ckalback
Jun 18, 05:25 PM
i'll be there, no krispy kremes tho
iThinkergoiMac
Apr 28, 03:46 PM
If you got an OS X disk with a particular Mac, it probably won't work on a different Mac.
You mean "definitely". The only exception is if the different Mac in question is the same exact model you have.
You mean "definitely". The only exception is if the different Mac in question is the same exact model you have.
GGJstudios
May 3, 12:31 PM
Thankss but ive tried it on and off and on and off so many times but it just does not budge
Try typing your password into a TextEdit document, to make sure all the characters are correct, then copy and paste to the website.
Try typing your password into a TextEdit document, to make sure all the characters are correct, then copy and paste to the website.
SamIchi
Mar 29, 06:54 AM
Hmm... I dunno. I'm skeptic. I'm usually all for anything that is Nintendo, but this doesn't sound too promising.
On another note, I don't care much for Sonic, he's a cool character and all but his games suck ass. The only really good Sonic game was back on the Genesis. The only good thing I see coming out of this is the high possibility for Sonic to be in Brawl.
On another note, I don't care much for Sonic, he's a cool character and all but his games suck ass. The only really good Sonic game was back on the Genesis. The only good thing I see coming out of this is the high possibility for Sonic to be in Brawl.
iperson21
Feb 1, 08:35 PM
but wouldn't that undo the jailbreak?
if i did this-> restore from iOS touch 4th gen firmware
jailbreak the firmware with redsn0w tethered
ipod goes into recovery mode.
only option is to sync it? or can i restore it and is the firmware on my desktop now jailbroken??
if i did this-> restore from iOS touch 4th gen firmware
jailbreak the firmware with redsn0w tethered
ipod goes into recovery mode.
only option is to sync it? or can i restore it and is the firmware on my desktop now jailbroken??
bizzle
Apr 3, 08:00 PM
What partition scheme is the 1TB? It's probably GUID which won't work on 10.3.x.
I AM THE MAN
Apr 10, 12:06 PM
Hi. My old VHS is slowly giving up the ghost and so we have decided to move with the times and get one of those DVD/HDD recorder things. The problem is that we have a stack of store bought videos that my kids still want to watch. I'm not looking to start a pirate movie business but I think it fair for me to copy those movies over to DVD for personal use. Does anyone have any suggestions or links that can help? Cheers in advance. :)
You can honestly purchase a Dazzle and convert the VHS as the file you desire and then eventually turn them into DVD.
You can honestly purchase a Dazzle and convert the VHS as the file you desire and then eventually turn them into DVD.
Creebe
Mar 1, 12:11 PM
You know when you see a PC, there are a lot of ugly, distracting sticks on them. How come Macs don't have the stickers?
Symtex
Nov 29, 03:05 PM
If you live in Montreal area, I'm looking to sale my G5. Details are in my sig. Send me your price by PM. ty
coleg
Dec 13, 07:32 PM
Sorry about forgetting the speed:
It is 1.5GHz, and has 64 VRAM.
Still has original box and all the CDs (Panther).
Cole
It is 1.5GHz, and has 64 VRAM.
Still has original box and all the CDs (Panther).
Cole
ross.32
Nov 17, 02:09 PM
I really enjoyed the inline display feature.
Also, any one else experiencing that the app crashes when geo-tagging is on?
Yeah I liked it too. He didn't say, but I imagine that it was removed at the request of Twitter. It goes against their 140 character philosophy.
Also, any one else experiencing that the app crashes when geo-tagging is on?
Yeah I liked it too. He didn't say, but I imagine that it was removed at the request of Twitter. It goes against their 140 character philosophy.
blow45
Feb 10, 05:17 PM
Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_2_1 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/533.17.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8C148a Safari/6533.18.5)
Hmmm, so many times the system is awake but the back light isn't coming on? I'll have to try that with mine, I always figured my system was totally frozen since shutting the lid did nothing & hitting space bar didn't do anything. I'll see if really it still will react to being told to sleep again. I'm really wondering if this is still just a software bug or some kind or logic or hardware problem. My nearest apple store is 75 miles away & I figure this wouldn't be a same day swap/replacement...
I have the same issue, I 'm calling apple tomorrow.
Hmmm, so many times the system is awake but the back light isn't coming on? I'll have to try that with mine, I always figured my system was totally frozen since shutting the lid did nothing & hitting space bar didn't do anything. I'll see if really it still will react to being told to sleep again. I'm really wondering if this is still just a software bug or some kind or logic or hardware problem. My nearest apple store is 75 miles away & I figure this wouldn't be a same day swap/replacement...
I have the same issue, I 'm calling apple tomorrow.
GGJstudios
Mar 31, 04:48 PM
Really gang?
Spend 20 seconds looking at MacRumors forums and you'll find dozens valueless, off-topics posts that don't get deleted. Please don't hide behind that.
Ha ha. I think I just got accused of being trollish for pointing out something that Arn says ought to be disclosed anyway. This is rich.
As you can see from the publicly-available thread that WildCowboy referenced, and the links to two more such threads in that thread, they're not hiding anything. If they were trying to hide something, they would have deleted those threads and wouldn't have directed your attention to them. They also would have deleted this thread if they were trying to hide something.
Spend 20 seconds looking at MacRumors forums and you'll find dozens valueless, off-topics posts that don't get deleted. Please don't hide behind that.
Ha ha. I think I just got accused of being trollish for pointing out something that Arn says ought to be disclosed anyway. This is rich.
As you can see from the publicly-available thread that WildCowboy referenced, and the links to two more such threads in that thread, they're not hiding anything. If they were trying to hide something, they would have deleted those threads and wouldn't have directed your attention to them. They also would have deleted this thread if they were trying to hide something.
stoveguy
Apr 7, 10:03 PM
we replaced the oem 120gb drive about 1 year ago. am using it as external drive. nothing much on it now. could put it back in mac and reload os. see how it works.
map1978
Jun 18, 12:38 PM
im going to white plains and staying away from the city stores ;)
leekohler
Apr 26, 12:21 PM
Umm...really? Are there really no church or religious groups on campus? It really is a race to the bottom to see who can be the nastiest people, isn't it? This dirtbag even admits that he really doesn't want "Traditional values centers", he just wants to close any gay centers. Hey fundies- keep your religious crap in church, where it belongs!
The Texas House of Representatives has passed a budget bill that would require any public college with a student center on "alternative" sexuality to provide equal funding to create new centers to promote "traditional values."
While the Senate has yet to adopt a version of the budget bill, the inclusion of the measure in the overall budget bill and the dominance of social conservatives in Texas politics means that the measure could well be enacted. The House vote in favor of the amendment on the campus sexuality centers was 110-24.
Many Texas public colleges -- as is the case at many colleges elsewhere -- have centers within student affairs departments that serve gay and lesbian students. These centers sponsor programming, refer students who need counseling or support groups, and serve as advocates for gay and lesbian students on their campuses.
Representative Wayne Christian, a Republican, proposed the amendment, which would apply to any public colleges with a center "for students focused on gay, lesbian, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, transsexual, transgender, gender questioning, or other gender identity issues." According to The Dallas Morning News, lawmakers "cracked jokes and guffawed" during debate, with one representative asking Christian what "pansexual" means. Christian urged the lawmaker to visit the centers at the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University to find out.
Lawmakers supporting the bill have said that they favor only equal time for all kinds of sexuality.
But the Young Conservatives of Texas, a group that worked with Christian on the legislation, did so with the hope that public colleges would respond to a law, if the bill passes, by ending support for existing centers. Tony McDonald, senior vice chairman of the group and a law student at UT Austin, said in an interview that "we could try to get these groups defunded" in a law, but that the equal funding approach was viewed as more likely to pass (perhaps with the same impact).
McDonald said that he doesn't believe universities should be funding centers on any sexuality or values -- traditional or otherwise. He said that students "who want to promote a homosexual lifestyle" can do so "on their own time and with their own money."
Requiring the creation of traditional values centers would "give the left a taste of its own medicine," he said. He charged that these centers "are encouraging folks who consider themselves homosexuals to go on considering themselves as such. That's the point of the centers, and that's not something Texas taxpayers should spend their money on."
While supporters of the centers have said that they are needed to provide support for students who are in a minority on campus, McDonald said that it is actually traditional students who lack power. "If I were to walk through UT law school with a shirt on that said, 'Homosexuality is immoral,' if I were to do that, there would be an uproar. People would be upset, and it would be considered out of place and not acceptable to do that. I'd probably get a talking to. But if you go through campus to promote homosexuality, that is the norm."
While McDonald said he hoped that, if the bill is enacted, public colleges eliminate existing sexuality centers, he said that there are good programs that could be sponsored by a traditional values center. He said that they might offer programs to encourage chastity or marriage between male and female students, for example.
The budget measure is prompting derision from Texas liberals. A column in The Texas Observer began this way: "Imagine the plight of the heterosexual student stepping on to a college campus for the first time. How will he fit in? Should he tell his new roommate about his alternative hetero lifestyle? Will he be bullied, just like he was in high school, where he was mercilessly teased for being a sexual deviant? Where does a straight person turn?"
While centers in Texas await the outcome of the budget bill, the debate has already accelerated at Texas A&M University, where the leadership of the Student Senate is pushing the university to go on record by saying that it would not increase student fees to create traditional values centers, but would cut the existing Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center in half to finance a new center. In debate over the issue, advocates for traditional values centers said that straight students who may be questioning their sexuality need a center just as much as gay students do. Students said it was important to create "an equal playing field" for those who may disagree with the gay center. (The discussion may be viewed here, starting about 1 hour and 45 minutes into the meeting.)
Lowell Kane, program coordinator for the gay center at Texas A&M, said that he could not comment on the state legislation. But he said it was hard for him to accept the idea that gay students somehow have it better than their straight counterparts because of the center at Texas A&M or elsewhere. He noted that in various surveys of gay students about how welcoming the university is, Texas A&M does not do well.
"I'm sure there are instances where an individual heterosexual person might feel oppressed," he said, and that's wrong. But it's also not the norm, he added. "What we are talking about is the difference between an individual instance and societal homophobia."
"If you walk into any campus classroom or student health services, most of what you find is geared toward a heterosexual population and not a GLBT population," Kane said. Noting the suicide last year of Tyler Clementi, a student at Rutgers University, Kane said, "I have never heard of any student who took their life because their college roommate outed them as being a heterosexual student."
And turning to comments from students at Texas A&M, he added, "I have never had a student come up and complain that someone comes up and out of the blue calls them a 'hetero' and slapped them, but that happens to my students, who are called 'dyke' and 'fag.'
http://www.insidehighered.com/layout/set/print/news/2011/04/25/texas_house_votes_to_require_colleges_with_sexuality_centers_to_promote_traditional_values_too
The Texas House of Representatives has passed a budget bill that would require any public college with a student center on "alternative" sexuality to provide equal funding to create new centers to promote "traditional values."
While the Senate has yet to adopt a version of the budget bill, the inclusion of the measure in the overall budget bill and the dominance of social conservatives in Texas politics means that the measure could well be enacted. The House vote in favor of the amendment on the campus sexuality centers was 110-24.
Many Texas public colleges -- as is the case at many colleges elsewhere -- have centers within student affairs departments that serve gay and lesbian students. These centers sponsor programming, refer students who need counseling or support groups, and serve as advocates for gay and lesbian students on their campuses.
Representative Wayne Christian, a Republican, proposed the amendment, which would apply to any public colleges with a center "for students focused on gay, lesbian, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, transsexual, transgender, gender questioning, or other gender identity issues." According to The Dallas Morning News, lawmakers "cracked jokes and guffawed" during debate, with one representative asking Christian what "pansexual" means. Christian urged the lawmaker to visit the centers at the University of Texas at Austin and Texas A&M University to find out.
Lawmakers supporting the bill have said that they favor only equal time for all kinds of sexuality.
But the Young Conservatives of Texas, a group that worked with Christian on the legislation, did so with the hope that public colleges would respond to a law, if the bill passes, by ending support for existing centers. Tony McDonald, senior vice chairman of the group and a law student at UT Austin, said in an interview that "we could try to get these groups defunded" in a law, but that the equal funding approach was viewed as more likely to pass (perhaps with the same impact).
McDonald said that he doesn't believe universities should be funding centers on any sexuality or values -- traditional or otherwise. He said that students "who want to promote a homosexual lifestyle" can do so "on their own time and with their own money."
Requiring the creation of traditional values centers would "give the left a taste of its own medicine," he said. He charged that these centers "are encouraging folks who consider themselves homosexuals to go on considering themselves as such. That's the point of the centers, and that's not something Texas taxpayers should spend their money on."
While supporters of the centers have said that they are needed to provide support for students who are in a minority on campus, McDonald said that it is actually traditional students who lack power. "If I were to walk through UT law school with a shirt on that said, 'Homosexuality is immoral,' if I were to do that, there would be an uproar. People would be upset, and it would be considered out of place and not acceptable to do that. I'd probably get a talking to. But if you go through campus to promote homosexuality, that is the norm."
While McDonald said he hoped that, if the bill is enacted, public colleges eliminate existing sexuality centers, he said that there are good programs that could be sponsored by a traditional values center. He said that they might offer programs to encourage chastity or marriage between male and female students, for example.
The budget measure is prompting derision from Texas liberals. A column in The Texas Observer began this way: "Imagine the plight of the heterosexual student stepping on to a college campus for the first time. How will he fit in? Should he tell his new roommate about his alternative hetero lifestyle? Will he be bullied, just like he was in high school, where he was mercilessly teased for being a sexual deviant? Where does a straight person turn?"
While centers in Texas await the outcome of the budget bill, the debate has already accelerated at Texas A&M University, where the leadership of the Student Senate is pushing the university to go on record by saying that it would not increase student fees to create traditional values centers, but would cut the existing Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center in half to finance a new center. In debate over the issue, advocates for traditional values centers said that straight students who may be questioning their sexuality need a center just as much as gay students do. Students said it was important to create "an equal playing field" for those who may disagree with the gay center. (The discussion may be viewed here, starting about 1 hour and 45 minutes into the meeting.)
Lowell Kane, program coordinator for the gay center at Texas A&M, said that he could not comment on the state legislation. But he said it was hard for him to accept the idea that gay students somehow have it better than their straight counterparts because of the center at Texas A&M or elsewhere. He noted that in various surveys of gay students about how welcoming the university is, Texas A&M does not do well.
"I'm sure there are instances where an individual heterosexual person might feel oppressed," he said, and that's wrong. But it's also not the norm, he added. "What we are talking about is the difference between an individual instance and societal homophobia."
"If you walk into any campus classroom or student health services, most of what you find is geared toward a heterosexual population and not a GLBT population," Kane said. Noting the suicide last year of Tyler Clementi, a student at Rutgers University, Kane said, "I have never heard of any student who took their life because their college roommate outed them as being a heterosexual student."
And turning to comments from students at Texas A&M, he added, "I have never had a student come up and complain that someone comes up and out of the blue calls them a 'hetero' and slapped them, but that happens to my students, who are called 'dyke' and 'fag.'
http://www.insidehighered.com/layout/set/print/news/2011/04/25/texas_house_votes_to_require_colleges_with_sexuality_centers_to_promote_traditional_values_too
AJ Muni
Sep 22, 07:00 PM
switch now, and welcome to the mac world...
EdbBob
Apr 21, 04:42 AM
The thing about TN's bad viewing angles, isn't it's only problem. Most IPS run 24 bit RGB giving 16.7 mill different colors and shades. TN normally has lower bit depth, which could lead to banding.
IPS is the way to go, but don't get to fixated on the blacks. Many screen manufactures crunch the blacks in their default settings, meaning that you'll loose detail in the shadows.
If you wan't perfect colors and and blacks, you should consider buying a probe for calibrating. Even a cheap TN panel can output color and gamma close to perfect after calibration. Only thing is, you have to sit 100% still, and look only at the center of the TN panel in a 90 deg angle... ;)
I think IPS was developed by Hitachi, and the actual panels are made by very few factories, meaning, that you could buy most of the IPS monitors. Basicly they only differ, in design, USB hubs, tilt-ability etc.
If you do critical work on images etc., be aware that a monitor like the 30" ACD takes about 1/2 hour to reach full luminance after switching it on.
Best Regards
EDBBOB
IPS is the way to go, but don't get to fixated on the blacks. Many screen manufactures crunch the blacks in their default settings, meaning that you'll loose detail in the shadows.
If you wan't perfect colors and and blacks, you should consider buying a probe for calibrating. Even a cheap TN panel can output color and gamma close to perfect after calibration. Only thing is, you have to sit 100% still, and look only at the center of the TN panel in a 90 deg angle... ;)
I think IPS was developed by Hitachi, and the actual panels are made by very few factories, meaning, that you could buy most of the IPS monitors. Basicly they only differ, in design, USB hubs, tilt-ability etc.
If you do critical work on images etc., be aware that a monitor like the 30" ACD takes about 1/2 hour to reach full luminance after switching it on.
Best Regards
EDBBOB
Austin M.
Apr 13, 07:20 PM
Interesting, which one did you order?
Whichever one got sent out for review! :D
Whichever one got sent out for review! :D
iThinkergoiMac
Apr 30, 11:01 PM
TimeMachine is great, but I don't rely on it as my only backup either. I have one 1 TB drive partitioned into two partitions: one is slightly larger than my internal drive, and the other partition is the rest of the TB. I use CCC to clone my internal drive to the 1st partition nightly and TimeMachine backs up to the other partition. This way, if my internal HDD dies, I can boot right off the external and keep going. I use DropBox to back up all my super necessary files as well (I'm up to 5.8 GB without paying).
And, no, I don't consider my two partitions separate backups because they're on the same physical drive. But, still, it seems an effective solution to me. Even if a fire burns down my residence I still have all my important (small) files on DropBox.
And, no, I don't consider my two partitions separate backups because they're on the same physical drive. But, still, it seems an effective solution to me. Even if a fire burns down my residence I still have all my important (small) files on DropBox.
Paulywauly
Mar 13, 02:37 PM
Thanks for the reply!
I do know to work with servers, its my job :D but at home im not dealing with monolithic server racks with cable trunking etc Im limited by budget and have to think outside the box sometimes to get things how i want them.
Regardless, what you're saying does make alot of sense. what it boils down to is that I either have to deal with the noise or wire the place up if i wanna stick it in the kitchen. great stuff, thanks again! :)
I do know to work with servers, its my job :D but at home im not dealing with monolithic server racks with cable trunking etc Im limited by budget and have to think outside the box sometimes to get things how i want them.
Regardless, what you're saying does make alot of sense. what it boils down to is that I either have to deal with the noise or wire the place up if i wanna stick it in the kitchen. great stuff, thanks again! :)
bousozoku
Dec 10, 12:04 PM
Either it's not a stable speed or it's not a speed recognised by the system software.
KnightWRX
Apr 24, 01:23 PM
That book (Kochan's Programming in Objective-C 2.0) is what is recommended in the Guide at the top of the forum indeed :
http://guides.macrumors.com/Cocoa_FAQ#What_book_do_you_recommend_for_learning_Cocoa.3F
If you already have some programming experience with C++ (your initial post stated you were new to programming), you should be fine to delve into it directly.
http://guides.macrumors.com/Cocoa_FAQ#What_book_do_you_recommend_for_learning_Cocoa.3F
If you already have some programming experience with C++ (your initial post stated you were new to programming), you should be fine to delve into it directly.
zimv20
Oct 14, 03:13 AM
Originally posted by gambit
They are proabably gonna put G4's in the iBooks in January cause in January they are gonna go OSX only right? It makes perfect sense after you think of it that way.
errrr.... the g3 ibooks are shipping w/ osx now.
i thought of it your way and i'm sorry to say it did not make perfect sense to me.
sorry.
They are proabably gonna put G4's in the iBooks in January cause in January they are gonna go OSX only right? It makes perfect sense after you think of it that way.
errrr.... the g3 ibooks are shipping w/ osx now.
i thought of it your way and i'm sorry to say it did not make perfect sense to me.
sorry.