Macbook Error Code 10810
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is full. When the process table is full, new (not currently running) applications cannot be opened until another running application ends. Programming errors in the application cannot be opened 10810 third-party applications can fill-up the process table, leading to the -10810 error
The Application Finder Can't Be Opened 10810 Fix
when opening an application. This FAQ discusses: the background of this problem; its history, reported workarounds, and general troubleshooting
"10810" "finder" "disown"
advice; and provides a procedure for identifying the process or processes that are filling the process table. It is based upon extensive research of this problem on the Web, especially
Failed With Error 10810 For The File
a 2009 Apple Mailing Lists post by contributor Terry Lambert. This FAQ expounds upon Terry's post in an attempt to make the cause and resolution of this problem more accessible to the general Mac OS X user. Background All running programs on your Mac are processes. This includes both applications that you open and faceless background processes, i.e. processes without a the application finder can't be opened 600 graphical user interface (GUI), such as mds (the Spotlight metadata server) or cupsd (the CUPS printing daemon). Activity Monitor shows a list of all running processes. Finder is an application, hence it is a process. Processes can launch other processes, known as child processes. For example, the launchd (launch daemon) process opens many background processes when you start up or log in to your Mac; launchd is the parent process and each process it opens is a child process of launchd. Mac OS X tracks running processes in a process table. Mac OS X has a default limit of 266 user processes per account. You can see this limit by issuing the Terminal command ulimit -a and noting the max user processes value. Once this limit is reached, the process table is full: new processes cannot be started until a currently running process terminates, hence new applications cannot be opened. If you attempt to open a new application when the process table is full, an alert dialog will appear showing error code -10810, e.g. The application appname.app can't be opened. -10810 where
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the application finder can't be opened 10810 snow leopard the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack the application finder can't be opened el capitan Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community the application finder can't be opened 1712 of 6.2 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Applescript Error -10810 up vote 4 down vote favorite I have an Applescript that runs fine on http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/error-10810.html my Macbook Retina but fails on a Mac Mini. Both are running MacOS 10.9.2. After peeling the onion a bit I'm able to reproduce the problem with a one-line Applescript: tell application "MidiPipe" to activate On the Mini that throws the error: An error of type -10810 has occurred. On the Macbook the MidiPipe application opens. MidiPipe works normally on the Mini when started from the Finder or from Launchpad. Google provides http://stackoverflow.com/questions/23398435/applescript-error-10810 no insight into this error. osx applescript share|improve this question asked Apr 30 '14 at 21:35 Richard Milewski 142210 Is the Mini running the same version of MidiPipe? –Digital Trauma Apr 30 '14 at 22:40 Have you tried removing and reinstalling MidiPipe on the mini? Perhaps a botched install is to blame? –Digital Trauma Apr 30 '14 at 22:41 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 2 down vote accepted Well, I found this: http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/error-10810.html and this: http://osxdaily.com/2010/02/09/mac-error-10810/ and this: http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1389805 . At least one of these suggests a RAM problem. But just to make sure you've tried every weird variation, have you tried the following: 1) using a full path: tell application "Full:Path:To:MidiPipe.app" --(probably "YourHDName:Applications:MidiPipe.app"? 2) using an actual tell block: tell application "MidiPipe"--or full path activate end tell 3) using the Finder: tell application "Finder" to open "Full:Path:To:MidiPipe.app" 4) using shell: do shell script "open /Applications/MidiPipe.app" ? share|improve this answer answered Apr 30 '14 at 22:41 CRGreen 2,0581517 Trying to figure out how to put line breaks into these comments while holding appplescript anomolies in my head risks explosion, so I'm going to do this a several consecutive comments: –Richard Milewski May 1 '14 at 21:08 Solution #1 wor
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