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-   Computer/Internet Issues & Troubleshooting (https://www.pprune.org/computer-internet-issues-troubleshooting-46/)
-   -   Apple stuff - Mac, iPad, iphone (https://www.pprune.org/computer-internet-issues-troubleshooting/314763-apple-stuff-mac-ipad-iphone.html)

pendrifter 11th March 2008 18:33

Problem Solving
 
If you don't get a problem solved here - then try here

http://www.macfixit.com/

I've had a couple of probs and solved here.

I'm using Safari, which recently has been getting sloower and sloooooower each day. :ugh:
Checked out macfixit, and problem solved (someone else having the same trouble), Safari is flying again.

Bookmark it now!!

Senior Pilot 15th March 2008 03:49

I'm trying to delete Time Machine backups from an external hard drive (Free Agent Go), but can't see any files to delete, nor find a command to format the disc.

Any hints, please?

TIA

Senior Pilot 16th March 2008 01:46

Time Machine solution found at MacOSXHints :ok:

Senior Pilot 3rd April 2008 11:07

Anyone else here have a MacBook Air? I'm having a problem with battery charging times, and Apple Support are good, but not sure what is a normal charge time atm. It's taking hours (5.5 hours so far from 0% to 50%), I'd appreciate an indication from others as to what charge times they are experiencing.

TIA :ok:

MightyGem 10th April 2008 16:08

The MacFormat Forums are another good place for help with all things Mac.

redsnail 14th April 2008 17:40

As macs are gaining in popularity worldwide, it's only time before viruses are written for macs.

Does any one use or recommend some a/virus software or am I being unduly concerned?

(180 nights away, that's a lot of open wifi and broadband connections)

seekayess 14th April 2008 19:43

redsnail

Call me ultra-careful or what you will, but I have ALWAYS paid for, and had the Norton Anti Virus on! :ok:


And I find it more than adequate!



. . . open wifi and broadband connections)

What has THAT got to do with any virus? You can get virus ONLY if you go snooping in doubtful sites, most of which try and tempt you with porn, not because you are connected thru ANY wifi etc.



Leastways, I don't think so! I am open to correction, tho!

redsnail 15th April 2008 14:35

Many of the hotel sites that you need to go through first have a lot of ads flashing away and there's the potential for spyware etc.

The Nr Fairy 17th April 2008 13:02

What I would recommend, especially over an open Wi-Fi connection, is trying to use secure (i.e. https) web pages for logging in and even for reading private email. GMail, PPRuNe mail, Yahoo etc. all allow you to log in securely, but only GMail (off the top of my head) then keeps the https connection. The login URL is stable which means it can be bookmarked.

And ClamAV is the first MacOS AV software which appeared when I googled it. Ping me in a month and I might know more about it :)

Big Bad D 18th April 2008 11:54

I use and would recommend the Intego SecurityBarrier (VirusBarrier and NetBarrier) software for the Mac (www.intego.com). It is simple to install and configure; and, most importantly, is completely unobtrusive. The latest version X5 is Leopard compatible. There are 30-day trial versions available for each of their products.

The Intego solution is not free, you pay for the software which includes the first 12 months subscription; but the subsequent renewal is reasonably priced and there are good discounts for taking out longer subscriptions.

redsnail 18th April 2008 13:17

Thanks a lot, I shall look into these solutions more closely. :ok:

Wonderworld 20th April 2008 01:43

+1 for Intego :D

aviate1138 20th April 2008 08:28

seekayess said

"Call me ultra-careful or what you will, but I have ALWAYS paid for, and had the Norton Anti Virus on!
And I find it more than adequate!"

From Macos.com

"I would concur that Nortons causes more trouble than it solves. At present, there are no viruses on the Mac. There are a couple of legitimate antivirus products such as Norton's, Virex and ClamAV.

Of the three I mentioned, Norton's is the one I'd avoid the most because of the number of ways in which it hooks into the system, scanning everything in "real time" as it is written to the hard drive. This is intended to be more thorough, but in essence it just means that it can easily screw up your system."

seekayess 15th May 2008 11:25

Photoshop User guide: For FREE!!
 
Are you into Photoshop?

And, like me, not really professionally aware of its intricacies?

Well just go to:

http://photoshop.aws.sitepoint.com/


Click on the Download, give your email ID and, Bob's your uncle!!


PS: It is about 69 mb.

OllyBeak 17th May 2008 11:07

Er... This may not be a Mac problem, but it's happening on a Mac, so:

I get the usual assortment of spam, offering blue tablets, increased inches, etc. But some of the spam appears to originate from my address.

Not only that, but I cleared out the 'Sent' bit of Mail this afternoon and found that said spam appeared there as well!

How on Earth does all this happen, and how can I prevent it?

Any hints, tips, used fivers, etc, much appreciated.

Cheers,

Ol.

(The machine is an Intel desktop running Leopard with Mail; it speaks to the outside via Ethernet, an ADSL modem and the telephone line.)

Bushfiva 17th May 2008 14:49

chrisetom: Are you also Chrise, Dengchen, lovewenc and usnocnn, and on DEbianHelp? First time poster as all the above.
  • Ah, I see you have popped up on a couple of other sites, including MediaDV as hppay. And on a static IP address. A bit more digging suggests you own the iskysoft.com domain, which happens to be the first link in your message, and you're currently astroturfing web sites, of which PPRuNe is one, to promote it.
If you've hired an SEO to do this for you, they're no good and you should ask for your money back.

seekayess 19th May 2008 16:52

Ever Wondered What Heaven is Like?
 
Sorry, Folks! I know this is a serious thread, but this was just TOO darn good not to tell you all about it!!


Bill Gates died and, much to everyone’s surprise, went to Heaven. When he got there, he had to wait in the reception area. Heaven’s reception area was the size of Massachusetts. There were literally millions of people milling about, living in tents with nothing to do all day. Food and water were being distributed from the backs of trucks, while staffers with clipboards slowly worked their way through the crowd. Bill lived in a tent for three weeks until, finally, one of the staffers approached him.

The staffer was a young man in his late teens, face scarred with acne. He was wearing a blue T-shirt with the words TEAM PETER emblazoned on it in large yellow lettering.

‘Hello,’ said the staffer in a bored voice that could have been the voice of any clerk in any overgrown bureaucracy. ‘My name is Gabriel and I’ll be your induction coordinator.’

Bill started to ask a question, but Gabriel interrupted him. ‘No, I’m not the Archangel Gabriel. I’m just a guy from Philadelphia named Gabriel who died in a car wreck at the age of 17. Now give me your name, last name first, unless you were Chinese in which case it’s first name first.’

‘Gates, Bill.’ Gabriel started searching though the sheaf of papers on his clipboard, looking for Bill’s Record of Earthly Works.

‘What’s going on here?’ asked Bill. ‘Why are all these people here? Where’s Saint Peter? Where are the Pearly Gates?’

Gabriel ignored the questions until he located Bill’s records. Then Gabriel looked up in surprise. ‘It says here that you were the president of a large software company. Is that right?’

‘Yes.’

‘Well then, do the math chip-head! When this Saint Peter business started, it was an easy gig. Only a hundred or so people died every day, and Peter could handle it all by himself, no problem. But now there are over five billion people on earth. Jesus, when God said to ‘go forth and multiply,’ he didn’t say ‘like rabbits!’ With that large a population, ten thousand people die every hour. Over a quarter-million people a day. Do you think Peter can meet them all personally?’

‘I guess not.’

‘You guess right. So Peter had to franchise the operation. Now, Peter is the CEO of Team Peter Enterprises, Inc. He just sits in the corporate headquarters and sets policy. Franchisees like me handle the actual inductions.’

Gabriel looked though his paperwork some more, and then continued. ‘Your paperwork seems to be in order. And with a background like yours, you’ll be getting a plum job assignment.’

‘Job assignment?’

‘Of course. Did you expect to spend the rest of eternity sitting on your ass and drinking ambrosia? Heaven is a big operation. You have to pull your weight around here!’ Gabriel took out a triplicate form, had Bill sign at the bottom, and then tore out the middle copy and handed it to Bill.

‘Take this down to induction center #23 and meet up with your occupational orientator. His name is Abraham.’

Bill started to ask a question, but Gabriel interrupted him. ‘No, he’s not *that* Abraham.’

Bill walked down a muddy trail for ten miles until he came to induction center #23. He met with Abraham after a mere six-hour wait.

‘Heaven is centuries behind in building its data processing infrastructure,’ explained Abraham. ‘As you’ve seen, we’re still doing everything on paper. It takes us a week just to process new entries.’

‘I had to wait *three* weeks,’ said Bill. Abraham stared at Bill angrily, and Bill realized that he’d made a mistake. Even in Heaven, it’s best not to contradict a bureaucrat.

‘Well,’ Bill offered, ‘maybe that Bosnia thing has you guys backed up.’

Abraham’s look of anger faded to mere annoyance. ‘Your job will be to supervise Heaven’s new data processing center. We’re building the largest computing facility in creation. Half a million computers connected by a multi-segment fiber optic network, all running into a back-end server network with a thousand CPUs on a gigabit channel. Fully fault tolerant. Fully distributed processing. The works.’

Bill could barely contain his excitement. ‘Wow! What a great job! This is really Heaven!’

‘We’re just finishing construction, and we’ll be starting operations soon. Would you like to go see the center now?’

‘You bet!’

Abraham and Bill caught the shuttle bus and went to Heaven’s new data processing center. It was a truly huge facility, a hundred times bigger than the Astrodome. Workmen were crawling all over the place, getting the miles of fiber optic cables properly installed.

But the center was dominated by the computers. Half a million computers, arranged neatly row-by-row, half a million ........


Apple Macintoshes ........


all running Claris software! Not a PC in sight! Not a single byte of Microsoft code!

The thought of spending the rest of eternity using products that he had spent his whole life working to destroy was too much for Bill. ‘What about PCs???’ he exclaimed. ‘What about Windows??? What about Excel??? What about Word???’

‘You’re forgetting something,’ said Abraham.

‘What’s that?’ asked Bill plaintively.

‘This is Heaven,’ explained Abraham. ‘We need a computer system that’s heavenly to use. If you want to build a data processing center based on PCs running Windows, then ........ GO TO HELL!’

Telstar 17th June 2008 09:39

How many of you use an antivirus software prgram on your Macs? I know I probably don't need it but back when I was a PC user I used free AVG. Anything similar for the Mac?

seekayess 17th June 2008 10:38

Hi Telstar

I have always used Norton AntiVirus.

Have never had any problems with any virus for the last twenty years!! :)

Everyone says that I am wasting the money and I wouldn't have had any virus even if did NOT have NAV loaded. Mebbe they are right, mebbe not! I find it worth the small amount it costs for my peace of mind!

Horses for courses, I guess!! ;)

Telstar 17th June 2008 14:17

I would never have Norton or Symantec on my computer again. They crippled my PC when I had them running, they were seriously expensive too. AVG was dead good, lightweight and free!

Hasselhof 20th June 2008 22:03

OS X Leopard Server comes with ClamAV built in. If its good enough for them...

That said, I can't be bothered with antivirus software on my mac until there are viruses to scan for. I keep up to date with what is going on in the Mac community and if I hear that there is a looming problem then I'll be right on it.

Telstar 22nd June 2008 11:01

Fair enough. Thanks for the replies.

Anyone know of a good piece of software for "grabbing" flash videos for a mac? Only ones I could find are the ones for Windows. Trying to grab this type of video:

http://link.brightcove.com/services/...cpid1078549907

Hasselhof 24th June 2008 14:16


Anyone know of a good piece of software for "grabbing" flash videos for a mac?
Try CosmoPod. I use it and it works well, though its for safari only.

aidanf 25th June 2008 08:01

TubeTV also works quite well, and is easy to use

TubeTV - YouTube and other flash video to Apple TV, iPhone, and iPod - Download and Export Software for Mac OS X

PerAdUK 8th July 2008 17:06

Hey, nice to see a place that respects a good computer. :P

Ok so right now I'm still on my G4 Powermac Quicksilver, which has served me well, but with new software demanding more than 1.6ghz of Proc. speed :P , I'm looking at picking up a Mac Mini and using it on my Apple Flat Screen.
Anyone got one? the ones I've used have run really well, despite not being very powerful... And I was wondering if I was just lucky?
It's either that or I save up for a Macbook Pro, my dad has one of those and it's pretty good.

Background Noise 8th July 2008 19:00


Anyone know of a good piece of software for "grabbing" flash videos for a mac?
Yes - this is pretty good - from the apple download site - Web2 Delight

Mac the Knife 13th July 2008 18:57

"....picking up a Mac Mini and using it on my Apple Flat Screen. Anyone got one?"

Yes. Excellent little beast. Get the 2GHz one with a 160gig HDD and 2GB of memory. Only thing that lets it down a bit is the onboard Intel GMA 950 graphics processor which is good but not stunning.

:ok:

PerAdUK 16th July 2008 09:55

Ah yeah, they look good, surprisingly powerful for such a small thing.
Does yours make much noise?

Mac the Knife 16th July 2008 17:16

No. Have to put my head near it to hear it.

:ok:

Mac

aviate1138 19th July 2008 08:55

Norton? I stopped using it ages ago. It always seemed to be behind any crashes I had.

From an Apple forum....
" Symantec's tools have developed a bad reputation in the Mac world over the last several years and there's no question that for many users, removing Symantec programs from their computers improved their Mac experience tremendously. "

My feelings entirely.

seekayess 19th July 2008 15:12

Ah well! I have been a continuous user of Norton now for the last twenty years and I have NEVER had any problems of any manner!

C'est la vie!!


BTW,

I know, I could have posted about them one at a time, but, what the heck!

You guys deserve the best!

Please go to THIS and check out what is being offered!

I am already busy downloading!!

cavortingcheetah 19th July 2008 19:44

:hmm:

Wonder if some of you would please be so kind as to provide some information and/ or suggestions on a few points.
A little of a waffle perhaps but I want to explain why the Apple warranty would be so important to my travelling needs.
Posted a thread downstairs a few days ago, lamenting the lack of customer care on my Sony Vaio. Bought it less than a year ago in the USA/Sony dealer, warranty etc. Now it has a touchpad problem. Sony USA will only honour the warranty in the USA and will charge me $300 for shipping to San Diego. Sony UK tell me that if I send it to them in England, they will want £189 just to look at the kit. The South Africans will not touch it because that model, a cheapy, is not available there. The Germans, well, much the same as the English. In other words, it's not a company, it's a franchise with no recognizable service base.
I've been thinking of moving to a Mac for a long time, when my older little, tiny Vaio dies. Been put off by the fact that I am very, very unclued up on computers and those of the family who are good with the horrid things only know their way around PCs.
So, please, any feedback on dunces changing from PC to Mac.
Any feedback on the honouring of warranties in countries other than that in which the Apple has been bought. Surely Macs do go bust form time to time?
What really would be the competition for the Apple Air? It just feels right, like my VGN T2XP.
Thank you one and all.
cc

Background Noise 19th July 2008 20:00

Friend at work bought a US spec Macbook and has just had it repaired under international warranty in UK.

AppleMacster 19th July 2008 20:40

Specifically, AppleCare on the laptops has international coverage. The PowerMacs and iMacs are not covered internationally with AppleCare.

The only exception is the MacMini where the AppleCare has international coverage, being small enough to be deemed portable!

AppleMacster.

fleebag 21st July 2008 05:07

^^^
Where did you read that? I haven't seen anything on any of the mac forums I'm active on.

AppleMacster 21st July 2008 07:06

Flying Officer Kite,

Certainly, it would appear that hackers have managed to unlock the new iPhone 2.0 software, meaning that the iPhone could be run on any network. However, you have to deliberately run software in order to re-flash the iPhone to make it work. This is different from being able to do damage to a desktop via the iPhone in terms of viruses and dangerous code. Like fleebag, I've not seen anything along these lines.

What sort of problems are you having with downloading?

AppleMacster

MightyGem 26th July 2008 02:54

Something to do with This Article perhaps?

John James 26th July 2008 04:04

killer actions on macs
 
a cup of coffee is also a killer :(
I am trying to get a CH virtual pilot pro up for flight gear sim and running on my new imac but it is an older serial type and guess I need a transition to the new bus connect type- any tips?
thnx
ps I am new on macs
j

John James 26th July 2008 04:23

anti virus n back up
 
running clamx anti virus- has cleaned out some bad emails and not obtrusive

...norton from my pc days is a nightmare
good free 2 gig on line back up is mozy
yrs

seekayess 29th July 2008 17:32

I am sure most of you already know this, but if you do not, this is a very nifty trick:


If you want to create a new note in Stickies from a text selection in another application, first highlight the text you want to include, and then type Command-Shift-Y. Stickies will launch automatically and create a new note with your text selection already in place.



:ok::ok:


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