Thanks for the video. Up until now this worked in Terminal I found a while ago in forum. "sudo softwareupdate -i -a -R". Even though I successfully upgraded now using the method you demonstrated I had a Safari update after I logged in and when I clicked update its said I have to be the owner. After an expletive because I am the owner of course, I used the CLI command and I'm finally fully updated again. Thanks again for your suggestion. I hadn't tried it until your video showed exactly what I was having a problem with.
Great fix. It's working thus far. Thanks
Thanks for the video. Up until now this worked in Terminal I found a while ago in forum. "sudo softwareupdate -i -a -R". Even though I successfully upgraded now using the method you demonstrated I had a Safari update after I logged in and when I clicked update its said I have to be the owner. After an expletive because I am the owner of course, I used the CLI command and I'm finally fully updated again.
Thanks again for your suggestion. I hadn't tried it until your video showed exactly what I was having a problem with.
Thanks for the video 👍
It's working. Thanks!
This works, but I don't want to have to re-install the OS every time there is an update. Is there actually a fix for this?
just go to settings and try to change your login password it'll save you a lot of time
Will this work on m1 macbook air’s?
This does not work!
will the data get delete by doing this?
No it will update your Mac
@@JinusTechVideos thanks sir
Appreicate your quick response
thank, but this did not work me :(
this did not work me...
I fixed it by simply restarting the computer. I say try that first instead of reinstalling the entire OS.
Do you have an m1 mac?
@@jacobobrien306 Yep
My password is accepted but it shouldn't be asking every time. It should remember it
I swear it asks me to punch in the password at least once a day. Wish it would just do it in the background.
@@seanthebrawn I just reinstalled the OS