![]() And when I immediately unplugged the phone from the laptop which had successfully backed it up and plugged it into my Sierra Mac Pro, it was again unrecognizable in iTunes 12.8.2.3. Guess what? I was able to communicate with my iOS 14.5 iPhone and back it up. The updated version info was sneaked into the Copyright line: 12.8.3.1. I got info on iTunes again and saw the following: (not very descriptive of what is going on.)Īfter that had run, and not knowing exactly WHAT had been updated, I double-clicked the recently updated iTunes - only to be told that it would launch when the update finished. This is how the alert looked during the update: ![]() So I did the Install of this unidentified update. Just for grins I took my iPhone to my MacBook Pro running High Sierra. ITunes 12.8.2.3 is the latest version that will run on Sierra. It will not install on anything below High Sierra. You should already know that iTunes 12.8.3 is NOT compatible with OS X 10.12.6 (which I mentioned at the start that I am running). So Apple obviously needs to patch iTunes 12 for those of us still running Sierra who got into this predicament without any warning. BTW, Photos 2.0 does mount my iPhone iBooks 1.10 does not. There is no other conclusion to be made than to admit this iOS 14.5 update destroyed the ability of iTunes to communicate with the iPhone. ![]() iTunes will simply not show the icon of my phone, even though other applications on my computer DO recognize it for access. When I swiped up to the password screen and correctly entered it. The System Report > USB does show the device (I redacted the serial number):įurther: I shut down then restarted the iPhone while connected. I plugged in the phone again, and immediately GraphicConverter recognized it - asking if I would like to browse images on the phone. ![]()
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