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- Jan 1, 2009
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Rosetta will not appear in the Applications folder. It's not a user-launched application, but a system app that starts up whenever you try to open an Intel-only application.
Your other problem sounds like a permissions issue. Or an alias issue. The message about not finding "Garden nature" would seem to be that the icon you tried to open was an alias, or link, to the REAL Garden Nature folder. But your migration didn't put the real folder where the link thinks it is, so it won't open it. You can see if it is a link by right clicking on the icon that threw up the error, then Get Info and it may say that it is an alias under "Kind:" and then give a path to the Original, or where it expected the original to be. If that is wrong, just delete the alias and go find the real Garden Nature folder and create an alias there that you can put in place of the bad one.
The second error, about -8058, isn't all that scary. Follow the directions in the article exactly and if you aren't comfortable just deleting the plist in question, move it out of that location and put it somewhere else. Finder will recreate it as soon as it doesn't find it where it expects to, which the author says should fix the error. If Finder works, and it should, you can just delete the old plist from wherever you put it once done. Low risk, really.
Your other problem sounds like a permissions issue. Or an alias issue. The message about not finding "Garden nature" would seem to be that the icon you tried to open was an alias, or link, to the REAL Garden Nature folder. But your migration didn't put the real folder where the link thinks it is, so it won't open it. You can see if it is a link by right clicking on the icon that threw up the error, then Get Info and it may say that it is an alias under "Kind:" and then give a path to the Original, or where it expected the original to be. If that is wrong, just delete the alias and go find the real Garden Nature folder and create an alias there that you can put in place of the bad one.
The second error, about -8058, isn't all that scary. Follow the directions in the article exactly and if you aren't comfortable just deleting the plist in question, move it out of that location and put it somewhere else. Finder will recreate it as soon as it doesn't find it where it expects to, which the author says should fix the error. If Finder works, and it should, you can just delete the old plist from wherever you put it once done. Low risk, really.