A wrinkle in Time Machine
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in utilities, Leopard, Apple on July 2, 2008 at 2:26 pm
Those of us lucky enough to get a new Mac from time to time (hum hum) will be thanking Apple for Time Machine. It takes all the hassle out of setting up a new Mac, a task that used to take days to install, register, configure and upgrade all the applications. As our recent experience found, Time Machine archives are a rich ground for ardent tinkerers who never RTFM. And if they do they don’t believe all they read. Read more
Carbon Dating
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in utilities, Leopard, Apple on June 5, 2008 at 10:10 am
In the week following the latest Mac System upgrade to 10.5.3, the next upgrade to 10.5.4 is already under test and rumours populate the Net of the next biggie, Mac OS X 10.6 also currently known as Snow Leopard. The biggest surprise is that 10.6 will drop support for PowerPC processors and for Carbon – both yet unsubstantiated – so it can move to pure 64 bit addressing. Read more
10.5.3 and Time Machine
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard, Apple on May 29, 2008 at 4:13 pm
The latest Mac OS X upgrade is available at a Software Update near you. Apart from fixing loads of glitches, it also messes with Time Machine and some upgraders, this one included, have had mixed results after the upgrade. For more details go to the Discussions on Apples Support pages, here. Read more
Mac to my Back
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in utilities, Internet, Leopard, Apple on May 12, 2008 at 12:55 pm
When the temperature outside starts with a 3 you know you have problems. A single digit, Fahrenheit, or preceded by a minus (as is often the case in Montreal and other under-developed parts of the world) means it is what is technically known as bloody freezing. A single digit after the 3, as in the southern half of the UK this weekend, the correct term is bloody hot. Unless you are measuring in the Rømer scale in which case you will be dead. Read more
Catz and Dogs
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard, Apple on November 22, 2007 at 12:04 pm
According to latest reports, us Southerners prefer moggies to doggies while Northerners are more likely to assume we refer to their affectionate name for benzodiazepine.
And here’s another thing about Leopard…
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard on November 13, 2007 at 10:27 am
Our Leopard family has started to have cubs as the updates come in thick and fast. But one change that was unexpected and definitely for the better, is Firewire handling.
TV Capture Part 2 and a quarter
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard on November 5, 2007 at 12:25 pm
We have a whole family of Leopards living in our office now. The upgrade has been trouble-free once we had learned which utilities to un-install before upgrading: ClamX, Onyx and Epson scanner driver being the most important for us.
Switch Users folder, best Leopard trick… so far
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard on October 31, 2007 at 10:00 am
Before Leopard, Mac OS X expected the Users folder to be in the same disk location as the active System. This is usually no problem for Mac users with only one hard disk but for those cognoscenti who work in more rarified ways, having a System and the Users folders in different places is a real bonus.
Leopard hunting
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard on October 29, 2007 at 8:31 am
As I write this, that Trucking Never Turns-up courier company have less than 15 minutes remaining before they break their delivery promise for the third time in a row.
One of Leopard’s hot spots
By Mark Tennent in Reader
Posted in Leopard on April 27, 2007 at 11:49 am
Back in the last century, when we got started as designers and our clients paid their bills (unlike today – You know who you are), we used to work with companies’ directorates.
Usually the personnel manager would call us in to discuss the new magazine/sales leaflets/whatever. They would pass us over to the senior manager or director it was destined for, most likely the head of sales. We worked directly with them. They took the decisions, accepted to proofs and things went wonderfully smoothly. If they also took the opportunity to get few more hairs added to their heads, maybe a tummy tuck and wrinkles removed, so what. We were pleased to oblige with early pre-Photoshop image editors.
The good old days
If only things were like that nowadays. It must be a feature of our education system, teaching children to work collaboratively. Will no-one will make a decision on their own nowadays? We start the job with who we assume is the ‘client’, they send us ‘final text’, accept the visuals and we produce the finished artwork. We are told they are “just going to show their colleagues”, before returning with a whole new ball game.
The final text apparently wasn’t and “can we just slip in these four extra pages of A4″ (into a DL leaflet usually). The images they sent aren’t correct and one of their friends doesn’t like the pink corporate colour we were told we had to use. Worst still, they send something they’ve knocked-up in Office which they want us to recreate; complete with centred Times bold titles, ‘friendly’ Comic Sans body text and clipart bullet points.
Creating everything digitally should have been a time-saver but because people use word processors, they assume that it is just as easy to make changes to a piece of design. No matter if you just spent 4 hours shoe-horning text into place to get all the baselines aligning across the spread. Or, the PDF you sent as a low resolution visual gets forwarded to the printer who happily runs out a million, full-colour copies with 72dpi images pixelated to destruction.
Apple to the rescue
Far be it for an Apple fanboy to blab on about the maker of his computers… but it looks like they may have a solution to proofing problems. The next version of iChat, Apple’s Instant Messaging client, will have iChat Theater here. With it we will be able to work collaboratively, holding a conversation with our client while editing their document. They will be able to watch us in realtime without leaving their desk.
To a certain extent this can be done by turning a free-standing web cam towards the computer screen but Apple’s move to build cameras into the monitor has taken this away. Plus, many of our clients go into a flappy-handed tizzy at the thought of setting-up something new. They want the IT department to do it for them. iChat is so simple that we can talk them through completing three one-line address boxes.
Once iChat Theater is incorporated into applications, audio and video can be presented during an iChat cenference. Editing changes will be easy-peasy, our client will see their addition of a ‘word or two’ (as if it were) throws the whole document out and they will have to cut the crud elsewhere. Their damage will be right in front of them, as will the solutions we try before finding a work-around.
The one problem is that iChat Theater will only work with Cocoa applications and QuarkXPress is not one of these. This could be the spur for Quark to rewrite XPress if Adobe makes further in-roads into Quark’s one-time near monopoly. But then again, Adobe’s CS3 applications are hugely expensive, here, even for upgrades…
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