Unable to Open Older Pics - "Photoshop 3 Required"

Running OS 10.10.4 on my Mac Pro


Work with iPhoto, Photos & Lightroom 6


Series of older pics (JPEGs) in separate folders can no longer be opened in Preview


Get a message that "Photoshop 3 is required"


Same thing occurs when the pictures are imported into iPhoto 9.6.1


Any suggestions greatly appreciated!


Thanks!


...John

Posted on Aug 4, 2015 10:26 AM

Reply
15 replies

Aug 4, 2015 11:25 AM in response to Old Toad

Did as you suggested. Set System to display extensions. Files showing as .jpg open OK in Preview ( & iPhoto - Photos)


But the problem files have no extension showing.


The Window above displaying after selecting "Change all similar documents" indicates that these are "8BPS" types


This is an extension for Photoshop documents; I have never used Photoshop.


No problems with 'current ' iPhoto, Photos or Lightroom photos; its the old ones I'd saved since 2001 in backup files that will not open.


I am perplexed. 😕

Aug 4, 2015 12:12 PM in response to Old Toad

Did as you suggested.


Preview unable to open files to which I added .jpg or .jpeg


Switched the extension to .8BPS


Went to 'Get Info' & noted the image is described as "Kind: Adobe Photoshop Document"


Set "Open with " to Lightroom 6


Clicked on "Use this Application to open all documents like this"


Don't have Photoshop on my Mac but did try Lightroom 6


Those files I added .8BPS as an extension to are not recognized by Lightroom and fall to Import


Frustrating!

Aug 4, 2015 2:34 PM in response to John Bonn

You cannot have slashes in a name in OS X. The underlying Unix system treats those as path separators. So it's looking for a file named White in a folder named Cool Shale, and that within a folder named Dirt. Photoshop CC won't even let you save a file with a / in the name for the same reason.


Change any characters Unix thinks are illegal in file names to a dash - , an underscore _ , or something else.


In OS 9 and earlier, the only character you couldn't use was the colon : , since that was the path separator. Unix, which underlies OS X, uses more symbols to denote functions, so they can't be used as plain characters. Avoid these characters:


Forward slash /

Backslash \

Pipe |

Colon :

Semicolon ;

Plus +

Period . (At the beginning of any folder or file name. Elsewhere is fine).

Comma ,

Less than <

Greater than >

In OS X's earlier days, you could not use /, | or \. If you managed to get one of those characters into a name, other apps, or even the OS would tell you it didn't exist since / and \ are path delineators, and the pipe | is a command to pass the proceeding argument to whatever command comes after it.


Apple has since made it possible to use these characters in a file name, but it's still not a good idea. I've still run into the occasional app that doesn't know what to do with a file or folder that has those characters in them. Such as foo/bar.tif It thinks you have a file named bar.tif in a folder named foo, which it can't find because the folder of course doesn't exist.

Aug 4, 2015 8:27 PM in response to Old Toad

They are old iPhoto pictures from the years 2001 - 2005 that I had kept in separate folders for adding as email attachments etc.


As per Kurt's suggestion, I did change the names so that no slashes etc appear in them - same result - when I attempt to open them in Preview, iPhoto, Photos or Lightroom 6, I get the "Photoshop 3 is required to open this" message in 7 languages.


Interestingly, when I add the extension .8BPS to an image, the 'Get Info' window identifies it as an Adobe Photoshop document but Lightroom cannot open it.

Aug 5, 2015 3:38 PM in response to John Bonn

I goofed above (was just typing what I saw). 8BPS doesn't exist as a Photoshop creator code. It was 8*** (short for 8 Bit Image Map). Which still is useless as an extension.


It's hard to say what format those files are, but I would guess they should be .psd . Sometimes, you can drop the files onto TextEdit and find out what they are. Since the files are binary, most of it will display as gibberish. But there's always some clear text in them. With any luck, you can find a phrase that tells you what type of file it is.


If they're all from Photoshop, they're all going to be a raster file of some type, but then it's knowing which one. Use the wrong extension, and Photoshop will tell you the file is damaged, can't be parsed, or something.


The most common ones from back that far:


.tif - TIFF

.jpg - JPEG

.psd - Photoshop document

.gif - CompuServe GIF

.eps - Photoshop EPS


Actually, those files should still have their Type and Creator codes. So if you look at those, the Type will tell you what each one is. File Buddy is a very useful tool for many file and folder functions. I believe it will run in demo mode for many options. Launch the app and choose File > Get Info. Open one of the images you have without an extension. Here, I opened a TIFF. I already knew that's what it was by the extension, but the point is File Buddy shows me the Type and Creator codes.


User uploaded file

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Unable to Open Older Pics - "Photoshop 3 Required"

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