Apple Releases Mac OS X 10.2.6
Numeric writes "Apple has released 10.2.6 update, which you can read in detail. Here's a partial list: Addresses an issue for Mac OS X 10.2.5 in which a kernel panic message may appear if certain USB hubs or devices are connected. Addresses an issue for Mac OS X 10.2.5 in which English is the default language and Asian language scripts are not be available in the International preference pane, if a script's font is not available. Address Book now supports the Sony Ericsson T610 phone."
As always, it is a good idea to repair your permissions after an OS update (though this update isn't huge). It always seems to speed things up a little for me.
Applications/Utilities/Disk Utility
The text you pasted is from the description of the "Combined" 10.2.6 update, which includes all minor version updates and security patches since 10.2.0.
Here are the relevant KnowledgeBase articles:
I prayed about it, and God said, "Don't do it!" But I thought, "I know better."
The above list is not correct for the 10.2.6 update. Software Update just says:
The 10.2.6 Update delivers enhanced functionality and improved reliability for the following applications, services and technologies: Address Book, Graphics, Printing, OpenGL, and PC Card and USB hub device compatibility.
For detailed information on this Update, please visit this website: http://www.info.apple.com/kbnum/n25448
The too-long list in the parent is probably the full list of changes from 10.2 to 10.2.6
"These are my principles. If you don't like them, I have others." --Groucho Marx
Well, have you taken a look at xlr8yourmac.com?
They happen to have a huge drive compatibility database which lists tons of drives people have managed to get to work with Finder disk burning and iTunes by modifying configuration files. I have an *officially unsupported* Samsung 32x CD-R/DVD which now works fine with both, thanks to some minor tweaking.
I prefer Toast for these functions, but I didn't like the *Unsupported* label I saw by my drive in the System Profiler.
Not everyone is sitting at 10.2.5. New computers on the shelf, as an example, are at 10.2.3.
;-?
Like I said: The too-long list in the parent is probably the full list of changes from 10.2 to 10.2.6. What part of 'probably' in the parent caused you confusion
But seriously, in the context of this specific update that's just come out it's not very interesting (not to say misleading) to list all changes of earlier updates, attributing them all to 10.2.6.
For the specific changes from 10.2.1 to 10.2.5, if that's what you're interested in, just check these Apple knowledgebase articles: 107036, 107140, 107263, 107362, 25405 (for instance 107036)
I could make you a list of changes since 10.0, or even Mac OS 7.5.... that would look even more impressive. But it wouldn't help anybody much.
"These are my principles. If you don't like them, I have others." --Groucho Marx
"The only problem is that to do this, you need to have a supported drive."
/System/Library/Frameworks/DiscRecording.framework /Versions/A/Resources/DevicePlugIns/
Take a look at
I have an unsupported Samsung CD-RW. I just opened the SamsungCDR.device-plugin with an hex editor and changed the model description I found there to my model. Use the model description that Toast shows or use any UNIX tool you like.
Make a backup of the changed file, bcz with some system updates it got reset.
A previous Apple update fixed a DNS bug where large DNS reponses (typically from Akamai-based sites) would get dropped. The most notable victim was Apple itself.
10.2.6 appears to re-introduce this bug, making Safari pretty much useless for me.
Did anyone else notice this un-fix?
A.
...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
SafariNoTimeout is a little utility that removes the 60 second connection timeout from Safari.
Without it on my dial-up connection, Safari is virtually useless while downloading and/or with a few tabs loading at once.
It should make Safari useful again for you. It sure did for me.