Opinion

AOL kills Netscape Navigator

AOL decides to discontinue development of the browser that helped start the Mozilla Foundation. The end was nigh for quite some time; it has finally come.

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Perian's Type Installer 2.4.2

We've all heard of the venerable Perian, but perhaps not of the Perian's Type Installer 2.4.2. If you've ever downloaded YouTube movies in their FLV format, you'll have noticed that, although, QuickTime agrees to play them (with Perian installed), it always seems rather reluctant because it refuses to give FLV files a native QuickTime Movie icon. Now, you can make your FLV files feel at home.

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Warp prefPane for Leopard

Cool tool to switch between Spaces in Leopard using the mouse.

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Best Windows Error, Ever!

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Benazir Bhutto assassinated

This is seriously, seriously fucked up.

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miniajax.com

Lots of AJAX goodness to take a look at, even if you don't want to (or, can't) add it to your own website.

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The Royal Channel

The Official YouTube Channel of the British Monarchy has just been launched. Probably the most uptight YouTube Channel you'll ever see, just like the website of the British Monarchy itself makes me think of a dreary, grey street in London on a rainy day.

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Blue Screen

I don't know who'd have thunk it but the release of Mac OS X "Leopard" has, amongst other things, brought along with it the most ironic thing the Mac world has seen thus far and that is the blue screen you get when sometimes you do an "Upgrade" installation from a previous version of Mac OS X. So, I mean, you can pretty much take it as a good rule of thumb (and a good rule it has been for a good four years now) that you should do an Upgrade installation only if it is absolutely, positively necessary. The Mac OS X Installer does use it by default because it is supposed be the most seamless and painless way to get into a new installation, but it's actually not worth the kinds of troubles it can cause.

Here's my Leopard story. I had installed it successfully on my own MacBook and I was living the Mac dream, with the three-dimensional Dock, the translucent menu bar, the Finder losing its ability to automatically remember whatever little window state information it previously could... wait, scratch that - "nightmare" is a better fitting word. (Yes, I am being deliberately pessimistic and am, in reality, enjoying Time Machine, the multi-threaded Finder, etc.) Anyway, I came back home with a Leopard disc hoping to install it on my computers at home during break.

My dad's MacBook Pro was first in line for installation. Now, as I said earlier, you better have a very good reason if you want to do an Upgrade installation and I rather fancied I had one. This is the point when I should have had all my limbs amputated because of the absolute terror that was to follow. The Upgrade installation went just fine and the computer rebooted. This is when I got the blue screen. I waited and waited but apparently patience was not the tool of choice for this game. Did a Google search and found out that Apple says it can be due to "Application Enhancer" installed on the previous installation. Get into command line mode, look in the folder they mentioned and there's nothing. Disappointed, I boot the Leopard disc again and do an Archive and Install. At this point, the disk, which had little space to begin with, does not have enough to do an Archive and Install unless I check off everything but the Essentials. I do so, go out for dinner and come back to see that Archive and Install says it has failed to set the drive as the startup drive and that I would need to reinstall again. I hit the Restart button in despondency knowing that I only have 250MB left on the drive right now and that is nowhere near enough for any kind of re-installation unless I command line in again and delete the Previous Systems folder. Anyway, I reboot and Mac OS X starts up anyway.

Everything is fine and dandy, so I install all the Software Updates and restart. Now, the damned thing is showing me the question mark and folder icon signifying that it cannot find a disk to boot from. This scares the willies out of me because I think the disk has crashed and I know there's no backup. Cold boot the computer, reset the PRAM, no avail. Boot using the Leopard disc again and thank heavens, the disk shows up in Disk Utility. Repair Disk, Repair Permissions, set as Startup Disk, reboot. Everything normal.

And has been as such to date. There are a few lessons to be learned from this; they are as follows:
(a) Don't be a git; do an Archive and Install
(b) Don't be a git; if you have Leopard, keep a backup
(c) Don't be a git; use a Mac (because it's got FireWire Target Disk mode) 

Comments (3) Posted on at  

  • » Keeping a backup is fine... But some phases of the "bad experience" has really snatched away my joy of upgrading in the near future
  • » I did an upgrade install and although I ran into a few problems, they were largely fixed with the 10.5.1 update.
  • » The only problem I've had with leopard is glitches with the dock not drawing correctly. But that's just superficial. Oh and IB3 is really buggy. But nothing major.

Virtualization Benchmarking

Unfortunately, still no definitive result. I use VMWare because it supports both CPUs, feels fast enough and has a decent Cocoa UI. As for Parallels, it supports multiple snapshots, if that's your thing.

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Latest Flash release supports H.264

Let's hope this means better video quality across the hundreds of video sharing sites so popular these days.

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