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Friday
Nov022007

Oh Yeah, We Got a 'Trojan'

Every once in a lifetime, a virus/trojan or wahtever for Mac OSX raises it's 'ugly' head. And now we got a Trojan. Infection occurs through porn websites :-P, and it promises a codec with which you can view the x-rated content on the website(s). I guess that there's a sex-starved market out there. As you might have guesed, the trojan isn't exactly what it promises to be. It modifies your DNS settings, which are almost undetectable (for regular users). The result is that you might get rerouted to other sites than you originally intended. Since 'they' control the DNS, you might be typing your usernames and passwords for eBay on a site that's not really eBay. There are way of detecting and removig the darn thing.

Click to read more ...

Monday
Oct292007

Finder Searches

The new Finder in Leopard has this neat feature that shows your documents (and other stuff) that have been accessed 'Yesterday', 'Today', and 'Past Week'. Very handy. Downside is that it shows not only the documents, but also every other file that has been changed. So a nice short list of documents is out of the question. After a day of workin, you might end up with a very, very long list of files. The 'Search For' is a nice way of exploring the crap on your machine after an upgrade of Tiger. Do an upgrade and use the 'Search For' feature the next day. I found some files that I didn't even knew I had. Most of them were mail related (kinda embarrassing attachments etc.). Oh, and if you're a person that wants to hide certain things on the computer, you might wanna disable spotlight (or whatever function is doing this), because it's one hell of a Parental Control mechanism. Even the items you used in the preference panel show up. B.t.w. Did I mention that the new Cover Flow feature in Finder just kicks ass. It runs as smooth as a baby's bottom... well you get the idea.

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Monday
Oct292007

Installed Leopard

It's been a long night, but I finally installed Leopard. The reason it took so long is that I didn't have a retail DVD of the the OS. I had to screw around with a diskimage. From the moment I successfully burned the DVD it took about half an hour to 40 minutes to upgrade Tiger to Leopard. Here are my experiences:

  • First time booting into the desktop takes forever. I guess that spotlight is to blame for this, but I'm not sure.
  • Eventhough I had correctly configured network interfaces, the network assistant thingy popped up, and kept bothering me (even after reboots). Removing it from the 'login items' stopped it.
  • My Mail (all account were configured as IMAP) was unable to retrieve new e-mails from all accounts. After some poking around I deleted all accounts and mail settings. After recreating the accounts everything worked fine. This is the nice thing about IMAP. You can remove your account and settings, and you won't lose your mail, because it remains on the server.
  • Adobe Lightroom seems to work, and so do all of my other image manipulation tools.
  • PGP v9.6.x crashes. I had to remove it by hand. Too bad that there isn't a documented manual uninstall procedure. Guess I have to wait for an update. Just uninstall the app before upgrading.
Initial impressions:
  • Faster than Tiger
  • Very backwards compatible. Vista eat you heart out.
  • The app improvements on Finder, and the Dock are great. Especially the coverflow view in Finder kicks ass, and runs great on my 'old' MacBook Pro.
  • .....

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Sunday
Oct282007

Installing Leopard

Well, nothing is as easy as it may seem. As I mentioned earlier, I downloaded a copy of Leopard to see if it's worth buying. This download was a so-called .dmg file. This file can be burned to a double layer DVD by the Disk Utility or by using Toast. The problem is that my MacBook Pro doesn't have a dual layer DVD burner, so I need to burn this one with my external USB NEC burner (which supports burning dual layer DVD's). For some weird reason it (my MacBook Pro) refuses to burn anything dual layer. So in the mean time I'm searching for another version of Leopard (preferably an ISO-file), and I'm using Super Duper! to backup my MBP. Both are taking 'some' time, so I don't think that I'll be upgrading this weekend :-( . UPDATE: Oke, I found a PDF from Adobe stating that Adobe Lightroom isn't fully compatible yet. So, no upgrade for me. Guess I can stop trying to get the downloaded DMG to work. Well, at least I didn't spend my Sunday on nothing. I figured out how to convert a DMG to ISO.

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Wednesday
Oct242007

Apple OSX 10.5 aka Leopard

If you have lived under a rock, you might have missed the news about the release of Leopard. No, not the animal, but the latest and newest release of Apple OSX 10.5. As usual, the final release is leaked onto the Internet before it hits the shelves. This gives me time to try the release before actually buying it. Don't worry, I will buy Leopard. I'll get it with a new iMac, a new MacBook Pro, or I'll buy the shrink wrapped version. The question is, should I buy it immediately? I use some apps that might not work with Leopard. So first, I'll Super Dupe my hard drive, so if things go wrong I can go back. After that I'll try to upgrade and see if all apps still work. If not, I still have a way of getting back to Tiger (10.4.x). I guess I found a way to spend my weekend. Oops.. getting back the the old OS, might be a reinstall. Super Duper isn't fully tested on Leopard;

Leopard Infomation

SuperDuper! 2.1.4 is not yet fully Leopard compatible.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Oct242007

History Repeating

About 4 years ago (to this date), I went to the west coast of the US for a 3 week holiday. At the time there were also several forest fires. It almost seemed that the fires were following us. Everywhere we had been, things started to burn. Now, exactly 4 years later, the same thing is happening. Only difference is that I'm not in the US. So don't blame me ;-)

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Wednesday
Oct242007

Gmail Goes IMAP

It seems that Gmail is going to enable IMAP support for their free mail service. The gmail application for mobile devices is nice, but it IMAP is nicer to have. It seems that the IMAP option isn't available on my account (yet). Guess I have to wait a little longer.

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Saturday
Oct202007

Dolby Digital and DTS MIA

Most of the TV series I watch, I watch on my MacBook Pro. I just hook up the laptop to my 40inch HDTV, and enjoy Stargate Atlantis, Heroes, Lost, House, etc. in HD quality (mostly 720p, because the MBP isn't fast enough to decode 1080p :( ). But the only way of enjoying this to the fullest is with Dolby Digital or DTS, but Quicktime doesn't support this. Only Dolby Surround is supported by Quicktime. Last week I installed Perian. This is a so-called codec pack which enables Quicktime to play more video formats. After installing Perian, it's even possible to play Matroska files from within Frontrow, but still no DD or DTS support..... I wonder why Apple hasn't added support for DD or DTS. It's shouldn't be too hard (the DVD player does support DD and DTS). Especially, since Apple is the choice for content-creators.... I guess VLC is here to stay for a bit longer.

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Monday
Oct152007

Miss Tibet

I went to Tibet in 2005. This was one of the best holidays ever. Only Africa could beat it in my top 10. The country is just beautiful. It's just a damn shame that the Chinese are 'corrupting' the country with modern transportation, and genuine Miss Tibet contests...... What's so Tibetan about this???

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Saturday
Oct132007

ISP's Blocking Childporn on the Internet (part 2)

Oke, it seems that UPC has already implemented the so-called child pornography filter. There's no fancy filtering software. They are using their own DNS servers to re-route traffic. This means that when your using other DNS servers (e.g. openDNS), a modified hosts file, or just browse to the filtered server based on the IP address you'll be just fine. As I've mentioned before; with casual browsing you won't end up on child porn websites. Only if you want to find it you'll probably end up getting it. So a awefully simple DNS protection won't stop the real perverts. It's just another false sense of safety.

Click to read more ...