On Nov 2, 2012, at 9:01 , Nick Zitzmann <n...@chronosnet.com> wrote:

> Those look like Sync Services properties. Sync Services was a way of 
> synchronizing data between applications and computers back in the days when 
> PCs were still peoples' digital hubs. In Leopard (I think) Apple added the 
> option to directly sync a CoreData database with Sync Services, greatly 
> simplifying the sync client logic you'd normally have to write to sync data 
> with Sync Services. Sync Services was deprecated in favor of iCloud in Lion. 
> Anyway, you can ignore these properties if your project doesn't use Sync 
> Services.

Agreed. They also didn't seem to make a difference to the other issue I'm 
having. What a pain it was to remove them, though!

-- 
Rick




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