Powered by Squarespace

 

Entries in os x (28)

Wednesday
Nov102010

OS X 10.6.5 released today. Mine a healthy 680MB.

If you are running Snow Leopard, you need this update.  Go here for the info from Apple.  If you have a recent camera that did not have RAW support, this has an update for that too.

Supported by Mac OS X v10.6.5

Canon EOS 60D
Canon PowerShot S95
Hasselblad H4D-40
Nikon D3100
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX5
Sony DSLR-A290
Sony DSLR-A560
Sony DSLR-A580
Sony SLT-A33
Sony SLT-A55

Wednesday
Oct202010

Mac OS X Lion coming summer of 2011

Mac OS X was previewed at today’s Back to the Mac event, showing new features inspired by iOS on the iPad, such as multi-touch gestures, the App Store, app home screens, full-screen apps, auto-saving capabilities, and how apps resume when launched.

Lion brings many of the best ideas from iPad back to the Mac, plus some fresh new ones like Mission Control that Mac users will really like,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “Lion has a ton of new features, and we hope the few we had time to preview today will give users a good idea of where we are headed.

Lion will be released in Summer 2011. The Mac App Store will open in 90 days.

Tuesday
Nov102009

Apple released Mac OS X 10.6.2 on Monday

On Monday, Apple released Mac OS X 10.6.2, the latest update to its Mac OS X operating system. As you might have guessed, it contains a number of fixes and feature enhancements for the newest cat. Apple recommends 10.6.2 for all users running Snow Leopard.

The 10.6.2 update is available via Software Update and Apple’s support downloads site. The size of the download in Software Update may vary depending on your computer.

Friday
Oct162009

Apple's Snow Leopard bests Windows 7 in speed tests

When both Mac OS X 10.6 and Windows 7 were tested on a MacBook Pro, Apple’s new operating system clearly beat Microsoft in terms of speed, a new test has shown.

Both operating systems were tested on a 2008 MacBook Pro machine by CNet, and each was given its own, separate, clean hard drive. The 64-bit version of each OS was included in the test, which measured a variety of speed and performance related tasks. Snow Leopard was given true, full 64-bit support with most of its native applications taking full advantage of modern processors.

Each OS had the same software installed: iTunes 9, QuickTime, Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, and Cinebench R10. In the test, Snow Leopard booted and shut down significantly faster than Windows 7.

“In time-based tests, Snow Leopard consistently outdid Windows 7,” the study found. “It took only 36.4 seconds to boot up, while Windows took 42.7 seconds. In a shutdown test, Snow Leopard took only 6.6 seconds, while Windows needed twice the amount of time: 12.6 seconds. Both computers, however, took just about 1 second to return from sleeping. For this reason, I didn’t actually test the wake-up time as it was too short in both operating systems to produce meaningful numbers or even allow me to measure the difference.”

The Mac software also unsurprisingly ran Apple’s own native applications more efficiently. Converting a movie from M4 format to iPod in Quicktime X on Snow Leopard took 444.3 seconds, while Windows 7, with QuickTime 7 (the latest version available) took 723 seconds. Similarly, converting 17 songs in iTunes from MP3 to AAC took 149.9 seconds in Snow Leopard, while Windows 7 required 162 seconds.

The test also found that Mac OS X 10.6 had better battery life on the MacBook Pro than Windows 7. The 2008 model has a removable battery. But author Dong Ngo said he believes Boot Camp drivers were mostly responsible for the Windows 7 battery life, as many PC laptops fared much better than the 77 minutes the Microsoft OS fared.

One area where Windows 7 was able to easily trump Snow Leopard was in graphics performance. The system’s 512MB Nvidia GeForce 9600M GT graphics card helped the system score much better in the latest version of Windows, earning a 5,777 3D rendering score in Cinebench R10. Snow Leopard scored 5,437.

In testing Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, Windows 7 again came out on top, with an average 26.3 frames per second performance, compared to 21.2 frames per second within Snow Leopard.

Ngo’s conclusion: Unless you are a gamer, get a Mac.

“If you can get by with just software designed by Apple and if money is not a big issue, you will be happy with a Mac,” he said. “Examples of these software choices are iTunes, iLife, QuickTime, Safari, iChat, and so on (and you probably won’t need much more than those for daily entertainment and communication needs). Finally, if money is not an issue—and it definitely is for most of us—you should get a Mac anyway. It’s the only platform, for now, that can run both Windows and OS X.”

source:appleinsider

Saturday
Sep052009

Apple lists apps incompatible with Snow Leopard

Apple has published a series of official support documents for Mac OS X Snow Leopard, which ships today. These cover Finder and the desktop, the printing process, and more crucially a number of incompatible applications. A specific set of programs may be automatically moved to an “Incompatible Software” folder on a Mac, and/or blocked from being opened.

Apps which are moved to the separate folder include:

  • Parallels Desktop, ver. 2.5 and earlier
  • McAfee VirusScan, ver. 8.6
  • Norton AntiVirus ver. 11.0
  • Internet Cleanup 5 ver. 5.0.4
  • Application Enhancer ver. 2.0.1 and earlier
  • Unsanity
  • AT&T Laptop Connect Card ver. 1.0.4, 1.0.5, 1.10.0
  • launch2net ver, 2.13.0
  • iWOW plug-in for iTunes ver. 2.0
  • Missing Sync for Palm Sony CLIE Driver ver. 6.0.4
  • TonePort UX8 Driver ver. 4.1.0
  • ioHD Driver ver. 6.0.3
  • Silicon Image SiI3132 Drivers ver. 1.5.16.0

On top of this, the following software is being blocked from launching:

  • Parallels Desktop ver. 3.0
  • VirusBarrier X4 ver. 10.4.4 and earlier
  • SPSS 17 ver. 17.1
  • Director MX 2004 ver. 10.2
  • EyeTV ver. 3.0.0 to 3.1.0
  • Ratatouille ver. 1.1
  • Aperture ver. 2.1.1 and earlier
  • Keynote ver. 2.0.2 and earlier
  • AirPort Admin Utility for Graphite and Snow ver. 4.2.5
Tuesday
Sep012009

REVIEWS AND TIPS FROM THE MAC COMMUNITY

  •  “Snow Leopard Security and Technology is the latest in our special report on the new operating system. Robert Mohns digs deep into 64-bit issues and support, along with ‘NX bits’, OpenCL, Grand Central Dispatch and additional security details and issues.” MacInTouch 
  • “Hands-On Review: Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard—How fast is it?” Macs Only! 
  • “Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): After spending a couple of days with Snow Leopard, I can give an enthusiastic recommendation to upgrade” Creative Mac 
  • “Weekend with Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard” Terry White’s Tech Blog 
  • “Snow Leopard: hands-on review” The Independent 
  • “Discoveries in Mac OS X Snow Leopard: The Finder” The Small Wave 
  • “The Night Owl’s Snow Leopard Review” The Tech Night Owl 
  • “Mac OS Snow Leopard: Great news for Windows 7, too” CNET News 
  • “Review: Apple launches Snow Lepoard” Illawarra Mercury (Australia) 
  • “First Look: Snow Leopard. From The Wow To The Ouch” Mac360 
  • “Universal Type Server 2 review: Sean Ashcroft” Macworld UK 
  • “Photoshop Plugin: Akvis Sketch v9.0” DigitalAppleJuice 
  • “Ecoute - Not Just Another iTunes Controller” Smoking Apples 
  • “Checking 32 or 64-bit Kernel Boot Mode in Snow Leopard” The Mac Observer 
  • “Set a blazingly fast keyboard repeat rate” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “A pawful of quick Snow Leopard tips” The Unofficial Apple Weblog 
  • “What to do if the Snow Leopard Install Hangs” The Mac Observer 
  • “10.6: Windows updates may fail with Bootcamp 3” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “10.6: Keep Quicktime Player X from pausing after seek” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “10.6:What to do if asked to find System Events.app” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “10.6: Re-enable LCD font smoothing for some monitors” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “10.6: No more easily-found hidden preferences” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “10.5: Set up Clojure on Leopard” Mac OS X Hints 
  • “How to: Wake on Demand for network, music, printer” FairerPlatform 

source:macsurfer

Monday
Aug242009

It is official now. Apple releasing Snow Leopard on August 28, 2009

This time it’s only costing you $29 dollars for the upgrade, but if you are like me with the “old” chipset, you’re out of luck.  Only the Intel will be able to run OS X 10.6.

So upgrading to the new operating system will cost me a lot more than $29….

Friday
Aug212009

Apple's UK Online Store Lists August 28th Ship Date for Snow Leopard Up-to-Date Program

If all the latest rumors are to be believed, Apple’s next operating system Snow Leopard would see an August 28th launch, ahead of Apple’s previously-announced September launch window.

 

Tuesday
Aug182009

Reviews and Tips from mac sites

  • “Razor in the Apple: Catching Up With Stainless” Smoking Apples
  • “Gorilla 4.5.5: Taming the jungle of film production logistics” Macworld
  • “Dr. Mac: QuicKeys provides shortcuts for tasks you perform daily” Houston Chronicle
  • “Sumo Paint review: Photoshop in your web browser? Sumo Paint comes as close to this as the state of the art allows” Macworld UK
  • “The better Finder for your Mac” PixoBebo
  • “Beyond HandBrake’s defaults” Macworld
  • “Open Firefox with a clean profile” Mac OS X Hints
  • “Add a Save to PDF directory to your Print options” Mac OS X Hints
  • “Mac Book Pros not going to sleep” MacFixIt

source:macsurfer

Wednesday
Aug052009

Apple releases Mac OSX 10.5.8 update

Apple released the next and probably last upgrade to its Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard operating system Wednesday afternoon, bringing minor tweaks before the debut of Snow Leopard in September.

What’s included in this update:

  • Upgrades Safari to version 4.0.2.
  • Improves the accuracy of full history search in Safari 4.
  • Resolves an issue in which certain resolutions might not appear in the Display pane in System Preferences.
  • Dragging an Aperture image into Automator now invokes an Aperture action instead of incorrectly invoking an iPhoto action.
  • Resolves an issue that could prevent importing of large photo and movie files from digital cameras.
  • Improves overall Bluetooth reliability with external devices, USB webcams and printers.
  • Addresses an issue that could cause extended startup times.
  • Improves iCal reliability with MobileMe Sync and CalDav.
  • Addresses data reliability issues with iDisk and MobileMe.
  • Improves overall reliability with AFP.
  • Improves overall reliability with Managed Client.
  • Improves compatibility and reliability for joining AirPort networks.
  • Improves Sync Service reliability.
  • Includes additional RAW image support for several third-party cameras.
  • Improves compatibility with some external USB hard drives.
  • Includes latest security fixes.