Flame Artist by day. Proud Dad by, uhm, the rest of the time. Lover of everything Apple. Hater of everything Microsoft. Except for the Xbox 360 of course.
With Christmas shopping in everyone’s mind, may I offer up a novel idea for the iPhone geeks in your lives? Yes, iPhone application icon coasters. A set of 6 coasters for £12.99 and they come in three different icon packs as well.
I think it’s about time I spec out my ideal Mac. I need a Quad-Core all in one system with a 27″ LED screen, ideally 2560 x 1440 res with up to 16GB RAM and 2TB internal drive. It would absolutely need a multitouch wireless mouse and have a DisplayPort input to turn it into an ultra HD viewing device. Oh, and it would need to be wall-mountable.
But who am I kidding? When is a dream system like that ever see the light of day?
Finally, the iPhone has more than one network in the UK. Two days ago Orange announced that they’ve broken O2′s stranglehold on the iPhone and will be selling all models by Christmas. Yesterday Vodafone declared they will be selling the iPhone as well from early 2010.
What will this mean to the iPhone? Considering that Apple recently reported that there are over 85,000 apps in the App Store and over 2 Billion downloads in its first year, those numbers will now skyrocket. There has never been a better time to start writing apps for the iPhone and the Mac platforms.
I’ve been dabbling with Xcode for a little while and found some really good resources to help me get started. The best guide so far has been BecomeAnXcoder and I highly recommend Aaron Hillegass’s book Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X. When you have a handle on Xcode and want to get started on iPhone development, there’s Stanford University’s excellent iPhone Application Programming podcasts.
Do it now if you can. The iPhone application market is about to expand massively.
Since the update to Snow Leopard I find myself using a feature that was introduced in Leopard which I never used very much: Stacks. Finally, I can navigate the hierarchy of a folder or drive in the Dock quickly and easily. In Leopard I usually switched to the View as List option and avoided Stacks altogether. Thanks to this hint on MacOSXhints.com I now have a hybrid view which I really like: a navigable list which looks slick.
Just type this in the Terminal and you’ll see what I mean:
defaults write com.apple.dock use-new-list-stack -bool YES; killall Dock
Click on the image above for a full-sized view. Of course if you’d like to switch back to the default view just replace the YES to NO in the command above.
I was a little bit disoriented with Quicktime X, to be honest. What, no export preferences? Only Sharing to iTunes? The UI looks very nice and the promise of GPU-accelerated playback is theoretically good, but what about 1080p MKV files playing natively? Quicktime X doesn’t recognise anything besides MP4 or iTunes’ M4V files. Perian was a constant presence in Leopard but a second-tier citizen with 10.6. Until now!
Thanks to the info in this thread on the cocoa forge board and the latest version of Perian, this utility will let Quicktime X recognise and play .mkv files. Front Row will happily play AVI files (as long as you have Flip4Mac installed) and SD MKV files but not 720p or 1080 movies unfortunately.
Of course, there’s always Plex which plays all movie codecs flawlessly without the need for Perian.
Ever since I installed Snow Leopard, I’ve been battling with a strange bug in Safari. If I go to a website with several embedded videos, they all start playing simultaneously. I’d been in the head of the page with no video present in the current view when suddenly all the audio streams start playing and overlapping each other. Cue heart attack. Here’s what happens:
I’ve been searching Google, combing the Apple discussion boards with no clue or direction on how to fix this bug. Then this morning I had an idea. I thought it must be a Safari plugin… and it was. I’ve been using a flash blocker called ClickToFlash and it was the culprit. When it intercepts YouTube videos it sets them all to Autoplay and they all start playing. Thankfully, it’s been reported as a bug in the ClickToFlash support board.
Once I removed the plugin from the ~/Library/Internet Plugins folder, Safari behaves normally as seen here:
UPDATE: As I mentioned before, there is a support ticket to fix the autoplay bug in ClickToFlash 1.5fc2 and there is now a workaround as well. In the ClickToFlash Settings window, make sure Load H.264 Videos from YouTube is unchecked.
After installing Snow Leopard all my CS4 applications displayed the same error dialog above. So I went through the gruesome task of re-installing CS4 and I still got the same error. Even running the Adobe License Recovery utility several times (with several reboots) didn’t solve the issue. It was driving me mad! Fortunately, thanks to a reply to a post in another blog that it was solved.
Here’s how. I had to delete the following folder:
/Library/Preferences/FLEXnet Publisher
When I launched Photoshop it asked me for my serial number and once entered, all the CS4 applications worked perfectly.
So Snow Leopard, otherwise known as Mac OS X 10.6, is released tomorrow and needless to say I’ll have it installed by the end of the day. The downside of a brand new OS is losing all the little hacks I’ve accumulated over the past 18 months with Leopard: Plex; Perian; a minimalist Dock; Google Quick Search Box; Expandrive; and finally Caffeine, the latest install.
There is a lot to look forward to with Snow Leopard as well. Most of the core applications have been re-written in Cocoa and they’re all 64-bit as well. In short it means, Go Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill!
If you’d like to check wether your favourite application works with 10.6, here’s a quite extensive and informative wiki site and most of the apps I mentioned earlier either work perfectly or need updating. I prefer a clean install with a new OS and then gradually adding extensions.
Gentlemen, rev up those Time Machine backup drives.
After using Caffeine for a couple of hours I was hooked. It’s a free utility that stops your laptop from dimming the screen or going to sleep. How is this useful? How many times have you been watching something on YouTube for the screen to dim? Cue irritated push on the trackpad to get the brightness back.
Caffeine lives in your menu bar in the shape of a cup of coffee. When you want the display not to dim, click on the empty cup which changes to a full cup and et voilà, no more display dimming. When you’re not watching the screen anymore and listening to music whilst working, click on the full cup to drain it and revert the dimming back.
Hi. I'm Hani and this is my blog. I also have some photos on Flickr, bookmarks on Delicious, tweets on Twitter and generalities on Facebook as well. Most of the time I can be found at Prime Focus in London, crafting commericals using Flame.
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