Hauptwerk relies on the end of the filename looking like one of these two formats, otherwise the installer does not recognize them. If you downloaded the files, but Hauptwerk does not "see" them to install, then if could be that the file names were changed during download. If the download manager changed the file names: Hauptwerk looks for a particular naming scheme within its model installer. There may be other tools which could probably work well. Firefox: DownThemAll is reported to download nicely, but it changes the file names.Google Chrome: the FreeDownload plugin works.Windows: EagleGet worked, FlashGet does not work well.Mac: iGetter (reported no longer working with Monterey and on.).
#Chrome igetter plugin install
In that case, you will need to rename the files to the original names after download in order for Hauptwerk to properly find and install them.īased on customer feedback, here are some download managers to consider (or avoid): However, some download managers change the names of the downloaded files. The most reliable and efficient way to download these large files over a slower or unstable internet connection is by using a download manager that can resume interrupted data streams. If your internet connection is slow or unstable, the download may be interrupted one or more times, which can cause the downloaded file to become corrupted.
We have tested current versions of Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, and Safari with good results on fast connections.
On fast internet connections, you can usually download directly from within your web browser. A single sample set may be distributed in 3-6 (or occasionally even more) packages. The download packages are huge, usually about 4 GB (i.e., one full DVD) each. The prefered and the primary delivery method for purchases is via download.