
Once downloaded on your Mac, dbl-click to open the zIp fileĭbl click to Install the Mac OS version if there is one listed in the archive file (might be a. Look toward the bottom half of this webpage link. This is the Adobe Flash Player you are looking for on the Adobe web site. On the Adobe Flash Player section of the Adobe website, you will need to look for the last Adobe Flash Player version compatible with Mozilla Firefox 45.9. You need to use Adobe's Flash Player uninstaller, first, to uninstall the older Adobe Flash Player.

You may need to update Adobe Flash Player to the last compatible version for Firefox 45.9

The go to your Applications folder, find Firefox, the launch it! This is a more recent, more secure web browser for OS X 10.6.8.ĭbl click to download, locate the Firefox 45.9 ESR.dmg on your Mac.ĭbl click on the file and it should put up both a disk drive looking image and a pop up installation window.ĭrag the Firefox Application icon into the Application folder shortcut icon in the same install window.

If your Mac can be upgraded to OS X Snow Leopard (you need an Intel Mac, NOT a PowerPC Mac) here's the link to get you a more relatively recent Mozilla Firefox web browser and compatible Adobe Flash Player for OS X 10.6.8 Snow Leopard. Why can't I access webpages through Safari on Mountain Lion? Why did my comp automatically load Mountain Lion instead of Big Sur? I tried to download an interim software between Mountain Lion and Big Sur through the app store (again, can't remember which one, sorry!) but the download failed. I would like to update to Big Sur, which should still be compatible with my hardware (according to this page) but, though Safari loads Google searches, when I try to access any Apple pages to download more recent software, Safari can't connect to the web page.

I then did a factory reset I erased all the data, did 'first aid' in the utilities on all the disk/drive thingies, and then reinstalled the operating system.įor some reason it has installed Mountain Lion. Can't install up-to-date OS X after factory reset? I have a MacBook Air (2013) that was previously running a fairly recent version of OS X (can't remember which one, sorry).
