![]() ![]() You can try downloading the file in a different browser as well. ![]() If possible, try downloading the dmg again, turning off any download assistant plug-ins you may have. ![]() In most cases, the downloaded dmg file is actually corrupt or had an error downloading. If you see the "no mountable file systems error" while opening a dmg, here's what you should try: The error was as the screenshot above shows trying to open a dmg (disk image), macOS showed the error "no mountable file systems". I didn't find a lot of good search results addressing the issue, so I decided to write up a post about it myself. ![]() The the original poster, good job! You would be truly surprised at how *few* people take the time to acertain what the issue actually is, and *rarely* go to the low level you took it to.I ran into an interesting macOS error while working with a customer. Since this worked previously for him, if it was indeed warez he would realize that simply making an image of a movie DVD does not mean it will work since there are such measures as block encryption, block shifting, and combinations of other techniques that would, in most cases, result in a useless image without help from tools like daemon tools. You allude, with the legal comment, that this might possibly be warez. He did his homework and found out there was a difference between the two, and was pointing out the technical differentiation between the working and the non working. Telling him to just click on it is completely missing the point that he was having issues with that. The point being made was that there is a technical difference in the two formats that was causing your solution not to work. ![]()
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