![]() ![]() You still have that app marked as "purchased" in your iTunes account. Only the most recent iPhoto version is available in the Mac App Store, so you need to upgrade to OS X Mavericks if you want to install iPhoto. In that case, if you are sure that you are no longer using that app on any of your currently-maintained iOS devices, then I would delete it manually from the Mobile Applications folder. Open the App Store application as usual, from /Applications/. So iTunes keeps both, so it can restore the old iPad if needed. For instance, your old iPad may have version 2.3 of app X, and your new iPad may have version 2.6 of the same app X. I suspect this happens when you have multiple iOS devices, and one isn't used as much. You may have noticed, as I have, that sometimes you see multiple versions of the app in the Mobile Applications folder. So if you are sure that the app is no longer on any iOS app, and you want to delete it, then you can do so in iTunes.īut, you mention older versions. ![]() Should not even be installed on your iOS devices, otherwise they will simply sync back to your iTunes library the new time you sync. install the standalone iPhoto '11 software from the new Mac App Store (14.99). Now I would make sure to only delete apps that you are no longer using on your iOS devices. the screen, select Check for Updates to see whether a new version of. You can even sort by size, so you can focus on the apps that take up the most space. You can look at the List view of your Apps inside the Library portion of iTunes. The proper way to do it would be from within iTunes. I can't think of a good reason NOT to clean this out, if you have the time and are short on disk space.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |