November 2, 2008 – 7:06 PM
I’d thought that if you wanted to boot Intel Macs you needed to use the recently available GUID partition table, mainly because that’s what it says in Disk Utility when you format the drive. In fact, as it turns out (at least as of Mac OS X 10.5.5), using the Apple Partition Map (APM) boots [...]
October 27, 2008 – 2:11 PM
While Spotlight in Mac OS X 10.5 is greatly improved, there is one area in which it has regressed to an unusable state. Sort options in Leopard’s Spotlight are limited to only three fields: Name, Kind and Last Opened. Uh… This is bad, guys… For most quickie finds I’ll usually turn to the Spotlight menubar [...]
October 27, 2008 – 1:48 PM
This is one of those I-keep-forgetting-how-to-do-this posts, so I’m writing it down. It’s certainly been posted elsewhere, but I’m tired of going looking every time I need it. So here it is. In Tiger a simple defaults command could be used to modify a user’s umask (a setting that controls the default permissions for newly [...]
October 12, 2008 – 5:30 PM
As big a fan as I am of Leopard, there’s always room for improvement. And, though I’ve covered my major gripes already, I’ve recently discovered some additional buggy behavior in Leopard. Application Switching For some time now, Mac OS X has had the ability to switch between applications using the handy command-tab key combo. This [...]
September 15, 2008 – 9:20 PM
I just looked all over Hell’s half acre for this (okay, I performed a perfunctory Google search) and I couldn’t find a definitive answer. Now I know and I just wanted to make a quick note of it for posterity. In the olden days (i.e., a few months ago), in order to get any mounted [...]
August 31, 2008 – 9:24 PM
One of my “greatest hits,” if you will, is called “Publish iCal Calendars on the Internet for Free,” and it’s about just that: publishing and subscribing to your iCal calendars using Box.net’s free and WebDAV-friendly file sharing service. This method of calendar sharing has helped me (and others, I presume) keep tabs on all our [...]
I’ve been using Time Machine for a while now. And I’ve noticed some interesting things about its behavior. Of particular note, I’ve noticed that Time Machine does not back up your data when you are logged out. I found this strange until I figured out why this is the case. I first noticed Time Machine [...]
So far this NetBoot/NetInstall thing is working out a thousand times better than I ever thought it would. I wish I’d done this years ago. Not only does it save time, it also reduces errors. This is often one of the most overlooked features of automating a process: the less human interaction in the process, [...]
So this is going great. I have a really solid Base OS Install, and a whole buttload of packages now. Packages that set everything from network settings to custom and specialized users. I can build a typical system in about 45 minutes, and I can do most of the building from my office (or any [...]
I’ve become quite the package whiz, if I do say so myself. Actually, I’m probably doing something ass-backwards, but still, I wanted to share some of my working methods as they seem to be, well… Um… Working… One of the things I’m doing is using packages to run shell scripts that make computer settings (like [...]