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I've been having all sorts of problems lately on my Macbook Pro. Things are starting to slow down.
A restart doesn't fix it. I'm pissed off how Safari acts like it's running on the iPhone(before
firmware 2.2 that is). It crashes like every 30 minutes or something. Even when I'm scrolling
Macrumors.
Here's another thing. Whenever I click Restart from the apple menu, does nada. Only thing it closes
is my iTunes. Safari, Mail, iCal just sit there.
Then, I manually quit the app but I have to force-quit mail every single time. Even when I'm not
restarting. Mail works awesome and fetches my gmail and everything but it refuses to quit. I have
to force quit at least 3 times for it to actually quit.
So, I'm thinking to erasing everything and do a clean install of Leopard. But before doing that, I
wanted to ask if it is practical, because I have a lot of stuff on here so back up would take
hours.
I mean, do users who do a clean install experience that new fast feeling?
P.S. My hard disk space is about 65 GB out of 200. Not too bad right? I don't believe that is the
problem.
P.P.S: Running 10.5.5
I manually made new contacts in Windows Contacts (a default folder in Vista). and now when I choose
to sync it with Windows Contacts, it moves the contacts from my phone to the computer(only the ones
that I changed the name a little by) but the ones that are the same are the same. How do I cancel
backwards contacts syncing for 1-2 syncs? so then it'll overwrite my contacts list on my phone and
keep only the contacts from Windows Contacts?
My Macbook, bought around x-mas 07, randomly will not turn off when I try to shut it down. It says
that finder failed to quit. I have tried manually forcing programs to quit and the only way it will
turn off is by holding the power button down for 5 seconds or so. Help?
Well it was Wednesday when i tried to turn on my iPod during school after listening to music, but
it was just off. The screen is just blank and it wont turn on.. :confused:. I tried to restore
using iTunes but it gives me error 6, ive tried the manually download the fw myself then hold shift
but that doesn't work either. I've tried about 7 times now but it still gives error 6 and iTunes
also doesn't recognize the iPod, it just says n/a next to the information on iTunes.
My ipod was jailbroken using quickpwn and it was on 2.1.
Anyone know what i can do?
Any suggestions, my warranty runs out on the 18th december so i guess if worst comes to worst ill
have to send it back.
So, I had to do an emergency install of Leopard, and now I'm trying to get iTunes to find the music
on my external hard drive.
I had stored my iTunes Music folder on the external drive before the new install. Now, when I point
my new iTunes to use this folder as the new library location, nothing happens.
Do I need to manually drag my huge collection back into iTunes?
Every time I scroll through my list of ‘Friends’ on Facebook, I inevitably come to
the same (somewhat depressing) conclusion: I have absolutely no idea who many of these people
are. This is mostly my fault - my standards have always been pretty low when it comes to
accepting inbound requests, and I never kept up with assigning them to appropriate Friends Lists.
But there’s also the fact that Facebook doesn’t do much to automatically
differentiate between friends and acquaintances (while it does filter your News Feed based on who
it thinks you’re interested in, there isn’t a way to automatically generate a list of
“good friends” versus everyone else).
Meezoog, an Israeli
startup backed by veteran VC Yossi Vardi, is looking to help differentiate between acquaintances
and close friends. Today the company has launched its own social network at Meezoog.com that
attempts to determine how strong the connections are between users by analyzing their
relationships on other sites across the web (it also asks you to manually input your relationship
with each friend, but this isn’t required). The site presents a number of
“paths” connecting you with each friend in a manner similar to Six Degrees of Kevin
Bacon, that helps users determine the degree of “social trust” they have with
each user. At this point it’s too early to tell how well the system works, but it’s a
step in the right direction.
Besides its social network, Meezoog also plans to offer Facebook and OpenSocial applications that
allow users to estimate the nature of their connections with their friends, even if they
aren’t on Meezoog’s network. This cross-network analysis is probably the
company’s best shot at success - while Meezoog may be able to establish its standalone
social network in some regional areas, it will have a very hard time directly competing with
established networks like Facebook and MySpace.
Other companies have tried to do similar social connection strength mapping, including Linking Universe.
Crunch Network: MobileCrunch
Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.
I unlocked the iPhone with the first free dev team procedure. It was a lot of manual stuff, and it
resulted in a corrupted seczone. Obviously things are a lot cleaner now, but it leaves early
adopters like me in the dust.
In the interest of allowing others to learn from my research/trials, I'm posting what I went
through (so if you see a similar problem you're having partway through, this might be useful) to
finally get to a pwned, 100% functional, 2.0.2 iPhone.
You can probably eliminate or condense a lot of these steps.
(Note, started using iTunes 7.5. You could/should probably start with iTunes 7.7.1.11, but I can't
verify that.)
1. Phone was working, at 1.0.2 plus corrupted seczone old-unlock-hack. Because of this, installer
wouldn't work right.
Tried manual installs / reinstalls of installer, but nothing worked. I even tried SSHing in and
manually running virginizer
scripts. Odd things happened; chmod didn't function correctly. The scripts wouldn't work; even if
executed individually.
I concluded I needed to restore to 1.0.2 and start over installing installer on a fresh iphone.
2. This appeared to work. I tried to use iliberty to free my fresh iphone, and it failed. I tried
to use winpwn,
and it also failed. At this point I noticed that my phone wasn't booting correctly any more. It was
getting the
"BSD root: md0, major2, minor0" error. None of George Zhu's proposed fixes via iliberty, restore,
nor DFU restore
helped.
3. I found a post that said to start at step 12 (actually , 11) of this post: http://www.hackint0sh.org/forum/showthread.php?t=42046 and after DFU installing
firmware 1.1.1, the phone seems to
boot correctly again. I then DFU down to 1.0.2.
4. Attempting to use iLiberty to jailbreak, activate, and cydia the phone causes the purple usb
cable --> itunes logo screen and
subsequent boots have the "BSD root: md0, major 2, minor 0" error. This is repaired by DFU
restoring to 1.1.1. (SIM card being
present doesn't matter; I checked)
6. AppTappInstaller stopped in iPhoneComm.exe Stage 2, (4) Booting iPhone in recovery mode.
(I don't think this helped)
7. So I download iDemocracy: http://www.drakenza.com/Were_Done_Here.html and activate, then jailbreak.
I tried to "refurbish", then use iTunes to restore to 1.1.1 (yes, phone was in DFU mode) but that
caused an
itunes "2003" error.
8. Power off the iPhone; restart in DFU mode. Do the same operation: restore 1.1.1. Should work
this time.
9. Trying winpwn 2.5beta, I get to the "preparing pwnage DFU restore information", but I always get
"Failed to pwn
your device." I never get a countdown, and even trying to put the iphone in DFU mode and then
clicking "go"
doesn't seem to work.
10. Found a page saying that winpwn requires the iphone be at 1.1.4. Why do I have to find this out
via anecdote?
DFU, restore to 1.1.4.
11. Winpwn won't correctly do it. So I found that the .ipsw image is in "My Documents". Copy to
desktop, then try to DFU
restore via iTunes. Doesn't work. Found an anecdote in the older winpwn guide that iTunes 7.7 is
required, at minimum.
Installed itunes 7.7. Retried restore, got 1601 error from itunes.
12. Rebooted into DFU again, tried again, 1602 error from itunes.
13. Tried using expert mode on winpwn 2.5beta. Apparently easy mode doesn't actually work; it
creates the
restore image, but it never goes into the countdown code to pwn the phone. I upped the root
partition to 700mb per
some comments on the winpwn page, and it worked like a charm.
14. Installed iTunes 8.01. Reports are on the web that it works fine.
16. Cydia only half-works, popping up a message that says "sub-process bzip2 returned...". This is
solved by
allowing Cydia to update all of its source sets (just click "changes" on the bottom and then
"upgrade (5)"
in the top right).
img class=face src=http://planet.ubuntu.com/heads/gouki.png alt= pI'm writing this down here in
case I have the need to do it again and don't remember what was done./p pThen I ran codeaticonfig
--initial/code. This will create an ATI device section on X.org configuration file capable of
loading fglrx drivers./p psudo aticonfig --initial=dual-head --screen-layout=left/p pThis will
create the initial configuration on xorg.conf for dual-head./p pAfter this I restarted X
em(CTRL+ALT+BACKSPACE)/em. The second monitor was running as a clone em(same image as the main
monitor)/em./p pSince this worked out it was time to try Big Desktop./p psudo aticonfig
--dtop=horizontal/p pAnother X restart./p pThe image was now expanded to the secondary monitor on
the left side. One problem, though./p pInstead of the mouse leaving the main monitor by the left
side em(the side which the secondary monitor is located)/em it was leaving by the opposite side./p
pTo fix this we can manually edit /etc/X11/xorg.conf and change, on the 'Device' section, Option
DesktopSetup horizontal to Option DesktopSetup horizontal,reverse./p
Just having a moan really.
I used to use a Pentax ME Super and I remember my dad spending an extra £15 to
get me a Pentax camera case for it. One of those ones that the lens cover unclipped and unfolded
and hung underneath the camera. Now that I have a Pentax K10D I can't find a case for it unless I
get one that I have to take the camera out of in order to take a picture. Very annoying.
Also, while I am having a moan, while I like the camera and am impressed with the pictures it
produces, why is it so big? Any why so complicated? The sensor size is smaller than a 35mm
negative, so shouldn't the camera be smaller? My Dad's compact Panasonic takes pictures that
compare well with mine, and it's much smaller.
I happily used my ME Super either in aperture priority or manually and focussed it myself without
any confusion. I mostly use the "P" mode with the K10D because I'm still not at the stage that I
can change settings without thinking.
Still like the camera, just wish it had the controls, size and case of my old Super. I'd even put
up with focusing the lens myself...
This problem has carried over from firmware 2.1. My album art is all messed up. I'll add album on
one album but it will show up on two albums, or album are won't show at all. Weird random glitches
like that. I also manually manage my music. Any ideas on how I can fix these problems so cover flow
works properly?
to make this related, i cant connect my ipod to my computer until my problem is fixed. My computer
has 20 critical objects after coming back from repairs and i really need to get them off. I tried
the free versions of avast and a cracked version of AVG and nothing works...sites listed by google
search cant be opened unless i manually put in the url and i cant conncet to the avg website for
updates or anything because of the viruses. PLEEEEASE HELP!! i've tried so many other forums
------------------double post merged------------------lol sorry about the mistakes in the
title...
pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/ps3_video.jpg" width="800"
height="494" style="display:block;float:none;" /If you're here reading Gizmodo, there's a good
chance you have a hard drive full of video somewhere. And you also probably have a PS3, Xbox 360 or
Wii. If those two things aren't working together for you in beautiful symbiosis, allowing you to
watch all of your downloaded or ripped video on your TV instead of hunched over a laptop screen,
well, this is the guide for you./p pNow there are two general strategies you can take: physically
copying your files to a USB drive, memory card or CD/DVD, which is pretty straightforward, or
streaming your video over the network, which is where things get more fun and interesting. So let's
dive in./p pFirst things first, codecs. Now that you're all learn-ed on the ways of video encoding
thanks to a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5093670/giz-explains-every-video-format-you-need-to-know"Matt's Giz
Explains from this week/a, the issue of codecs will make a lot more sense. Thankfully, it's not
something you have to worry too much about here, because all three consoles can handle a large
number of the codecs you will find commonly: AVI, MPEG (1, 2 and 4), H.264, DivX/XviD, and
WMV—and if a particular format you want to play isn't supported, it's often
possible to convert it to work on the fly. The PS3 also supports AVCHD, a format used by many HD
camcorders. Not all formats are supported with every streaming method though, especially in the
360's case, which we'll get to in a second. Now, for getting all those files on the TV./p pNote: if
you need to re-encode a video in a different format because it won't play, nothing beats VLC's
transcoding wizard. a href="http://www.videolan.org/doc/streaming-howto/en/ch02.html"Here's a
guide./a/p pstrongXbox 360: Streaming (PC)/strongbr img
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297019303_tversity_01.png"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="403" style="display:block;" /In typical
Microsoft fashion, there are tons of different ways to pull of streaming your video to the Xbox
360—and the only one that's truly comprehensive, in our opinion, comes from a
third party. a href="http://tversity.com/"TVersity/a is a free UPnP media server that can manage
your video and music files anywhere on your PC and stream them out to your 360 over the network. It
will also kindly transcode just about any video you can throw at it into a codec your console can
definitely read. You might have to install some additional codec packs here and there for Windows
but for the most part, you can forget about worrying about codecs with TVersity. This also allows
TVersity to handle files not officially supported by the 360, like MKV containers./p p1. Grab a
href="http://tversity.com/"TVersity here/a and install it.br 2. Click the giant plus sign in the
top left corner to "Add Your Media Source" - namely, the folder on your PC with all of your
videos.br 3. Under advanced options, set your transcoding preferences: "When Needed" will make sure
most all of your files play.br 4. In the main TVersity menu, select "Start Sharing"br 5. On the
Xbox 360, TVersity will now appear as a source in the Media blade or under My Xbox -gt; Video
Library in NXE./p pThe other three options via Microsoft's own various software solutions all have
their own drawbacks, which we'll cover here briefly. Our advice? Use them only if you already use
the Zune software, Windows Media Player or Windows Media Center to manage all of your video./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297041777_windowsmediaplayer_01.png"
width="494" height="432" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Player 11/strong: WMP 11 can
stream out to the Xbox 360 pretty easily. Here is an a
href="http://paininthetech.com/2008/01/03/stream-video-to-xbox-360-with-windows-media-player-or-winamp-remote"in-depth
guide/a. strongDrawbacks?/strong Somewhat clunky format support. In our tests we could not stream
Quicktime video at all, and had inconsistent experiences with MP4 files. MPEG-4 and H.264 support
are technically supported via third-party WMP codec add-ons, but even with those, we still had
trouble—MP4 files tended to play fine on the WMP 11 end, but not show up as
browsable on the 360. Somewhat unbelievably, the Xbox 360 team actually recommends you a
href="http://blogs.msdn.com/xboxteam/archive/2007/11/30/december-2007-video-playback-faq.aspx"manually
rename your unsupported MPEG-4 and H.264 files/a, adding the ".avi" container extension to fool WMP
into playing them. This worked occasionally, but not for every file and was generally
inconsistent.br clear="all"/p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297025800_zune_01.png" align="left"
hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="338" style="display:block;" /strongZune Software
3.0/strong: Zune offers a much nicer interface than WMP (Settings -gt; Sharing -gt; Add is the
extent of the setup), and thankfully supports MPEG4 and H.264 much more consistently.
strongDrawbacks?/strong No DivX or Xvid support, which means a huge chunk of your Torrented video
probably won't work.br clear="all"/p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297876080_360_MCE.jpg" width="494"
height="308" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Center Extender/strong: If you already
have a Media Center setup honking on your network, there's a good chance you won't need this guide,
but the Xbox 360 can of course stream your MCE content to your TV seamlessly (a a
href="http://features.teamxbox.com/xbox/1392/Xbox-360-Windows-Media-Center-Setup-Guide/p1/"complete
guide is here/a). The interface is really fantastic. strongDrawbacks?/strong The gimpiest codec
support of the bunch: only MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and WMV are supported. So unless you're converting
everything you have into those formats, you'll still need something like TVersity to play most
files you'll find up for download.br clear="all"/p pSo, in the end, TVersity wins hands down as the
easiest and most elegant streaming setup for the 360. But do keep in mind—if
you're playing a format that your Xbox can't handle (MKV being the most common of these you'll
find), TVersity will have to transcode, which means you will lose a bit of quality./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297010629_connect360_01.png"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" width="494" height="378" style="display:block;" /strongXbox 360:
Streaming (Mac)/strong: UPnP support—the networking standard used by both the
Xbox 360 and the PS3 in various flavors to play network-streamed video, music and
photos—is not natively supported by OS X yet. And unfortunately, there isn't a
stellar all-in-one free package like Windows' TVersity.br clear="all"/p pNullriver, however, makes
an incredibly slick piece of software called a
href="http://www.nullriver.com/products/connect360"Connect360/a, which easily streams all of your
iLife libraries or any folder full of video on your Mac to the 360. Unfortunately, it'll cost you
$20. There is a free trial version that supposedly shuts off after 30 minutes of sharing, but
sometimes it seems to forget and lets you play longer. But even so, $20 isn't bad for the
convenience factor here. No transcoding, but it will handle every codec the console itself can play
back./p p1. Download and install the Connect360 preference pane.br 2. In System Preferences, start
up Connect360 sharing. Here you can also add folders for more sharing.br 3. Access the Connect360
source on your Xbox in the usual way. Done./p pimg
src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227301048351_xbox_video.jpg" width="494"
height="329" style="display:block;" /strongXbox 360: Physical Media/strongbr 1. If streaming isn't
for you, and you don't mind hauling a storage device back and forth between your computer and Xbox,
then this is super easy: Insert Flash disk/USB/CD/DVD and browse it with the Media blade or the
Video Library section of NXE (under "My Xbox"). Enjoy.br clear="all"/p pstrongPlaystation 3:
Streaming (PC)/strongbr strongTVersity/strong: Again, Tversity is your friend. It works just as
well for the PS3 as it does for Xbox 360 (see above for setup)./p p1. With Tversity set up and
sharing turned on, just browse to COMPUTERNAME: TVersity in the XMB and you'll see a listing of all
your shared files./p pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/11/ps3_wmp11.png"
width="500" height="371" style="display:block;" /strongWindows Media Player 11/strong: Just like
for Xbox 360, you can use WMP11's built-in DLNA/UPnP serving capabilities to stream to the PS3,
too—but with the same codec funkiness as noted above.br clear="all"/p p1. In
the Media Sharing preference box with your PS3 powered on and connected to the network, select
"Unknown Device"—that's your PS3.br 2. Your library should now show up in
XMB./p pimg src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/2008/11/custom_1227297942918_Picture_26.png"
width="494" height="405" style="display:block;" /strongPlaystation 3: Streaming (MAC)/strongbr Mac:
Nullriver didn't just hook up 360 owners—Media Link is the version especially
for PS3. It costs 20 bucks, but will give you totally seamless and painless streaming of all of
your iLife libraries (photos and music too) as well as files in any folder you can access with your
Mac, whether it's on a network or local.br clear="all"/p p1. Operation is just like
Connect360—with sharing enabled in the Media Link preference pane, just browse
through all your files under the "Media Link" source in XMB./p pstrongPlaystation 3: Physical
Media/strongbr 1. Easy as pie. If you're using a USB flash or hard disc or an SD or CF card, just
dump all of your videos into a folder named VIDEO on the root of the drive and they'll show up
automatically in the XMB.br 2. You can also browse the entire drive or disc by pressing triangle
and choosing "Display All" to find videos that aren't in the VIDEO folder./p pstrongWii: Physical
Media/strongbr img src="http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/gizmodo/2008/10/wiihomebrew6.jpg"
align="left" hspace="4" vspace="2" style="display:block;" /For playing video on your Wii, physical
media is the way to go, which is easy to pull off with some a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"homebrew
hacking/a. There are lots of services that will transcode your video and ouput it in a Flash player
that you can view through the Wii's Opera browser (like a href="http://orb.com"Orb/a), but you'll
take a hit quality-wise and it's not as easy as just playing the source files directly with
Mplayer.br clear="all"/p p1. Install the Homebrew Channel and Mplayer on your Wii. We've got you
covered here with our a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"complete
Wii homebrew guide/a—but hopefully you haven't installed the latest System Menu
update. In that case, you'll have to wait for a workaround, but it probably won't be long./p p2.
Install Mplayer via the Homebrew Browser (also a
href="http://gizmodo.com/5096150/a-complete-guide-to-playing-video-files-on-your-ps3-xbox-360-or-wii-/?op=postpreviewrefId=5096150"covered
in our guide/a)./p p3. Now, you can use Mplayer to play files off or even an attached USB drive (as
long as its formatted in FAT16 or FAT32, which most are). The interface is not nearly as nice, but
it gets the job done./p p4. Mplayer for the Wii covers a ton of codecs, but sadly, the Wii's
processor chokes on HD content. If you've got HD files, you'll need to transcode them into a lower
resolution with VLC./p pAnd that's about it. Now, no more huddling around your laptop screen or
fiddling with TV and audio-out cables. Welcome to the good life./p pemAdditional reporting and
testing by Seung Lee. See more a href="http://gizmodo.com/tag/how_to"Giz how-to guides here/a. And
as always, if you have anything to add to our findings, please let us know in the comments./em/p br
style="clear: both;"/ a
href="http://www.pheedo.com/click.phdo?s=a5f8e7e6b714214c9acf57feb2a23015p=1"img alt=""
style="border: 0;" border="0"
src="http://www.pheedo.com/img.phdo?s=a5f8e7e6b714214c9acf57feb2a23015p=1"//a img
src="http://www.pheedo.com/feeds/tracker.php?i=a5f8e7e6b714214c9acf57feb2a23015" style="display:
none;" border="0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/div class="feedflare" a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=2Sprc4If"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=120" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=B7Ld3MDr"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?d=41" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=FGGqQmpb"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=FGGqQmpb" border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feeds.gawker.com/~f/gizmodo/full?a=ihusyPJE"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/gizmodo/full?i=ihusyPJE" border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~4/7dHhmHJCNb8" height="1" width="1"/
Scroll down to Tasks, and youll see two types of methods: "Creating" an NSDictionary and
"Initializaing" an NSDictionary. Both have pretty similar methods. However, I know that the
"creating" methods interact with your Autorelease pool, and so you don't have to "release" them;
you can simply do [pool drain] at the end of the program.
My question is, why not ALWAYS use the "create" methods? Why would I ever want to "initialize" the
object, and have to worry about manually releasing that object separately from the
NSAutoreleasePool?
GraphStudio is a open source free a href=/tools/GrapheditGraphEdit/a tool. The main reasons for
this project were lot of cool features missing in GraphEdit tool. Features: Detailed System,
Filter, Pin, MediaType information, Reports, Registry modification (add/remove types for filters
manually), Information on registered filters , CLSID, name, file, version, location
…), Detection of broken registry entries, Easier graph construction,
Support for DVB, DVD, Capture graphs, Inspection of media type formats including header parsing for
existing codecs such as H.264, MPEG-2 …, Dumping of media type formats
for later analysis, and many more …. May require a
href=http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=d7b5dc81-ad14-4de2-8ad5-8c4a9aab5992displaylang=en
target=_blankuXMLLite.dll/u/a
Sometimes i put different albums etc on my macs, so not all of them have the same music. How can i
keep them both synced without doing anything? Both of them are on a network but i rather not drag
the new songs into my other itunes library manually.
iFlicks.app 0.5Using iFlicks.app you can easily import your Video Collection into
iTunes. This gives you the ability to watch your Videos directly in iTunes or transfer them to your
iPod or iPhone. On top of that iFlicks downloads Metadata for your Videos and lets you tweak the
Metadata manually. Managing your Video Collection in iTunes has never been this easy.
REQUIREMENTSMac OS X 10.4 or later.
DEVELOPERJendrik
Bertram
DOWNLOADS22 DOWNLOAD NOW
(882 K) More information
Can someone here, possibly a beta tester tell me when the official cat's are going to support the
4830 series? I have to install them manually with anything other than what came on the cd otherwise
the newest cat's 8.11 don't recognize the card. I have to pick the 4000 series in the inf. Not a
big deal IF you know how to do it but it is still a little extra pain to go through. :D
I have a Powercolor video card but I assume that shouldn't matter as it uses the standard ati
cat's.
I think that I may already know the answer in this case but my searches are coming up with
conflicting answers.
What I would like to do is a sync a copy of my Outlook calendar (work, connected to Exchange) to
MobileMe/iPhone. This copy can be read only as I have no desire to edit my calendar w/anything but
Outlook. I don't care if the sync is done only when I have my work PC running. I'm not looking for
real time updates, I'd just like to have a reasonable view of my work calendar on my phone.
Connecting my iPhone to Exchange is not an option, my company will not allow this (unless I'm
willing to use a Windows based phone). Bouncing my calendar through another service like gmail
would be acceptable if required. I'd rather not manually sync via a cable if possible.
From what I can tell, the older version of the Windows MobileMe software would allow this but 1.2
will not. Are there any options here for a (potentially) new user of MobileMe? What about
circumventing MobileMe altogether and just sending it to the iPhone in some way?
I have had my Canon XTI for about a year now, and I love everything about it except for two
things:
1) No Spot Metering
2) Tiny viewfinder
I have recently been shooting film on a Canon Rebel with a larger view finder, and I'm finding it
tough to go back to the XTI, its darn near impossible to focus manually, so I am starting to think
about an upgrade and it looks like the older 30D might solve both of these problems. The reduction
in megapixels from 10.1 to 8.2 is not a big deal for me. Of course I would rather have a
40d/50d/5dmkII or whatever, but I'm a grad student right now on a very strict budget. Would a 30d
as an XTI replacement be a huge mistake?
pimg class="float_right" src="/~~/f?id=4926bde8796c7a65008cd3dcmaxX=320maxY=213" border="0"
alt="iphone-street-view.jpg" title="iphone-street-view.jpg" width="320" height="213" /Another free
time waster (and useful feature) for iPhone owners, courtesy Apple's (AAPL) new iPhone 2.2 software
update, which rolled out last night: Google Maps Street View./p pThis catches the iPhone up with
Google's (GOOG) G1 'GPhone', though the iPhone doesn't seem to have the same automatic "digital
compass" technology as the G1, so you have to move around manually. That's fine -- either way, very
addictive./p pThe software update also includes some user interface improvements and lets you
download podcasts over the air. It does emnot/em include over-the-air iTunes purchases, as a
href="http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/11/are-over-the-air-itunes-downloads-coming-soon-"we had
supposed it might/a. Seems like that's a rights/pricing issue./p pList of new 2.2 features, a
href="http://www.macrumors.com/2008/11/21/apple-releases-iphone-2-2-firmware/"via MacRumors/a:/p p
style="padding-left: 30px;"Enhancements to Mapsbr /- Google Street Viewbr /- public transit and
walking diretionsbr /- display address of dropped pinsbr /- share location via emailbr
/Enhancements to Mailbr /- resolved isolated issues with scheduled fetching of emailbr /- improved
formatting of wide HTML emailbr /Improved stability and performance of Safaribr /Podcasts are now
available for download in iTunes application (over Wi-Fi and cellular)br /Decrease in call set-up
failures and call dropsbr /Improved sound quality of visual voicemail messagesbr /Pressing the Home
button from any Home screen takes you to the first Home screenbr /Preferences to turn on/off
auto-correction in Keyboard settings/p pstrongSee Also:/strongbr /a
href="../../2008/11/rim-blackberry-storm-review"RIM's BlackBerry Storm Is No iPhone, But Should
Sell Well/abr /a
href="../../2008/11/next-year-s-iphone-sales-your-guess-as-good-as-the-analysts-aapl-"Next Year's
iPhone Sales: A Crapshoot/abr /a
href="../../2008/11/blackberry-storm-coming-to-verizon-nov-21-for-199-rimm-"BlackBerry Storm Coming
Nov. 21 For $199, iPhone Not Toast/a/p pa
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src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~at/Adei4t3QPPYDV7aefOcVissMrHA/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?i=E3o2oveg"
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href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?a=Do6ml4OF"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?d=131"
border="0"/img/a a
href="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?a=XJJaztog"img
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?d=336"
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?d=41"
border="0"/img/a a
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src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~f/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider?d=50"
border="0"/img/a /divimg
src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/typepad/alleyinsider/silicon_alley_insider/~4/WcO_mUIrSxQ"
height="1" width="1"/
Screenium 1.0.6Screenium... Make live movies of your Mac's screen, capture
everything that's happening there, including mouse pointer, selections and movements - in
real-time!
With on-the-fly voice recordings, you can easily describe what you are doing on-screen. Simply
use the built-in microphone or any external audio source or input device connected to your Mac.
You can actually capture movie-in-movie: Screenium records your screen just like it is -
including ongoing video playback in multiple windows.