![]() Your best bet is to create the DMG file and use that as a virtual CD. I used a CD mounted on a USB drive (Macbook Air Superdrive) to install Windows 7, so Virtualbox recognized the CD as a CD. Now I'm trying to install a program in Win 7. The CD icon at the bottom of the window is greyed out, so I clicked on the USB icon. In the system directory ("Computer") the CD drive shows up as D: I used the Windows Toubleshooter to find the driver. It came up with "Sun VirtualBox Setup Wizard." Not knowing if I should use that, I attempted to create a disk image using Mac Disk Utility. I tried to create a shared folder with path Z:\Macintosh HD\Users\myname\Documents\Quicken. But VM VirtualBox Manager Shared Folders has "OK" grayed out when I enter path, folder name and select Auto-mount. So now I don't even know if the disk image will work or how to access it without a shared folder. When I tried out FF 53, I discovered that some of my add-ons got disabled. Usually these were legacy add-ons that continued to be maintained after Mozilla banned pre-WebEx add-ons, and thus could no longer get Mozilla to sign them. The biggest example was the legacy version of uBlock Origin, which I use because it offers more privacy protections than the WebEx version does on FF 52 and 53. (A couple were add-ons that were originally signed, but from which I had removed the signature in order to implement some hack.) In FF 52 ESR, unsigned add-ons aren't much of a problem. ![]() You simply set the about:config preference to false and you're good to go. The unsigned add-ons will produce warnings in the about:addons page, but they work. ![]() You can even hide the warnings with an add-on like Classic Theme Restorer.īut FF 53 is a "stable" release, and doesn't work in stable FF releases. ![]() (I put it after code, but it will probably work before it too.) The workaround at the link can be combined with fix for re-enabling SSUAOs in Firefox 52:įirst, follow the instructions there then add this JavaScript to the config.js file you just created: Luckily, there is a workaround, but it's a bit more complex than just setting a preference. ![]()
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