It told me to install the USB driver and took me to a page on the PPS website. I found that the official Oceanic answer is to use Diverlog, so I installed Diverlog Lite and tried to download using that. I just can’t see how to get the correct port to show up there. Is not the port it should be using, so I’m not surprised by the error. My suspicion is that tty.Bluetooth-Incoming-Port If I click Download, it gives some error that it couldn’t open the port. There are no other choices in the dropdown and clicking the “…” button does nothing. In Subsurface, when I select to download and choose Oceanic and Atom 3.0, the only “Device or mount point” it offers is: /dev/tty.Bluetooth-Incoming-Port (whether via USB port on my monitor, or directly into the left side USB port on the Macbook), and I clip it onto the Atom, the Atom does go into PC download mode and start its 2 minute countdown. In all cases (below), when I have the cable plugged in But, I am, so far, completely failing at downloading on my Macbook. I have downloaded successfully from my Atom many times on both Windows and Linux. Oceanic Atom 3.0 dive computer with a brand new battery in it. I have been using this Mac for several years, but I am really a Windows guy, so I don’t pretend to really have a good handle on things like installingĪnd configuring hardware drivers on a Mac. Without Watchman, Nuclide will lose some functionality of its Mercurial, Remote Development, and Quick Open features.I am using a Macbook Pro Retina (late-2013). It must be in /usr/local/bin/ or in your $PATH environment variable. To benefit from all of Nuclide’s features, we recommend you also install the following: ![]() Instructions can be found in the Remote Development docs. If you want to use Nuclide for remote development, you’ll also need to set up the npm nuclide
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