto Library into the newer Photos App that is now standard with El Capitan to access your photos.
I'm on a late 2009 iMac, running OS 10.8.5 and iPhoto '11 (9.4.3) -
Dec 6, 2015 6:16 PM in response to peakseaby peaksea,UPDATE: ok, so I've since realized that if you disable "Look Up Places" (as I wrote above), the app still crashes when you click on "Info" for a specific photo. But at least you can access iPhoto Library photos and edit them.
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Dec 6, 2015 7:30 PM in response to peakseaby carvermon,Yeah, I was going to break it to you after seeing your earlier post, but figured you'd find out pretty quickly that it wasn't a fix (my Look Up Places has been disabled for years). Deleting the google files definitely fixes the info problem.
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Dec 8, 2015 1:48 PM in response to raybluby DavidAbramson,Well done! I finally worked out it was to do with the Info pane (after many rebuilds of the library), and this has fixed the crashes. Why is Apple relying on Google, and why can't they be more proactive in posting fixes? I have lost hours on this stupid bug and come close to ditching iPhoto altogether.
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Dec 8, 2015 3:23 PM in response to DavidAbramsonby Terence Devlin,Apple haven't relied on Google for three years now, and the fixes are there if you update iPhoto - or if you had done before it was EOL'ed
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Dec 18, 2015 1:45 PM in response to Huxly647by Robby Baier,Hi Huxly
this totally worked for me. Thanks!
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Dec 20, 2015 3:03 PM in response to carvermonby daniel Azuelos,Do you have the same problem?
A lot of users seem to have the same behaviour of iPhoto 9.4.3.
It crashes as soon as you enter ⌘I (View > Info).
After a few crashes of this kind, iPhoto will start to crash upon opening.
Disconnect your Mac from the Internet.
If then, iPhoto is starting without crashing, and moreover lets you enter ⌘I (View > Info) on a photo
then you have the same problem as discussed here.
Irrelevant advice!
Since you proved yourself that iPhoto is working (once disconnected from the Internet),
then you can conclude that your iPhoto library is not corrupted.
The advice to rebuild it is useless, silly and dangerous.
Don't rebuild your iPhoto Library just to test, and waste your time and your trust.
Since you proved yourself that the actual version of iPhoto is working fine (once disconnected from the Internet),
then you can conclude that this version of iPhoto isn't the problem. You don't have to upgrade it.
The advice to upgrade iPhoto to check it fixes this problem is useless, silly and dangerous.
Your iPhoto library might become impossible to use with iPhoto you have on your other Macs.
Don't upgrade your iPhoto version just to test.
What to do?
Report every crash to Apple.
And if you are bored to fill such a bug report with no real feedback,
add as a humourous comment:
- My iPhoto library isn't yet corrupted, every thing is ok till now .
- Is this an advertising in disguise for next versions ?
Meanwhile, if you need to work with your iPhoto on your iPhoto library, just temporarily disconnect from the Internet.
This isn't dangerous. This doesn't risk to corrupt your iPhoto library. This doesn't risk to break your working tool.
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Dec 20, 2015 3:28 PM in response to Huxly647by léonie,Huxly647, have you seen this fix by cotton-x? Re: iPhoto 11 - Problems With Photo Locations
It takes your brilliant solution even further. Instead of deleting the Google files, cotton-x is patching them with a private key. This way the javascript inside does no longer use the expired Apple key, but a new, valid private key, and the Goggle Maps are working again in iPhoto 9.4.3 amd 9.4.5.
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Dec 20, 2015 10:40 PM in response to daniel Azuelosby Terence Devlin,There is zero point in sending bug report to Apple for a version of an App that they stop developing three years ago. The fix is simple. Update. It's free. Ditto when running an OS they stopped developing three years ago. Update. It's free. Then it's all even more pointless since they stopped developing iPhoto at all six months ago.
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Dec 20, 2015 10:47 PM in response to Terence Devlinby hairygoose,Terence - lighten up please. Its a bit bullish listening to you telling people to 'upgrade its free' in every response. People have their own reasons for not waiting at their keyboard for each new upgrade. All developers are very good at telling us whats new but they never tell us what they have taken away and that can be a real problem for some users.
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Dec 20, 2015 10:51 PM in response to hairygooseby Terence Devlin,My point is simple: that's Apple's answer. Telling people to send bug reports for a discontinued product is a waste of their time. It also gives people hope that there might, someday, be a fix from Apple for this out-of-date version of the app on an out-of-date version of the OS. There will not be one. Apple's solution is there now: free upgrades. If you don't want that, fine. But don't expect anything else.
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Dec 20, 2015 11:17 PM in response to Terence Devlinby hairygoose,It's not a waste of time at all - it tells Apple that there are still people out there using old or even out dated software. If Apple were really smart they would start asking why people CHOOSE to do this.
Take look at the App store reviews for El Capitain - more than 50% of the reviews last time I looked, rated that new release at 1 star with all of those reviewers expressing regret for taking the upgrade or recommending that you don't take it.
For me, updating Apple now is much more of a serious decision than it used to be, and never done without a full back up that I can roll back to when the update disappoints. There is always a useful functionality that is removed.
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Dec 21, 2015 12:01 AM in response to Terence Devlinby daniel Azuelos,Terence: there is a zero point in telling update is the solution to everything.
There is zero point in lying to Apple about existing bugs within really used softwares.
The proof is within any version:
- Functions are suppressed regularly, and hence bugs are removed.
- New functions are added regularly, and hence new bugs are added.
Security, quality isn't improving with such a process!
This is mathematically provable.
Why to pretend that tomorrow will be sunier than today when everyone can see how is today and heard the same promise everyday.
A commercial speach doesn't make a truth, doesn't make a trust .