Thursday, July 31, 2003
Wednesday, July 30, 2003
And now a Cult of LaunchBar™ update: 3.2.12 has been released and it has some minor updates, but one that I feel is important.
- The "Default Web Browser" and "Default Email Reader" preference settings have been removed. Please use the corresponding settings in System Preferences instead, or use the "Open with Application" setting of your LaunchBar configuration.
It's nice to see apps, especially one as vital to me as LaunchBar, use things in the OS that make their life easier to make my life easier. It is such a pain to have every app have it's own way of figuring out what the default net app is. Remember the days before Internet Config? Pah you say, it's not like it takes a lot of time to set preferences. True, but a few seconds here and a few seconds there and pretty soon you are talking more than a few seconds.
Monday, July 28, 2003
Sunday, July 27, 2003
Wednesday, July 23, 2003
In response to customer demands (and many long discussions on the REALBasic mailing list), REAL Software has announced that RB 5.5 will be capable of cross-compiling apps for Red Hat and SuSE distributions of Linux, with other distros being added according to demand. You'll still need either a Mac or Windows box to create and cross-compile the app for Linux. You'll have to wait for the Linux-based REALBasic IDE, but REAL Software says that they intend to make one available in a later version.
RB 5.5 is expected to be released in the first quarter of 2004.
Tuesday, July 22, 2003
Monday, July 21, 2003
(For the record, while this is a gripe post, in general I love how easy OS X makes monitor-spanning. I consider it indispensible.)
I use two displays vertically stacked (my PB internal below and a 17" CRT above, for a 1152x1638 desktop). A lot of these problems are much more noticeable with this kind of setup, which I can only surmise has never been used by any OS X developer inside Apple.
A couple examples:
- with the menubar on the top monitor, open Clock. Drag it to the bottom. Now drag back to the top. Oops, you can't!
- with the menubar on the bottom monitor, open any Cocoa app on the bottom. try to drag its window to the top. Oops, you can't! (There may be Cocoa apps that don't do this and Carbon ones that do, but none that I've tried.)
Tuesday, July 15, 2003
backing up and restoring on my box were really simple. i plugged in my 30GB ipod and installed os x on it (which went smoothly, i just selected it as the drive to install to when the installer asked me). then with a few points and clicks, i got disk copy to create an image of my powerbook's drive and save it to my ipod. click, click, reboot while holding down "T" (to boot firewire target mode) -- instead of your laptop's drive whirring you'll hear the ipod happily clicking away. perfect. when booted, format your laptop's drive, then expand out the image onto the notebook's drive, and voila.
jeez. i remember the hassles i would go through before on my other computers. this is just too easy. to make it even easier, the carbon copy cloner will even schedule the creation of disk images! if anything goes wrong with your laptop, its your fault. these people just make it too easy.
update (7/21/03 23:34): oops, thanks to adam sherman to pointing out that i left out how to restore the disk image to the hard drive. use bombich's carbon copy cloner for that.
Monday, July 07, 2003
Friday, July 04, 2003
Tuesday, July 01, 2003
Bill Bumgarner has a nice easy description of setting up ssh tunnels for Apple file sharing (as well as SMTP, IMAP and POP).
It's secure drag and drop, man.