I am a Software Engineer from Nigeria, here to write and learn by helping others learn from my experience, the characteristics of who I became today, and on a journey of who I become tomorrow.
No assurances it'd be a sweet ride but it will be well worth it.
Welcome aboard... YuhCee Musings.
I am available for mentoring, writing, pair coding and idea sharing for learning and remote work.
I am not sure I get what you are saying Jose . The command sudo nano /private/etc/hosts is trying to open a file called hosts with the nano editor. Are you saying the file didn't open so that you can type in the next commands into it or that it did but you didn't see some contents in it? Can you explain further the challenge you are experiencing? Thanks
Jonah Honestly, that's a weird one. So it doesn't even allow you to install a new Mac OS? Maybe you would have to take it to a physical repairs shop where they would use the disk utility method to install a new Mac OS for you. That's all I can think of now.
Hi Jonah, What year and version is your Macbook and also which Mac OS is it currently running on? Is it an M1 or Intel chip? This post was written when I was using an intel chip. I haven't encountered this issue on an M1 chip yet. Let me know more so I can guide you on what to do. Thanks.