

The plugin folder was installed into /Library/Application Support/iPhoto/Īpparently, that doesn't work for my configuration. But it does work, and it's mostly still pretty fast (though it draws to the screen a little bit slowly).I had problems installing this plugin on Mac OS X 10.6.8 with iPhoto v.6.0.6. Similarly, integration with Finder is not very good. For me, the Z: drive is my Mac volume, so I've added Z:\Users\\Pictures and the rest to the list of watched folders.Įxpected issues: you'll have to ignore most Google services, there's no retina support, and raw support is ancient (so you may want to turn it off). Adjust Tools->Folder Manager to index things on your Mac.Clicking it will then launch wine and let you run Picasa. Find the Picasa3.exe and drag it to your dock (in the "documents" part next to the trashcan, because to the Mac it isn't an app).Now, you can run the installer (just double-click it) and it should make a Picasa3.exe. Then download a Windows Picasa build here:.> brew tap gcenx/wine & brew install wine-crossover After homebrew is installed, do this from a terminal window:.(If you have Apple Silicon, you should make sure to have Rosetta2 installed for this.) If you want to use Picasa occasionally on a Mac, it turns out the best (and cheapest) way these days is to use the Windows build and run it under wine. Picasa for Mac was never updated after this, so it doesn't work at all anymore on newer Macs. As you may know, Apple macOS has discontinued support for 32-bit apps and Carbon (as of Catalina and later, from 2019).
