

However, to avoid an unnecessary reboot … When you find them, take a look at the files as they likely have the path to the binaries in them.Īlternatively to typing the following commands, you can trash the files and reboot.

The startup scripts might be scattered in a handful of locations: They bought some for builds etc, but were not willing to let me have one to show to customers, etc.Īre you able to right click on the System Preference and choose remove? That's the easiest way to get rid of it.

It is my Mac - I paid for it because I couldn't get the company to buy me one, even though we needed some Macs to get our software running on Mac. Any ideas on what needs to be done to be able to get rid of the stuff (like a dubious copy of Firefox 3.5.7) from under there? Or how an area of the file system can be marked 'read-only'? Actually, it is part of the root (and only) file system, which is not generally read-only. I also found a directory in /private/tmp belonging to 'the software gizmo' - but I can't remove it, not even with root privileges, because it is mounted on a 'read-only file system' (according to the error messages).

I went to the Symantec site via a Google search and found a page about removing Symantec Antivirus from the Mac. I removed the Symantec software folders because it was not clear that anything had worked, but the Symantec scanner still managed to start up after a reboot - and still shows up in System Preferences. I've had nothing but trouble since the installers ran into some problem while unpacking Firefox 3.5.7, which I also tried to install via the same work-provided software at the same time. I installed Symantec Antivirus on my Mac (mid-2009 MacBook Pro) running Snow Leopard (10.6.2) via a work-provided software gizmo - along with some other software.
