Recently, some users complained about they can’t update or uninstall iTunes because they get an error message that says “itunes6464.msi” is missing. If you’re going through this same error, you probably know how annoying it is. But, the good news is that there are some reliable solutions you can try to come out of this problem. If the subkey exists, verify that the LocalPackage string value is set correctly, and that the package referenced by the LocalPackage string value also exists. If the LocalPackage string value or referenced package is missing, the product is affected. Continue to step 2. If the referenced package exists and no additional action is required. When you see the message told you “.msi files is missing”, uninstalling iTunes or other Apple related software becomes a serious chore. You may get a message such as “the feature you are trying to use is on a network resource that is unavailable” and this relates to a missing file called “iTunes.msi”. I Just figured out how to get rid of that annoying message that tells you that you cant remove/upgrade iTunes because it ant find an msi file, well just foll.
Itunes6464 Msi Missing Error Windows 10
Comments:Itunes6464 Msi Missing Error 1007
- Would you please provide a little more detail on the process? Are your steps similar to this post http://www.itninja.com/question/itunes-12-5-1-and-itunesprefs-xml ? If so can you expand on the steps to configure Orca? Thanks - ws20003 years ago
- Why do you need to configure ORCA ? To package the current iTunes I am installing the vendor package and then configuring iTunes to the preferences required for our organisation.
Harvest the following plist files:
com.apple.apsd.plist
com.apple.iTunes.eq.plist
com.apple.iTunes.plist
com.apple.iTunes.{13be78c4-64a7-11e6-a1a3-806e6f6e6963}.plist
com.apple.iTunes.{846ee340-7039-11de-9d20-806e6f6e6963}.plist
com.apple.mediaaccessibility.plist
The two plist files with a GUID in the name are from a Win 7 and a Win 10 installation - presumably this is to handle roaming profiles where there is an environment with multiple operating systems. The GUID is the hardware ID of the operating system. It's entirely up to you how you handle the deployment of the plist files to the user profile - you can use Active Setup or Self Healing for example. Just a couple of things though. I found that the preference settings would not always 'stick' on the 12.5.x releases. However, if you install 12.5.x over an older release which is configured with XML files, the settings appear to be migrated. Anyway, once you have harvested the plist files they do appear to be consistent across newer versions of 12.5.x so not much work is required for each new release. I routinely deploy both the Win 7 and Win 10 plist files as we are moving in that direction and it makes sure we don't need to repackage for Win 10. Annoyingly, the plist files are a mixture of binary and text so it's nigh on impossible to figure out what is stored where. Nevertheless, parental settings do continue to be stored in the registry. - EdT3 years ago- I will give it a try. Thanks for the response. - ws20003 years ago