lanulos
Jan 3, 11:14 PM
With greenpois0n, what exactly happened? The first time I tried it, there was a point at which text was scrolling down the screen and then it stopped for several minutes with what appeared to be a serious error message, at which point I panicked and rebooted. When I tried again, I waited it out at that point in the process, and eventually the scrolling continued and the jailbreak completed. I don't know if the current revision of greenpois0n does that; I think I was using the previous one.
JForestZ34
Mar 16, 10:20 PM
Not to sure what this is about.. But looks like apple took a hit...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/us_apple
James
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/us_apple
James
kainjow
Dec 11, 11:24 PM
For whatever reason, it works now. I have no clue what happened. Oh well :)
eastercat
Oct 9, 02:28 PM
This has the potential to rock (so to speak) or fail in a Darwin award winning sort of way. I'm going to waitfor the reviews before I plunk down the cash.
MikhailT
Mar 28, 11:27 PM
Haha, well I think it's a valid concern!! I mean I would hope that Apple wouldn't do that to us, but honestly I wouldn't be too surprised.
A HUGE part of Lion is the OS doing the multitasking so we don't have to think about it. That's why apple took away the little light below the apps. There is no "open" or "close".
Although, I suppose another thing about Lion is that every state gets saved. So if a window or safari tab were to close, then hypothetically it would open back exactly how it was??
I would assume that any open windows stay open (and no safari refreshing!) but can any of you Lioners out there confirm this?
You're comparing an orange to an apple, actually more like a tiny grape to an apple.
They are both based on the same OS X core but the code is much more optimized and slimmer on the iPad with much tighter hardware restrictions.
If the iPad devices are as powerful as our computers, we would not be experiencing any issues in Safari. You're talking about just 256MB of RAM in the first-gen iPad and 512MB in second-gen iPad which are able to handle the sites in Safari much better than it does in the first-gen iPad. Add 2GB-4GB to the iPad, Mobile Safari would be able to handle 20 sites without any refreshing required.
Secondly, Apple didn't take open/close lights away, it is now an optional setting in the Systems Preferences. The reason Apple did this is because they want to remove the idea of "open"/"closed" states. The software are starting to catch up to the hardware in terms of speed that we can leave applications and return to it in the same state. Apple wants to be able to introduce the concept of *resuming* apps, not *closed*. When you restart Lion with open apps, Lion will restart with the same open apps in the same state. This is the future on Mac OS X. No more closing required, especially with a fast SSD.
The hard drive/ssd in today's computers are much faster than the NANDs in the current iPad. Resuming an app is much faster than it would be on a modern computer. Look at how fast apps are resuming from the previous state in the iPad 2 and you can see how much the hardware difference is affecting the performance.
Also, the multitasking isn't a huge part of the OS, it's actually tiny. If you remove Cocoa, all the apps/framework and the GUI, the OS is probably less than 512MB (based on the open source darwin's binary iso size).
The other thing that you need to consider is the memory swap. Mac OS X have swap, iOS doesn't. Even if you run out of free memory on the Macs, you'll begin to switch to the harddrive/ssd to use as virtual memory.
A HUGE part of Lion is the OS doing the multitasking so we don't have to think about it. That's why apple took away the little light below the apps. There is no "open" or "close".
Although, I suppose another thing about Lion is that every state gets saved. So if a window or safari tab were to close, then hypothetically it would open back exactly how it was??
I would assume that any open windows stay open (and no safari refreshing!) but can any of you Lioners out there confirm this?
You're comparing an orange to an apple, actually more like a tiny grape to an apple.
They are both based on the same OS X core but the code is much more optimized and slimmer on the iPad with much tighter hardware restrictions.
If the iPad devices are as powerful as our computers, we would not be experiencing any issues in Safari. You're talking about just 256MB of RAM in the first-gen iPad and 512MB in second-gen iPad which are able to handle the sites in Safari much better than it does in the first-gen iPad. Add 2GB-4GB to the iPad, Mobile Safari would be able to handle 20 sites without any refreshing required.
Secondly, Apple didn't take open/close lights away, it is now an optional setting in the Systems Preferences. The reason Apple did this is because they want to remove the idea of "open"/"closed" states. The software are starting to catch up to the hardware in terms of speed that we can leave applications and return to it in the same state. Apple wants to be able to introduce the concept of *resuming* apps, not *closed*. When you restart Lion with open apps, Lion will restart with the same open apps in the same state. This is the future on Mac OS X. No more closing required, especially with a fast SSD.
The hard drive/ssd in today's computers are much faster than the NANDs in the current iPad. Resuming an app is much faster than it would be on a modern computer. Look at how fast apps are resuming from the previous state in the iPad 2 and you can see how much the hardware difference is affecting the performance.
Also, the multitasking isn't a huge part of the OS, it's actually tiny. If you remove Cocoa, all the apps/framework and the GUI, the OS is probably less than 512MB (based on the open source darwin's binary iso size).
The other thing that you need to consider is the memory swap. Mac OS X have swap, iOS doesn't. Even if you run out of free memory on the Macs, you'll begin to switch to the harddrive/ssd to use as virtual memory.
EliteF50
Mar 13, 09:10 PM
Can someone please tell me how to crop (zoom) and move a photo in Final Cut Pro, like you can in Sony Vegas or iMovie? I'd appreciate it greatly.
saberahul
Mar 17, 10:11 PM
Anyone know how much a Tshirt is? And if there's any way to get one other than going to San Francisco?
You can probably make one on cafepress.
You can probably make one on cafepress.
MattSepeta
Apr 16, 11:35 PM
Lighting has nothing to do with brand, otherwise, I would be struggling to match "Daylight", "Canon" and "Nikon" light to this very day.
Seriously though, that's the great thing about lighting, it really does not matter if it is coming from a Vivitar 285 or a AB 1600, light is light.
Seriously though, that's the great thing about lighting, it really does not matter if it is coming from a Vivitar 285 or a AB 1600, light is light.
hostel6
Apr 20, 07:30 AM
Hi,
For reference, the site I have made is www.systematic-uk.com
I am having a huge problem where I have deployed to a windows server and IE text is displaying irregular characters instead of spaces and punctuation. The about us link is
www.systematic-uk.com/premium.html is the worst example.
Apologies if this has been covered before but your help is very much appreciated.
Mark
All sorted - was to do with RAGE SEO removing a meta tag - amend in preferences.
For reference, the site I have made is www.systematic-uk.com
I am having a huge problem where I have deployed to a windows server and IE text is displaying irregular characters instead of spaces and punctuation. The about us link is
www.systematic-uk.com/premium.html is the worst example.
Apologies if this has been covered before but your help is very much appreciated.
Mark
All sorted - was to do with RAGE SEO removing a meta tag - amend in preferences.
sorepheet
May 4, 10:51 AM
What?!?! :( fail
California King
Mar 17, 11:08 PM
Reminds me of my campus bookstore, lol
Transporteur
Apr 20, 03:00 PM
That's not true. LG have a relatively new LED backlit IPS monitor series, I believe they do a 20, 22 and 23 inch.
I stand corrected. Wasn't aware of any other IPS LED panels.
I stand corrected. Wasn't aware of any other IPS LED panels.
Penn Jennings
Apr 28, 08:11 PM
You can buy Windows 7 Home Premium with Service Pack 1 for $99, possibly less.
You can buy OEM for $99, although technically its only supposed to be purchased with new systems. Just purchased it yesterday for bootcamp.. That one I did read.
OEM also has no support and is bound to a single system board.
You can buy OEM for $99, although technically its only supposed to be purchased with new systems. Just purchased it yesterday for bootcamp.. That one I did read.
OEM also has no support and is bound to a single system board.
odris
Apr 25, 06:32 PM
My out of warranty 3GS has a LARGE crack near the dock connector. I am almost a year out of warranty, do you think Apple would replace it? There is no water damage of any kind to it.
http://img824.imageshack.us/img824/3043/65902356.jpg (http://img824.imageshack.us/i/65902356.jpg/)
Thanks.
http://img824.imageshack.us/img824/3043/65902356.jpg (http://img824.imageshack.us/i/65902356.jpg/)
Thanks.
Elan0204
Aug 13, 03:11 PM
You gotta love it! =D
I know I do!
I know I do!
Pgohlke
Feb 9, 05:04 PM
When I received my iPod Touch second generation for Christmas in 2008 I was excited, but then iOS 3.0 came along and I upgraded. I loved voice control but then I updated to iOS 4.2.1 and the feature was gone. Is there a way I can get voice control again. Addition information: I was jailbreaked using readsnow.
There never was or will be voice control for the 2nd generation. Only 3rd and up have it.
There never was or will be voice control for the 2nd generation. Only 3rd and up have it.
ArchXyrho
Dec 16, 04:26 AM
Hmmm there isn't any meet up for iPad fans up here In Canada so I thought I will just be the first to start one :) so name a place and time and we all can gather up.:apple::apple::apple::apple::apple::apple:
MacRumors
Apr 26, 04:04 PM
http://www.macrumors.com/images/macrumorsthreadlogo.gif (http://www.macrumors.com/iphone/2011/04/26/last-years-comments-from-steve-jobs-and-andy-rubin-on-privacy/)
In the wake of a highly-publicized disclosure (http://www.macrumors.com/2011/04/20/researchers-disclose-iphone-and-ipad-location-tracking-privacy-issues/) last week regarding iOS location tracking and discussion of similar activity found on Android-based devices, All Things Digital has gone back and cut together a video clip (http://kara.allthingsd.com/20110426/a-probe-in-your-pocket-heres-apples-steve-jobs-and-googles-andy-rubin-talking-privacy-at-d8-and-dive/) of comments from Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Google mobile boss Andy Rubin on privacy to remind readers what key executives have said about the issue in the recent past. Jobs' interview took place at the D8 Conference (http://www.macrumors.com/2010/06/01/steve-jobs-in-opening-interview-session-at-d8-conference/) last June, while Rubin's took place at the D: Dive Into Mobile conference back in December."We take privacy extremely seriously," said Jobs, who addressed the smartphone location data issue in particular. "A lot of people in [Silicon] Valley think we're old-fashioned about this."Rubin's comments focused on the basic Android operating system, reporting that there is nothing in that code that sends data back to Google. But obviously Google's own services and other extensions built on top of Android could report such information given the touted open source nature of the platform.Both Jobs and Rubin make some pretty strong privacy-related statements in these videos, so it will be interesting to see how it all shakes out.We reported yesterday (http://www.macrumors.com/2011/04/25/steve-jobs-on-ios-location-issue-we-dont-track-anyone/) on an apparent email response from Steve Jobs to a user claiming that Apple does not track users, but Apple has yet to issue a more thorough response in the face of increasing questions from users and inquiries from government representatives and agencies in a number of countries.
Article Link: Last Year's Comments From Steve Jobs and Andy Rubin on Privacy (http://www.macrumors.com/iphone/2011/04/26/last-years-comments-from-steve-jobs-and-andy-rubin-on-privacy/)
In the wake of a highly-publicized disclosure (http://www.macrumors.com/2011/04/20/researchers-disclose-iphone-and-ipad-location-tracking-privacy-issues/) last week regarding iOS location tracking and discussion of similar activity found on Android-based devices, All Things Digital has gone back and cut together a video clip (http://kara.allthingsd.com/20110426/a-probe-in-your-pocket-heres-apples-steve-jobs-and-googles-andy-rubin-talking-privacy-at-d8-and-dive/) of comments from Apple CEO Steve Jobs and Google mobile boss Andy Rubin on privacy to remind readers what key executives have said about the issue in the recent past. Jobs' interview took place at the D8 Conference (http://www.macrumors.com/2010/06/01/steve-jobs-in-opening-interview-session-at-d8-conference/) last June, while Rubin's took place at the D: Dive Into Mobile conference back in December."We take privacy extremely seriously," said Jobs, who addressed the smartphone location data issue in particular. "A lot of people in [Silicon] Valley think we're old-fashioned about this."Rubin's comments focused on the basic Android operating system, reporting that there is nothing in that code that sends data back to Google. But obviously Google's own services and other extensions built on top of Android could report such information given the touted open source nature of the platform.Both Jobs and Rubin make some pretty strong privacy-related statements in these videos, so it will be interesting to see how it all shakes out.We reported yesterday (http://www.macrumors.com/2011/04/25/steve-jobs-on-ios-location-issue-we-dont-track-anyone/) on an apparent email response from Steve Jobs to a user claiming that Apple does not track users, but Apple has yet to issue a more thorough response in the face of increasing questions from users and inquiries from government representatives and agencies in a number of countries.
Article Link: Last Year's Comments From Steve Jobs and Andy Rubin on Privacy (http://www.macrumors.com/iphone/2011/04/26/last-years-comments-from-steve-jobs-and-andy-rubin-on-privacy/)
laurim
Apr 25, 12:00 AM
Week 1: Read Python; familiarize self with scripting language semantics/syntax
Week 2-4: Learn PHP; obviously begin with what you learned from Python and build from there. Start to look at object-oriented PHP materials.
Week 5: Begin SQL query writing; queries aren't so difficult if you know your PHP material well. The better at coding you are, the better your query writing will be.
Eventually, you'll want to get into content management systems and MVC frameworks - this, outside of object oriented programming, is the biggest mountain to climb, but it is well worth it in the long run as all of your hard work will pay off. These two things will take a long time to learn so don't fret if you don't understand it all from the very beginning.
Also, like someone else said, make sure your design is consistent across different browsers. Since you are learning, you're probably looking at a lot of divs and what not. Divs are nifty, but browsers don't agree with them 90% of the time. This means grabbing a copy of Windows, downloading Internet Explorer 6, 7, 8, and 9 to make sure everything looks correct. This is one of every designer/developers biggest complaints and why Internet Explorer is hated beyond words.
wtf is Python? Sorry, but I had never heard of it until now. Stick with the basics and what's most commonly used. Maybe I've been out of the game a couple years but I would learn Ajax before I learned python.
Week 2-4: Learn PHP; obviously begin with what you learned from Python and build from there. Start to look at object-oriented PHP materials.
Week 5: Begin SQL query writing; queries aren't so difficult if you know your PHP material well. The better at coding you are, the better your query writing will be.
Eventually, you'll want to get into content management systems and MVC frameworks - this, outside of object oriented programming, is the biggest mountain to climb, but it is well worth it in the long run as all of your hard work will pay off. These two things will take a long time to learn so don't fret if you don't understand it all from the very beginning.
Also, like someone else said, make sure your design is consistent across different browsers. Since you are learning, you're probably looking at a lot of divs and what not. Divs are nifty, but browsers don't agree with them 90% of the time. This means grabbing a copy of Windows, downloading Internet Explorer 6, 7, 8, and 9 to make sure everything looks correct. This is one of every designer/developers biggest complaints and why Internet Explorer is hated beyond words.
wtf is Python? Sorry, but I had never heard of it until now. Stick with the basics and what's most commonly used. Maybe I've been out of the game a couple years but I would learn Ajax before I learned python.
mlstein
Apr 10, 10:39 AM
I've seen no reports that this allows you to do anything but download/play one song at a time. That's my experience--the player says it's playing on iCab-identified-as-desktop-Safari but nothing happens.
eric55lv
Jan 14, 05:47 PM
iTunes is to well known, they won't change the name.
I hope they dont!!!
I hope they dont!!!
-pete-
Apr 20, 05:56 PM
I got my development job from learning PHP, once you start being able to hook into databases and write "real" functions (something that imo javascript isn't much good for) then you can do some really cool stuff :)
iFiend
May 4, 12:35 PM
This thread is so full of fail it hurts! :D
What you're talking about is a basic function of an iPhone (backup/restore)
Boggles my mind that a large portion of the iPhone having population doesn't even know how to use it.
What you're talking about is a basic function of an iPhone (backup/restore)
Boggles my mind that a large portion of the iPhone having population doesn't even know how to use it.
aiqw9182
May 2, 07:21 PM
Open QuickTime X > go to File > New Movie Recording
Then select the arrow next to the full screen button and select either high or maximum quality.
Or you can record straight in iMovie by clicking the camera button in the middle bar on the left hand side and set it to 720p.
Then select the arrow next to the full screen button and select either high or maximum quality.
Or you can record straight in iMovie by clicking the camera button in the middle bar on the left hand side and set it to 720p.
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