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Posts Tagged ‘apple’

Mac OS X 10.6.2 Snow Leopard now downloading

by: Chris Hudson
10 November, 2009

Apple Mac OS X 10.6.2 update is available today.

According to Apple this 10.6.2 Update is recommended for all users running Mac OS X Snow Leopard and includes general operating system fixes that enhance the stability, compatibility, and security of your Mac, including fixes for:

  • an issue that might cause your system to logout unexpectedly
  • a graphics distortion in Safari Top Sites
  • Spotlight search results not showing Exchange contacts
  • a problem that prevented authenticating as an administrative user
  • issues when using NTFS and WebDAV file servers
  • the reliability of menu extras
  • an issue with the 4-finger swipe gesture
  • an issue that causes Mail to quit unexpectedly when setting up an Exchange server
  • Address Book becoming unresponsive when editing
  • a problem adding images to contacts in Address Book
  • an issue that prevented opening files downloaded from the Internet
  • Safari plug-in reliability
  • general reliability improvements for iWork, iLife, Aperture, Final Cut Studio, MobileMe, and iDisk
  • an issue that caused data to be deleted when using a guest account

For detailed information on this update, please visit this website: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3874.
For information on the security content of this update, please visit: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1222.

The 10.62 update to Snow Leopard can be downloaded via the Software Update within Mac OS X.

Apple Snow Leopard to make early UK debut

by: Chris Hudson
26 August, 2009

Apple’s latest version of  OS X, Snow Leopard, will ship in the UK this Friday, 28th August. The price is £25 with free shipping from the UK Apple Store.

This is good news for Apple Mac users who are looking forward to finally getting true 64-bit performance from their Intel-based Macs. Finder, Safari, Mail, iCal and iChat are now 64-bit native but Grand Central Dispatch and Open CL will make the most difference to your Mac’s performance.

For a detailed overview of the benefits of the Apple Snow Leopard upgrade please take a look at my preview.

Meanwhile, I’m off to order a big beautiful cat for my MacPro!

UK iPhone users can now tweet by SMS

by: Chris Hudson
29 July, 2009

Yesterday Twitter reached a deal with O2, Apple’s exclusive iPhone network provider, that will enable ALL O2 customers to both send and receive updates from Twitter.

Last year Twitter removed all SMS access for UK tweeters due to high SMS costs. Earlier this year Vodaphone subscribers got back access.

O2 customers can find out how to enable the SMS feature on Twitter’s blog:

“To Twitter over SMS with your iPhone or any other mobile, head over to your account settings and activate your device. The Twitter shortcode in the UK is 86444 if you want to save it in your address book.”

O2’s Apple iPhone users can also download free apps from the iTunes App Store such as Twitterific, Seesmic and Tweedeck that will also enable you to post messages on Twitter without the use of SMS.

Does your iPhone 3G or 3GS suffer from heatstroke?

by: Chris Hudson
6 July, 2009

If your Apple iPhone 3G or 3GS has been misbehaving during the recent sunny weather it may be because you’ve been using it in temperatures of over 95°F (35°C).

The iPhone can be stored in temperatures a little higher, up to 113°F (45°C) but beware, temperatures in cars can easily reach 140°F, even in the UK.

If you do use your iPhone at or above these limits you will find battery-life shortened and the iPhone may stop working altogether.

This is normal were the temperature inside the iPhone has gone beyond these limits; the iPhone will attempt to regulate its internal temperature to protect the components of the phone from damage.

Symptoms of these attempts include:

  • dimming of the iPhone display
  • weak mobile signal
  • the iPhone will not charge or stops charging
  • the most obvious signal of all is the temperature warning screen shown below.

iphonewarning

If you think your iPhone is affected then simply turn off your iPhone and put it somewhere cooler, away from direct sunlight.

Think ahead, if you place it on a desktop in the shade remember the sun moves and it could end up back in direct sunlight again! Don’t put it in a drawer, the heat will be trapped and it will take longer to cool down. Find somewhere open, where the air can get to your iPhone, away from the sunlight.

Although the iPhone can be stored at -20°C we don’t recommend sticking in the freezer for half an hour!

An important point - even if you get the “iPhone needs to cool down before you can use it” message you may still be able to make emergency calls.

Apple Snow Leopard hits UK in September

by: Chris Hudson
9 June, 2009

Apple’s Snow Leopard will give Microsoft a chill with Apple claiming that it is faster than their Windows 7 OS which won’t launch until a month later.

Anyone purchasing a new Mac between June 8 and December 26, 2009 will be able to get Snow Leopard for a miminal upgrade price of around a tenner, with a bundle discount for those wanting to buy iLife 09 or iWork 09 at the same time.

The reason for the dramatically low price is that Apple is promoting Snow Leopard as an “upgrade” for existing 10.5 Leopard users, but it is technologically much more.

Apple’s approach is probably explained by the fact that Snow Leopard doesn’t contain a consumer headline-grabbing new feature such as Time Machine, Boot Camp, or even Quick Look.

Instead, most of the exciting developments of Snow Leopard are stuck “under the hood”, hidden away from the admiring glances of Mac fans, like the rewriting of nearly all system applications in 64-bit code and by enabling the Mac to address massive amounts of memory. Snow Leopard makes the Mac OS X faster, more secure and future-proof.

mac-osx-snowleopard

Practically, this 64-bit development means that Finder, Safari, Mail, iCal and iChat are now 64-bit native, (actually all system apps except DVD Player, Front Row, Grapher, iTunes and X11 have been rewritten in 64-bit), boosting performance and enabling them to use all the memory available in your Mac. All aspects of using your Mac will feel faster and more responsive. It also means that Snow Leopard can support up to 16 terabytes of RAM, approximately 500 times more than current Macs can address. Although Macs already benefit from having very little malware in their world, Snow Leopard means even greater security because 64-bit applications can use more advanced security techniques to defeat malware and hackers.

Grand Central Dispatch is a new technology to help make your Mac faster by making all of Mac OS X “multicore aware” and optimising its ability to allocate tasks across multiple cores and processors. This means efficient handling of tasks out of sight but with visible performance gains all over your Mac.

Snow Leopard’s OpenCL technology means that programs will be able to use the vast power locked up in your graphics processor for other general computing tasks or applications, unrelated to graphics! Consequently your Mac will gain an extra processor capable of trillions of calculations per second – now you’ll be able to justify paying the extra for that top of the range GPU your new Mac (that also just happens to be great for playing games).

Snow Leopard brings with it QuickTime X which includes a brand new player application with support for a much wider range of codec’s (needed to play different types of media file) and it fully utilises the media technologies at the heart of Mac OS X, Core Audio, Core Video and Core Animation, to produce greater efficiency and higher quality playback. QuickTime X also uses Mac OS X technologies such as Cocoa, Grand Central Dispatch and 64-bit computing.

QuickTime X supports HTTP live streaming, the same network technology that powers the web. Therefore, QuickTime X streams audio and video using any web server instead of a special streaming server and it works reliably with common firewall and wireless router settings.

Apple says, “HTTP live streaming is designed for mobility and can dynamically adjust movie playback quality to match the available speed of wired or wireless networks, perfect whether the video is watched on a computer or on a mobile device like iPhone or iPod touch”.

The final significant feature is Snow Leopard’s built-in support for Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 - just add your email address and password and the rest happens automatically! What does this mean to the Mac user who doesn’t see the benefit? You’ll be able to use Mac apps like Address Book, iCal, Spotlight, Quick Look and Mail instead of Outlook in Windows to access email, calendar invites and Global Address Lists and the other joys of working for Windows-centric employers.

So, although less flashy than some of its recent predecessors most of Snow Leopard’s benefits will be dramatically evident to end-users as soon as they begin to use their Mac – this is one very fast cat that will easily give Windows 7 a run for its money.