It was probably thoroughly tested, but "thorough" doesn't mean there is 0 chance of problems. They can't test for every possible combination of hardware and software, including third-party stuff. I just completed a project yesterday using iMovie 3 running with OS X 10.2.4. I didn't see any change in iMovie 3 after the OS X 10.2.4 update (I'm using an iMac G4 800 with 1GB RAM). How was iMovie affected by the 10.2.4 update for you? Did you try re-installing it? Did you run Repair Permissions from Disk Utility on your boot disk? If you describe the problem, someone here might be able to help. On Sun, 16 Feb 2003 23:41:42 -0500, Gerhard Kuhn <suspice at hay.net> wrote: >I unfortunately updated to 10.2.4 now iMovie is useless hope that this >gets fixed fast since I have a project that I was starting that >includes over 400 scanned images some of which I wanted to use the Ken >Burns effect on. I have 75% of the scanning done so the editing was >going to start this week. My deadline is four months away but still >would have liked to have a trouble free start. > >Why would Apple post an update that was not thoroughly tested? This >would not have taken a lot of testing to uncover so what is their >excuse?? Funny thing was I seemed to be one of the few people that had >a good iMovie 3 experience, until this weekend that is. > >Hoping for a timely resolution > > >Gerhard Kuhn >suspice at hay.net -- Gordon Alley <*> <mailto:galley at texas.net> <http://galley.home.texas.net>