5Vote!
KIJO (Free subscription) | yesterday
No bonus points for calling this one, but it looks like Atom support has returned to Mac OS X 10.6.2 -- less than two weeks after it was unceremoniously removed to the dismay of hackintoshers. Of course, this new "fix" doesn't come courtesy of Apple, and it does take the art of hackintoshing to some risky new levels. Developed by a member of the InsanelyMac forurm, the hack is actually a...
3Vote!
Mac Rumors (Free subscription) | yesterday
InsanelyMac reports that a member of its forums has created a workaround allowing users who have modified their Intel Atom-based netbooks into "Hackintoshes" in order to run Mac OS X to upgrade to OS X 10.6.2. The 10.6.2 update had specifically disa...
3Vote!
iPhone, the Blog (Free subscription) | yesterday
Filed under: Software, Internet, Internet Tools Google is making some big announcements today during their Chrome OS press event. In addition to the official announcement for Chrome OS they also let another little tidbit of information loose: “Just this year alone in Chrome, there’s tons of new stuff coming. Before this year gets over, we’ll have 3 [...]
3Vote!
Click World News (Free subscription) | 19/11/2009
aaaaaaargh! writes "I'm using a laptop with Ubuntu 8.04 for work, a netbook with Ubuntu 9.10 when I'm outside, Mac OS X 10.5 for hobby projects, and Windows XP for gaming. For backups, I'm currently using Jungle Disk and Apple's Time Machine, and I use a local svn repository for my work data. Now I need to frequently exchange and synchronize OpenOffice and Latex files and source code in various...
3Vote!
MacOSXHints (Free subscription) | yesterday
I know there are plenty of back up/synchronization packages for the Mac, and I know Time Machine is awesome. But as I have a Linux/FreeBSD background, I wanted to do it my way. And none of the software I tried was able to do it my way :-). So the command line seemed to be a good solution. My office Windows machine has plenty of disk space on it, and it is rarely used. It was an ideal system (with not...
3Vote!
MAC News Network (Free subscription) | yesterday
A workaround has been developed to restore Atom processor support in Mac OS X 10.6.2, a Russian hacker claims. The technique relies on a custom version of the Mach kernel, which must be installed using Terminal because of the need to gain root access. Once active, the kernel should support so-called hackintosh netbooks, most likely to use Atom chips....
3Vote!
MacMegasite - News for Mac Geeks (Free subscription) | yesterday
Celmaro today is pleased to announce Minco 1.0, a innovative, minimalist lightweight time tracking solution for Mac OS X Snow Leopard. It fully integrates with iCal and allows to write time logs in self specified formats to the file system. Minco can also visualize the daily spend time in iCal and hereby allows sharing with others. Minco comes with four standard preconfigured and customizable adapter...
3Vote!
OS X Daily (Free subscription) | yesterday
You can easily resize any disk partition in Mac OS X using the included Disk Utility app, located in /Applications/Utilities, you can even resize a mounted volume but that’s not the best idea in the world. Before you go messing around and resizing your partitions, be sure to backup your data in case something [...]
3Vote!
AppleInsider (Free subscription) | yesterday
Hackers have circumvented the changes in Mac OS X 10.6.2 to allow the latest upgrade to Apple's Snow Leopard to run on netbooks with Intel Atom processors.
3Vote!
Gadget Lab (Free subscription) | yesterday
When Apple dropped support for Atom processors in OS X 10.6.2, effectively killing Hackintosh netbooks, we knew that somebody would fix things. We didn’t know that it would happen so fast. Just over a week after the update, Russian hacker “Tea” has made a patched kernel specifically for the Atom CPU. Simply copying this to the [...]
3Vote!
JabzWeb.com (Free subscription) | yesterday
It has had less than two weeks to developers of the InsanelyMac forum to make a fix for running OS X 10.6.2 on a netbook that features an Intel Atom! The hackintosh is back on this type of device, but until when?
3Vote!
DV Hardware (Free subscription) | yesterday
Back in August upon the launch of Apple's Snow Leopard we delivered benchmarks comparing Mac OS X 10.5 and Mac OS X 10.6 along with initial benchmarks of how Ubuntu 9.10 was running against Mac OS X 10.6. Since that time though Ubuntu 9.10 has been officially released with various changes since last August and Apple has issued two point releases for Snow Leopard, now putting it at version 10.6.2. As...
3Vote!
Techno Portal (Free subscription) | yesterday
No bonus points for calling this one, but it looks like Atom support has returned to Mac OS X 10.6.2 -- less than two weeks after it was unceremoniously removed to the dismay of hackintoshers. Of course, this new "fix" doesn't come courtesy of Apple, and it does take the art of hackintoshing to some risky new levels. Developed by a member… Continue reading
3Vote!
Techno Portal (Free subscription) | yesterday
No bonus points for calling this one, but it looks like Atom support has returned to Mac OS X 10.6.2 -- less than two weeks after it was unceremoniously removed to the dismay of hackintoshers. Of course, this new "fix" doesn't come courtesy of Apple, and it does take the art of hackintoshing to some risky new levels. Developed by a member… Continue reading
3Vote!
AterSlash (Free subscription) | yesterday
I’m using a laptop with Ubuntu 8.04 for work, a netbook with Ubuntu 9.10 when I’m outside, Mac OS X 10.5 for hobby projects, and Windows XP for gaming. For backups, I’m currently using Jungle Disk and Apple’s Time Machine, and I use a local svn repository for my work data.
6Vote!
dudude | 18/11/2009
Basically, when you buy music from iTunes, it comes with a copyright protection called DRM. These DRM-protected songs are locked so that they only work with Apple MP3 players. That means that if you bought a Microsoft Zune, you cannot use iTunes music. So, what is the solution? You have to burn a CD. When you do this, the DRM is removed (because the music is converted to a non-DRM-compatible media)....
Explore : Digital Entertainment,
DRM and Copyrights,
DRM free,
iTunes,
Mac OS X,
MP3,
Operating Systems,
Portable Audio,
Software,
System Administration,
Windows,
Zune
6Vote!
annyhaiyan | 13/11/2009
But once again reiterate that, Snow Leopard system itself there are some serious flaws, not the ideal choice for business users. First Snow Leopard system, little pairs of enterprise application software support. To a large extent, the software R & D personnel R & D software are targeted at Windows systems. From a historical experience, Windows for corporate users is the best operating system, because...
Explore : Apple,
Computer industry,
Computers,
Dell,
Leopard,
Mac OS X,
Operating Systems,
Personal Computers,
Privacy and Legal Issues,
Software,
Spywares,
System Administration,
Tiger
5Vote!
gabrielsmith | 28/09/2009
Why you need to transfer music from iPhone to iTunes ? yea, it always happened like this: Your computer crashed and now that you got a new one you wanna transfer all music from your iPHone back to computer before sync it again. You just got a new laptop and want to transfer all songs and playlists from my iPhone to my iTunes library. By the way, you don’t want lose anything on your iPhone when sync