Quote from: Guru on August 04, 2012, 04:10 amI understand that GPGTools may not run properly on Leopard... Louis Cyphre has a thread on compiling GPG to run on the Mac. You can find it here:http://dkn255hz262ypmii.onion/index.php?topic=33577.msg383669#msg383669As long as the Xcode developer tools are installed (to get the GCC libraries and GNU tools) the process is the same as compiling on Linux or BSD.Quote from: Guru on August 04, 2012, 04:10 amDoing a quick search reveals that GPGTools may not run on Leopard; one posting in particular, made about a year ago, cited the fact that noGPGTools developers were still running Leopard, so patches/updates for the program were not being made.Yeah, they can be a bit annoying like that.Quote from: Guru on August 04, 2012, 04:10 amNow that Mountain Lion has been released, I suspect that Snow Leopard (10.6) will undergo that same slow downhill progression.Probably.Quote from: Guru on August 04, 2012, 04:10 amNow, all that said, Louis did mention finding a version that would run on 10.5, in this posting:http://dkn255hz262ypmii.onion/index.php?topic=7753.msg343172#msg343172As Louis states: This version should work on OS X 10.5.x (and above): https://github.com/downloads/GPGTools/GPGTools/GPGTools-20120318.dmg I believe it is the last version available for 10.5.x, although advanced users can attempt to compile their own versions of GPG 1.4.x (I posted instructions on this somewhere around here) or 2.0.x (a little more difficult).Yes, but that version is missing most of the features that make GPGTools worthwhile. Things like integration with Finder or Safari and being able to set hotkeys for the various functions. It's really only good for installing GPG 2.0.18 and Keychain Access.Quote from: Guru on August 04, 2012, 04:10 amNaturally, I have no way of verifying whether this works or not. Perhaps you could try it and update us on whether it works or not.In addition to the Linux systems, I've got a system running Leopard. One of these days I'll upgrade it to Snow Leopard, but I really don't like what they've done with Lion and beyond so I'll probably leave it there. Anyway, this is how I know for sure what you can do on Leopard (assuming you have the Apple Xcode developer kit installed).On an unrelated note. My 500th post, yay! :D