Yes, that is what I was referring to. You got it right the first time.
On Jul 16, 2009, at 2:53 PM, Jordan wrote:
Talking to sharp people about the good stuff they sell can be
satisfying and stimulating to some of us.
Sounds like an Apple Store.
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 16, 2009, at 7:30 PM
Libraries and bookstores are exciting.
Jeff Miles wrote:
I've only seen the one. That was in the largest mall in Hawaii.
I'm a Mac fan, but this place was the furthest from exciting. I was
even looking for new and exciting things for my Mac, but nothing
jumped out at me. I was going to us
puɐʇsɹǝpun ʇ,uop ı
rleesimon wrote:
Ë™ÇÉ¥olÊ É sÉ poÉ¹Ê Çɥʇ ʇnq 'ÉŸÇlʇsı ÊŽq ɹÇʇÇʇl ÊŽÇʌɹÇ
pÇÉɹ ʇou soÇp pıuɯ
uɯÉnÉ¥ Çɥʇ ÇÉÇsnÉ”q sı sɥıʇ˙ɯlÇqɹod ʇıɥʇnoÊ Ê‡Ä± pÇÉɹ
llʇıs uÉÉ” noÊŽ puÉ sÇsɯ
lÉʇoʇ É Çq uÉÉ” ʇÇsɹ Çɥʇ˙ÇÉl
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Jul 18, 2009 at 3:44 PM, Jeff Wright wrote:
I know both kinds and I don't ask.
And they don't tell, either. Apparently these folks who have
switched did not want to provide you with any reason why they
switched. That seems odd to me because, to t
Jeff Wright wrote:
I'm thinking Jordan might be the 21st hijacker.
We'll have some questions for you, so please make yourself available and don't
try to leave the country.
We'll know if you try. There's an app for that.
Be careful when you come for me. Strangers
t had to put in a coffee shop. And libraries exciting? You need to
get out more.
Please don't get me wrong on this. Reading is a wonderful,
exciting and enlightening thing. But you throw a few books in a store
doesn't make the store great.
Jeff M
On Jul 18, 2009, at 6:00 A
Eric S. Sande wrote:
It's simply not important to me what other people's motivations are.
Use what works for you. Full stop.
In audio, there's quite a bit of discussion along these lines.
As long as it's bit-perfect digital output, the only discussion revolves
aroud the interface.
Appar
.
The only person I've ever heard of who switched from Mac to Windows was
an employer I had around '96. I don't think he was too happy with the
situation, but I left about then.
Have a good day
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Jul 19, 2009 at 8:40 AM, Jordan wrote:
App
I don't know if my computer isn't displaying this stuff right or what
but these symbols and foreign language puncuation don't look like upside
down letters to me. Ê Çı
This site will flip text over for you:
http://www.revfad.com/flip.html
Robert Carroll wrote:
b_s-wilk wrote:
"
Yes, it's m
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 19, 2009, at 8:14 AM, Jordan wrote:
But what is really sad is that so many people these days have lost
their curiosity , and imagination.
Do you think Mac owners exhibit curiosity and imagination (creativity
too) to a greater extent than PC owners? It seems like just
Surprise, surprise! Mr Wright in another pissing contest.
Jeff Wright wrote:
See how that works? Your self-worth isn't dependent on the latest fashions
that the pop stars are wearing.
The fact that you keep bringing this up says more about what you think
about than what any Mac user thinks
Aaaah, thank-you. I thought it was in the character encoding but I had
forgotten how easy it was to switch it. Clicking on unicode did the trick.
betty wrote:
I don't know if my computer isn't displaying this stuff right or what
but these symbols
and foreign language puncuation don't look like
Some good stuff!
Thanks
John Duncan Yoyo wrote:
The best quote on Apple people I have read in a while is this strips
punchline-
http://www.dieselsweeties.com/archive/2324
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Yet another belligerent ass!
t.piwowar wrote:
Also check out Zdziarski's website for a lengthy attack on health care
reform...
http://www.zdziarski.com/
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Yet another belligerent ass!
Mike wrote:
But a correct belligerent ass.
Sent from my iPod
On Jul 25, 2009, at 6:59 AM, Jordan wrote:
Yet another belligerent ass!
t.piwowar wrote:
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There is so much money against doing what the public wants and needs
right now that I think all we can hope for is a step in the right
direction. If we could get something in there that is not insurance it
would be good.
Every other industrialized country in the world has single payer healthcar
OK iTunes fans, I've got a question for you.
I've got my audio tracks showing in a list and Date Added and Date
Modified are headings in the list. But of the 11047 "songs" in the list,
there is not 1 date shown in those columns. Some have been in iTunes
for years, and some were added in recent
I hope your mother has recovered well.
Ten years ago I joined the PA Farm Bureau so I could get group rate Blue
Cross through them. I don't recall exactly, but the cost then was about
$350 per quarter, per person. Three or four years later it had gone to
$1000 per month for my wife and I. Seve
Thanks Tom:
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 26, 2009, at 9:37 AM, Jordan wrote:
OK iTunes fans, I've got a question for you.
I've got my audio tracks showing in a list and Date Added and Date
Modified are headings in the list. But of the 11047 "songs" in the
list, there is not 1
"Microsoft stores to mimic Apple's with 'Guru Bars'"
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/09/07/24/microsoft_stores_to_mimic_apples_with_guru_bars.html
"A leaked presentation has exposed Microsoft's tentative plans for its
retail stores -- and the high degree to which they'll imitate Apple
s
unes 7 and
Tiger.
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 26, 2009, at 9:37 AM, Jordan wrote:
OK iTunes fans, I've got a question for you.
I've got my audio tracks showing in a list and Date Added and Date
Modified are headings in the list. But of the 11047 "songs" in the
list, ther
owar wrote:
On Jul 26, 2009, at 12:56 PM, Jordan wrote:
In iTunes Library.xml dates and times are there.
I presume you mean the Date Added and Date Modified are in the xml file.
You can force the iTunes Library file to be rebuilt from the iTunes
Library.xml file. Maybe that will give yo
26, 2009, at 12:56 PM, Jordan wrote:
In iTunes Library.xml dates and times are there.
I presume you mean the Date Added and Date Modified are in the xml file.
You can force the iTunes Library file to be rebuilt from the iTunes
Library.xml file. Maybe that will give you what you need.
Note
If he is against the public option then he is against the people of this
country and for the greedy corporations that make the costs so high.
These costs are born by everyone now, including the small businesses and
individuals he claims to be concerned about.
But I suspect you know this.
Rev.
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 26, 2009, at 1:49 PM, Jordan wrote:
Can you imagine the nightmare of an MS guru bar!?
But maybe if they had free drinks...?
That would only encourage fist fights.
Its a good thing that the NRA didn't get its gun slinger bill passed.
Now you're talki
t.piwowar wrote:
On Jul 26, 2009, at 2:53 PM, Jordan wrote:
But when I tried it, instead of rebuilding the library from the xml
file it changed the xml file to match the empty library file. (no
empty text file needed. It creates a new itunes file, and did nothing
to a text file named iTunes
I have loaded books on CDs into iTunes. Many of them have dozens or even
a hundred tracks on each CD, and a book might be 10 or 15 CDs long.
These audio files typically have a name like Track 1, Track 2, and so
on, there are no differentiating titles, up to 25 or 99. So when I first
loaded up a
I have old fashioned filing habits on the computer. I do not use and
know nothing of tags.
But I do know where stuff is.
Now that I know to join the tracks I'm pretty happy.
Except, I have messed with everything in all the iTunes files I can find
this afternoon and still no dates.
Sent from m
Except for the specific problem with the multitude of audio files I
mentioned, which I have a great solution for, I'm pretty happy with my
filing system. I have little need for another system.
That said, since a couple of these Mac apps insist on putting files in a
big pile, and I'm starting to
Thanks,
I do or have done some of what you describe. As I've said the joining
files eliminates the multitude of tiny files, and adding names and
labels in the various categories will keep things totally clear.
I also take a step that takes the location of these files out of iTunes
hands. For e
Thanks,
I'm OK on backups and I tried starting over with iTunes, and reimporting
some files and there are still no dates.
I'll start fresh again with this when I have another block of time,
which may be soon if it keeps getting hot and steamy out.
Again, because of the filing methods I've adopt
b_s-wilk wrote:
With audio books I generally have no problem listening to them in
iTunes. On an iPod it's another story. I was listening to a collection
by Neil Gaiman, with 70+ chapters. On my iPod they were out of order,
but not in iTunes. I took the book and merged all of the chapters,
addi
Here is an article from Macworld that I think nails this subject down
pretty well:
http://www.macworld.com/article/136824/2008/11/audiobooks.html
George Carr wrote:
As Jordan and Steve described, I also join all the tracks before importing an audiobook CD, then make a playlist of all the CD
nd it did change the modified stamp in
both iTunes and WinExp.
If Jordan Gets Info on a track, does it show the Date Modified:?
All this may be a moo point* since it sounds like maybe he's finding
other alternatives.
*<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIkJ4BUChxI>
To show or hide hidden files on Mac put this with a yes or no in Terminal:
defaults write com.apple.Finder AppleShowAllFiles YES
b_s-wilk wrote:
You shouldn't see the .DS_Store file. It's supposed to be invisible.
It stores metadata about contents of a folder. Are you using any of
the utiliti
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 11:20 PM, b_s-wilk wrote:
Single-payer did NOT prevent you from getting the care you need. Managed
care did. Be informed and you can be better served.
When I hear all the railing against a single-payer system, with the
attendant call
Tourbus Rider Stuart Carlow wrote:
So what does all this healthcare debate on The Computer Guys listserv have to
do with computers?
Uumm... if we didn't have to pay so much for healthcare, we could
get better computers. Not to mention better food and other good stuff.
Well, some of us co
On Friday Bill Moyers Journal was a discussion about healthcare where
one of the interviewees suggested basically phasing in Medicare by
decades or by state. Sensible discussion and ideas so I don't have much
hope for it.
But you can see the interview or read the transcript here:
http://www.pbs
Andy Gallant wrote:
I strongly object to paragraphs five and seven of your posting, and in
particular, to your use of highly objectionable terms and comparisons.
Radical right Obama hate media can't resist such disgusting crap.
**
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 2, 2009, at 2:16 AM, Jeff Wright wrote:
Yes, I'm sure the FCC is much more knowledgeable about running Apple
than
Apple is. The question is whether or not the FCC can squint its way
past
1934. I'm not holding my breath, since it still has commissioners
[cough]Copps[/co
db wrote:
Yes, but those are all PC keyboards mostly with separate mice except
for the expensive ( $185 )one made by Apple and it has no integral
pointer / mousepad.
The reason I am looking for such is to turn a white Tiger macbook with
a broken unreadable screen into a multimedia center machi
To continue:
I use the Logitech cordless optical trackman on the iMac that I use for
EyeTV in the living room. I just checked it and with used batteries it
was still working from 8 feet away.
I could use one of the bluetooth keyboards, but I haven't sprung for that.
db wrote:
Yes, but those ar
db wrote:
As another alternative solution re: my previous post ( Wireless
keyboard w. built-in mouse/ pointer for mac?? ) about controlling a
white tiger laptop attached to a digital TV, I am researching remote
control apps for the iPhone.
I see ones that will let you control iTunes.
Does an
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 12:10 AM, Jeff Wright wrote:
Sunk costs is a reasonable ...er... reason for not investing in a new
platform.
Actually, it is an understandable rationale for not shelling out for
a new platform.
But if money is limited, and who's i
trac...@aol.com wrote:
I have been receiving notices entitled
Undelivered Mail Returned to Sender
>From MAILER-DAEMON.
Does this mean that I have a virus and how can I get rid of it?
I think it's more likely that someone is spoofing your address and you
are getting some of the undeliv
Wayne Dernoncourt wrote:
Art Clemons
Does any of that make sense? I understand that the local
cable office does have a WAP version as well as a non-WAP
version of the modem.
One other approach when the cable company or other
broadband ISP doesn't want to open up its firewall set
I agree with the comments made here on this subject but submit that the
essence of the problem lies with the lack of common sense of most drivers.
I have a GPS mounted on my windshield. But it is mounted such that it
does not block my view of the road. And I am very careful about what
kind of si
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 5, 2009, at 7:57 PM, b_s-wilk wrote:
Safari sucks. Use Firefox or SeaMonkey.
Some people get really bent out of shape about Safari, but Safari is
innovating while others are not. While others boast of W3C
compatibility, Safari is not only the first to achieve that, it
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
Everyone who has such a device mounted to their windshield will say
that it does not block their view. Would you really expect to hear
anyone say otherwise?
Agreed. It's still a lack of common sense thing. It would not surprise
me at all to hear someone who has som
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 10:37 AM, Jordan wrote:
Exactly! Mine does not block my view anymore than that sticker. The road can
not be seen through the part of the windshield it blocks.
Actually, and I did not mention this previously so we must remain
quiet
For maybe 20 years I've been putting Beltronics remote radar detectors
in my cars. Crutchfield used to sell them. I don't know if they still do.
But the receiver was mounted behind the car grill and a tiny unit is
mounted inside the car, preferably out of site. Nothing blocking the
view. Nothing
Jeff Wright wrote:
With 65,000 apps available for the iPhone and less than a dozen for
the competitors it is going to be very hard to catch up. The
competitors are still making some of the mistakes Apple made in its
early days and they will need to fix those first. Right now Apple
appears to be i
Jeff Wright wrote:
Except this isn't true. You constantly talk derisively about the
people you are supposed to support and save the greater portion on
your spleen for those who are best able to do their work with Macs.
That is what makes it an issue.
I don't think I've ever known anyone wi
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 8, 2009, at 11:17 AM, Jordan wrote:
That said, I'm happy with a regular iPod and the simplest of phones.
I can ooo and aaah over the latest iGadgets and Palms without really
wanting one.
I also don't have chunks of time, like a commute, where I could use one
Jeff Wright wrote:
Every right winger like yourself has a stronger reality distortion field.
Now go back to your worship of Dick and Sara and leave the rational
discussion to others.
You know Jordan, I want to be nice to you, I really do.
I an truly blessed!
But then, you shoot your
I don't know if this is just for Tom or if others have an understanding
of this but: I'm considering starting List for a local food group I'm
involved with. I've started looking at some manuals from L-Soft and AOL,
and they are voluminous. The LISTSERV list owners guide looks like it
will tell
Ahh! Thanks all. I should have thought of this. I've actually been on a
couple of Yahoo groups.
Good points Stewart. These are mostly low tech people. Gardeners and
community organizers. Simple is better.
I'm glad I don't have to digest those manuals.
Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
Depends on wh
Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
The moon is made of green cheese, and Oh yeas Elvis is alive.
I like the Men In Black version;
He's alive but he just went home.
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I totally depends on what you expect and what you want to use it for.
I've been out of the loop on the details of what is going on in the bike
world for a few years, but I can safely say that this bike is a basic
entry level bike.
If you want a bike to "get your feet wet" in the mountain bike re
Fred Holmes wrote:
No, I'm not running a mail server. I need to help someone set up his/her mail
client for a third party POP/SMTP mail account, and he/she is connected via
Verizon (dunno if FIOS or DSL, but I presume FIOS). I'm trying to find out
what to expect, although a quick test should
I think Google is doing the a good job of making its Groups, on-line
apps, and other tools accessible and easy to use, but as the article
suggests, control and security are difficult and complicated.
And then there's the resisting the urge to become another evil
corporation thing.
TPiwowar wro
I'm not a syncing expert. I've never sunk an iPod at all. But in
iTunes/preferences/devices/ check Disable automatic syncing for iPhones
and iPods.
One Man wrote:
I want to add some songs on my iTunes playlist to my friend's iPod, which is
already synced to another iTunes How can I do this,
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 20, 2009, at 9:04 AM, Jordan wrote:
I think Google is doing the a good job of making its Groups, on-line
apps, and other tools accessible and easy to use, but as the article
suggests, control and security are difficult and complicated.
Is that fair? The article says
My 2 year old intel iMac won't boot. I got a grey kernel crash screen
yesterday, but it restarted and ran fine in the evening so I didn't take
any time to investigate. This evening it started strangely, displayed
properly, but would not run Eye TV. I tried to restart it and now all it
does is p
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 22, 2009, at 9:50 PM, Jordan wrote:
My 2 year old intel iMac won't boot. I got a grey kernel crash screen
yesterday, but it restarted and ran fine in the evening so I didn't
take any time to investigate. This evening it started strangely,
displayed properly,
db wrote:
It's a new computer and the most he might have done was accidentally
clicked on the iChat icon on the Dock (he says he didn't..) ... which
could have launched the program. Somehow it got launched. (I think
maybe iChat gets automatically launched if you access the camera or
microph
db or anyone else, how did the logmein work for you, and are there any
other programs like that, that work for the Mac?
Thanks
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db wrote:
LogMeIn is easy as cake... a great tool. Web based it takes all the
tech out of setting up VNC / remote desktop login etc.
The Free version does most of all you want. No SFTP or printing to
the controlling computer that you get with Pro.
A PC controlling a Mac won't have the comman
OK, thanks for the confirmation! I've been kind of busy since this
morning and was afraid to shut it down or let it go to sleep.
TPiwowar wrote:
On Aug 23, 2009, at 10:50 AM, Jordan wrote:
I think I had tried that at one point last night, but in any case, it
didn't start it just
David Cowdrill wrote:
I live in No. Va. also and use T-Mobile pre-paid for uses like you
describe.
Advantages:
- low cost: first year I paid $100 for 1000 min. Used 500 in first
year, second year is $50 for another year. Hard to beat $4 per month.
Disadvantages: T-Mobile coverage is spotty.
Sue Cubic wrote:
That's what's nice about TracFone. They buy space on all of the major
companies' towers. You get coverage from whatever tower you're nearest.
I don't know how much I trust that. Tracfone won't show you a coverage
map that you can zoom in on. I checked them out years ago when
This is interesting stuff. Some if the things I read in the late 90s and
early 2000s seemed to suggest that the Linux and BSD type platforms were
antiquated.
Probably FUD.
But Apple is still moving forward and further refining and updating the
OS X core.
TPiwowar wrote:
This explains a lot.
Has anyone gotten a warning or seen anything about the "Postcard" virus?
A friend of mine forwarded a big panic about not opening anything in an
email entitled Postcard.
As a Mac user I guess getting emails like this are the greatest threat.
Here's what it says:
*checked with Norton Anti-Virus,
Tony B wrote:
If you really looked this up at Snopes, you sure didn't read very
well. If you trusted _someone else_ to look it up at Snopes and read
it, shame on you.
http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/postcard.asp
I didn't say I looked it up at Snopes or anywhere else. I would have no
rea
t.piwowar wrote:
WFBs can't detect that they are being mocked.
Shh!
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t.piwowar wrote:
MacWorld's extensive coverage of Snow Leopard makes me think Apple
lied. This upgrade offers many significant improvements. Maybe Apple
marketing isn't impressed because they want big flashy additions
(which I'll probably never use). In contrast in Snow Leopard I'm
seeing lots
I've read discussion of what you can update with the $30 version of Snow
Leopard, but I have a specific question that I'm not sure about and have
not seen anything written about.
This notebook has Leopard, but I did a migration from My iMac when I got
it. I'm thinking of getting a fresh start wi
phartz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Aug 29, 2009 at 12:42 PM, One Man wrote:
I lost interest when Dan Frakes began his review with "a minor tweak ... *9* years
in the making" -- viewing the date in the menu bar. Come on. How difficult is it
to click on the time for the pull-down menu of t
David K Watson wrote:
(sorry for forgetting to fix the subject line in the previous post)
Well, I'm certainly happy so far. Everything I use works in the 32 bit
kernel although EyeTV has a few issues and Office 2004 and some
older games still need Rosetta to be installed. In the 64 bit kernel,
Bill Wajert wrote:
To put it straight we have not been the "Land of the Free" for
decades. We have become the "Land of the Regulated."
We've had 8 years, really many more since it started before Reagan, of
tearing down regulations. It doesn't work.(like we didn't already know
that) Look wh
katan wrote:
On Wed, 2 Sep 2009 23:50:30 -0400, t.piwowar wrote:
America has its Dick Cheney. CGUYS has Chris Dunford.
Ever notice how The List can have a pleasant conversation, or even a
lively debate. . .until Tom joins in?
No.
*
Jeff Miles wrote:
I've found this list to be pretty quick at answering questions.
Here, I'll test it.
How do I get Safari to open when I click on a link in Mail? I've
got it set to Firefox now, but want to change back to Safari. I used
to know this, but this morning I couldn't find the
I hate to throw cold water on all this fun, but wasting time talking
about all this fear and straw men is just what the right wing wants you
to do. That little video posted a while back is enough for any rational
person to get the picture.
http://brightcove.newscientist.com/services/player/bcpi
t.piwowar wrote:
On Sep 6, 2009, at 5:06 PM, Jeff Wright wrote:
That food, which uses a mixed but largely free market system, is so
cheap
and plentiful that even the poor can easily afford it, is lost on the
socialized medicine proponents.
Did you see the Time cover story about cheap food? Th
The nice Apple keyboard that I use on the iMac has a problem. The cde
and 3 keys have stopped working. Is there anything I can tinker with
that might fix this? It's a couple years old, but does anyone think
Apple will do anything for me on this?
Thanks
**
This is the thin, low profile, full width, aluminum, $50 keyboard, which
I love. The keys that failed are all in a row and failed the same day,
suggesting to me that the failure is electronic rather than a physical
problem with individual keys. There has not been any foreign material
near this
This is the thin, low profile, full width, aluminum, $50 keyboard, which
I love. I cover it when I'm not using it, nothing was spilled on it and
the keys that failed are all in a row and failed the same day. Doesn't
that suggest that the failure is electronic rather than a physical
problem with
b_s-wilk wrote:
I agree that you probably need a new keyboard. Now that you have
nothing to lose, open the keyboard and try to fix it yourself anyway.
Betty
Yes! I am that kind of person.
I'll have to see if I can do it more gently than the guy in the link you
gave. Heating it up a but will
I'm looking into a better spell checker than the one that comes on the
Mac. Sometimes the one on the Mac does a lousy job of guessing what I'm
looking for.
Does anyone have knowledge or experience with an alternative that the
Mac can use instead of the native one?
Thanks!
***
TPiwowar wrote:
On Sep 15, 2009, at 11:41 AM Sep 15, Jordan wrote:
I'm looking into a better spell checker than the one that comes on
the Mac. Sometimes the one on the Mac does a lousy job of guessing
what I'm looking for.
http://www.rainmakerinc.com/
Fred Holmes wrote:
At 02:46 AM 9/17/2009, John Duncan Yoyo wrote:
It is insane to think that a faceless
corporate bureaucrat is better than a faceless federal bureaucrat.
If one doesn't like what the faceless corporate bureaucrat decides, one can
drop the insurance and go with someon
Maybe some clarifications are in order to start:
Bill L'Hommedieu wrote:
I've my hi-speed broadband with Comcast and I cant access the Mac Mail through the server settings now set.
Mac Mail meaning the Mail program on your Mac, or mail from Mobile Me,
or what?
The techies at Comcast seem to be
I've been away and I don't know if anyone suggested this, but I think
for some circumstances making a PDF of a web page is the best way to
save the info. It's perfect for receipts.
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I have in the past, but not recently. It's a pain for me to track though
because I have gmail sent to Thunderbird, so I don't know if my posts
made it unless I check the archives, or someone responds.
By the way, I'm one of those who bought the package with Snow Leopard,
but I'm in no hurry to i
Maybe it's just my opinion, but once you use the Apple low profile
keyboard, every other keyboard feels clunky.
Reid Katan wrote:
Just got a Mac Mini and realized I don't have a USB keyboard to jack
into it. Other than it being a nice keyboard, is there something about
a Mac keyboard that's wo
Some of us suggested saving pages as a PDF. It's really the best
alternative to printing out a web page. (it's a far superior solution to
me) Is this not possible with Windows?
computerg...@att.net wrote:
Hello all:
Thank you everyone who replied to my post a while back. Briefly, I am try
Ahh, yes. But you sounded like you were looking for a replacement for
printing web pages out.
Fred Holmes wrote:
At 07:36 PM 10/17/2009, Jordan wrote:
Some of us suggested saving pages as a PDF. It's really the best alternative to
printing out a web page. (it's a far superior s
I'm new to flash drives.
The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System
which is clearly meant for Windows users.
Is there a way to get rid of this on the Mac?
Thanks
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using
terminal did not work.
Thanks again
John DeCarlo wrote:
Google U3 Removal. There are ways to get that space back.
On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 1:39 PM, Jordan wrote:
I'm new to flash drives.
The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System which
The SanDisks and the Cruzer ones I was working with had uninstalls on them.
It was having to dig out my Windows computer to uninstall that I didn't
like.
Yes, I know I'm spoiled.
tjpa wrote:
On Nov 1, 2009, at 6:06 AM, Rich Schinnell wrote:
Maybe I missed something but I have had flash drives
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