Mac OS X 10.5.2 Update Brings Welcome Fixes
jetpack writes to make sure we're aware that Apple's OS X 10.5.2 update is available and that it contains plenty of improvements and fixes that users have been asking for. Macworld enumerates some of the big ones, saying that the update "shows Apple listens to users" (sometimes). A couple of the new features simply restore Tiger (10.4) capabilities that Leopard (10.5) had inexplicably withdrawn. You can now shut off the much-maligned transparency of the menu bar, and organize your Dock stacks hierarchically and display them as folders. And Apple has provided welcome access to common Time Machine functions in the menu bar.
You can't back up to drives plugged into an Airport Extreme, though, even though the much-toted Time Capsule will apparently be able to (In their defence, this could come with an update before the Time Capsule actually ships).
All trolls please post here please so its easier to mod us all down.
...the fact that it's still the evil seed of Satan Jobs?
Sweet, no more need for a hack to stop the menubar from being transparent. Now if only they'd make the dock look like it did in 10.4...
-mrxak
Onions Will Kill You
... would it be possible for Apple to realize who their customers are and restore the ability to do two-way copying of MP3 (non-AAC, really) songs in iTunes? That got yanked a while ago, and it's an irritating functionality loss. There are alternatives (hat tip: MacWorld), but Apple's customer control tactics are almost as bad as the record companies'.
Dog is my co-pilot.
Can anyone who has installed this confirm that the Parental Controls bug is fixed? (Enable parental controls on one account and Dashboard widgets are broken on all accounts). Spent a couple hours trying to get it working again, without success. On the upside, TimeMachine did let me roll back to a hour before I enabled Parental Controls so nothing lost, other than an evening and some confidence in Apple's software testing methodology. (which is why I'm asking here... I want somebody else to "go first" on this update!)
I still double click my title bar expecting the window to vanish, leaving the title bar there, beneath my mouse, so I can say 'thanks' click click. And be back to where I was.
We were so amazed when Windows 3.0 taught us to "minimize" and still have ***another application running*** (back when DOS was neato) that we didn't ask "ok, so, why do I have to reach to the very farthest point on the screen to get my window back?"
Yes, Exposé might be a cool way around that, and some Vista maven may say 'aeroglass', but click-click... click-click is about as simple as it can possibly get. And no motion sickness!
granted I'd like the dock to look like it did in 10.4, but turning the glass effect off with the following 2 script lines: defaults write com.apple.dock no-glass -boolean YES killall Dock (to turn back on change YES to NO). It makes the dock be side-style while still on he bottom. If your'e lazy and have eitehr cocktail or onyx, you can do it in there with the force to side-style mode option.
I meant the dock...my mistake.
They didn't fix Racoon (IPsec IKE key manager). It's still busted. Worked fine in Tiger...
Sounds like this is a step in the right direction. As soon as they remove the silly rooting behavior in column view in the finder, I'll buy leopard. Funny how one of these "features" they decided to include is keeping me from buying the OS. I run a mac shop, but I just bought an additional license for 10.4 instead of 10.5 because frankly, I don't see much worth shelling out the extra dough for in leopard. (In 10.4 you can bypass the rooting behavior by making an alias for the folder.) I know how to use rsync and cron, so I don't really need time machine.... and I'm not all that interested in the new preview view for the files. It's not like I'd delete it off a computer that I just bought, but I don't see much reason to upgrade since some of the things they did are not the behavior I want.
Gentlemen! You can't fight in here, this is the war room!
Although 10.5.2 introduced support for additional dSLRs, such as the Nikon D3 and D300, apparently there's still an issue preventing (at least some) Aperture users from viewing these cameras' RAW files. Really odd since iPhoto and Preview display them just fine now - but not Apple's "pro" app.
#DeleteChrome
I had just discovered the awesome 'split' feature in Tiger's Terminal about two months ago. Click on the icon in the upper right portion of the terminal window, and a bar appears. You can drag the bar to split your terminal in two. The upper portion is the scrollback, and shows your terminal history. The bottom portion is your 'live' terminal. It's awesome, and it saves me from having to open two different terminals in many cases!
:(
Of course, after upgrading to Leopard, this innovative feature has been removed! I couldn't believe it!
Now I'm back to opening up two Terminal windows...
I wouldn't install this tonight. My new MBP is stuck in a reboot loop.
Any New drivers in it for hardware that is not out yet?
Any video driver updates in it?
are the amd chipset drivers still in it?
http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=http://www.mac4ever.com/news/34085/amd_dans_leopard_10_5_2/&sa=X&oi=translate&resnum=2&ct=result&prev=/search%3Fq%3Damd%2B10.5.2%26hl%3Den%26safe%3Doff%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26hs%3DEBr%26sa%3DG
This is like SP1 in Windows land. Basically, 10.5 is the GM, 10.5.1 is where they fix other things that emerged in the several weeks between GM and public availability (along with a couple of critical bugs that turn up in the first few days of wider public release), and then 10.5.2 is the first release based on public feedback and issues. That's also part of why this version enables you to turn off the menubar translucency (and makes the menus themselves more opaque) - users hated it so Apple tweaked things for them.
Windows is freakin' huge - hence the year to Vista SP1 - but Microsoft's releases also go much wider, have more hardware to test with, and have more public pre-release cycles as well. So it takes them a year to do a service pack, where Apple only takes about 3-4 months.
-- Josh Turiel
"2. Do not eat iPod Shuffle."
I kid! I kid!
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
IN general apple tends to remove old features/ ports/ connectors when it adds replacements or equalivalents. Apple is a first mover in many areas: parallel ports? ADB, Floppy disks, ....
Then it adds them back if there are howls.
It's a good strategy in many ways. First, it allows one to keep the idea that there is one-primary-way-for-novices-to-do-something on most mac. When you go to another mac, it behaves the same. (e.g. Life is a box of chocolates with linux. when you sit down at someone elses terminal, focus might follow the mouse, it might auto-raise, god knows what happens when you launch emacs (xterm or text, context colored or not, etc...) Uniformity is viewed as good mac land because ultimately by not having to think too much or memorize short cuts you can just focus on getting the job done and the computer is more appliance like than tweaker box like. It's not that you can't customize a mac, it's just stupid to try in general.
It also allows them to introduce new lower level mechanism that break old higher level mechanisms. Such as the clean/dirty file tracking used for Time Machine.
I don't know why they deprecated your MP3 file moving. My guess however it was the opposite intent. they were trying to put in speed bumps--apples view of the best DRM seems to be to simply use invoconvience rather than prohibition when they can. I rather like that approach philosophically.
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
Once you install 10.5.2 another update becomes available that updates various video drivers. Some animations seem "snappier" now, particularly Expose and Spaces.
* Restore the ability to have folders remember their views.
* Run each Finder window in a separate process, so it doesn't lock everything up when one window gets busy. Particularly when hitting network shares.
* Restore the pre OSX "staggered" icon layout option.
* Give us an option to completely eliminate the sidebar without having to go back to "spacial" windows.
* Move the "FTP" support from Finder to Safari, so we don't have the overhead and security issues of file-system-like operations when accessing remote high-latency servers.
* Bring back the Shelf from NeXTSTeP.
* Add "Cut" as well as "Copy". There's a "Cut" option in the edit menu but it's always greyed out. If there's some obscure option key that will enable this, well...
* Make it OBVIOUS when there's an option/command click 'advanced' operation, instead of making us guess. And that goes for the rest of the software on the Mac.
My Dual G5 took hella long to update, but is definitely a bit snappier now.
music lover since 1969
Yeah yeah, off-topic, go on, I know you want to, I've been missing this ever since I switched from linux ~5 years ago. I've given up the ghost on "sloppy focus follows mouse / click to raise" but I'd pay real money for a right click on the title bar to send a window to the back of the stack. Has anyone come across this? I've been searching for years to no avail.
never drink kool-aid from a big vat
is still broken, a single file in the trash being deleted still results in a file count of 11 or 9 files being securely deleted. I'll have to stick to Permanent Eraser for a while longer it seems. You'd figure Apple would have dealt with this by now.
I administer an apple x server at work, and I haven't been impressed.
I'm running ubuntu on a PC, so I can't use the server admin, or workgroup manager tools. Also, apple doesn't come with a standard VNC server, instead it uses VNC with some proprietary shit built in, so I had to install vine server to get a remote desktop. Of course, vine server sucks as well, because I can't get it to start on boot, without logging into the server with either the native server admin tools, or locally with a KVM. Oh wait, the X Serve doesn't play nice with a standard KVM. I have an extra mouse and keyboard setting in my rack just for the X Serve.
Once you manage to get in the damn thing, if you have any sort of complicated setup at all, you simply CAN'T DO it using the server admin tool. I've usually had to bust into the config files just like any other Unix system. Take a look at the SQL section of the Server Admin tool, its a fucking joke. Also, even if you do start to do some things by hand, shit still doesn't work right.
See one of my bug reports here.
http://macosx.com/forums/mac-os-x-server/298314-samba-shares-hfs-extended-attributes.html
The mailing list / blog / colander stuff is also less than impressive. Why the FUCK should I have to wait 15 minutes for my changes to take affect. It this 1982 or some shit? Some changes seem to take much longer than that as well. I waited a whole day for one of my groups to show up. Why is it that the "recent changes" section of each group shows group emails, even if I turn the mailing list feature off?
Oh yeah, last but not least, the server crashes. It responds to pings, still responds to local terminal input, but anything that requires authentication is dead in the water. So that leaves mail, netbios, ssh, server admin, work group manager, etc etc all dead. I think the LDAP server is crapping out, but I haven't been able to prove it yet. I've had to hard boot the server half a dozen times in the last two weeks.
My last rant. WHAT THE FUCK IS WITH THE QUICK TIME UPDATES, AND THE REQUIRED RESTARTS. Jesus christ, it's like I'm working with windows NT.
Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
Where's the Sarbox excuse? Apple adds new features and doesn't charge for the update? It sucks that my girlfriend has to pay 20 bucks to unlock those new features on the iPod touch she got for Christmas.
"The objective of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved." -- John Ashcroft
As someone pointed somewhere else (sorry, I have several Mac things, since I'm a new Mac user), there is an Graphics Update update after you upgrade the system. Just in case, open the software update again and check if there is something new.
Mac OS X will never be ready for the desktop while it requires users to use the command-line to... oh, too easy?
how to invest, a novice's guide
I would just like to take this time to rub in the fact I never once had to see that transparent menu. At first I just thought that it might only be slightly transparent, and that the beta users were just exaggerating the problem, so I tried it with a checked background, and sure enough it was completely solid. The reflective doc was there in all it's shinyness, but no pixel were leaking through my menu bar. I don't if it was a PPC/Intel thing or if Apple just deemed my video card too pathetic to get the see-through goodness, by my Leopard install has had an opaque menu since the day I installed it.
:P
So, neener-neener
Seems to be working fine now, at least as far as glxinfo/glxgears can tell me. Incidentally, this update also fixed issues with slow redrawing in all X11 apps, especially Inkscape 3
leopard broke SMB server mounts (when tiger worked fine).
sure hope this is fixed - its a deal breaker for adopting leopard.
2cents
j
OS X Leopard's release was originally scheduled for the end of 2006 or early 2007. A year later, this was amended to "Spring 2007". And as of March 23rd, Leopard was still supposedly on track for a spring release. Then on April 12, just 20 days later, Apple announced that Leopard would be delayed. The reason? Apple needed to "borrow some key software engineering and QA resources" and put them to work on the iPhone in order to meet that product's promised June release.
But the revised release date for Leopard was October 26th, 119 days after the day the iPhone would ship and those "borrowed" developers could return to work on 10.5. Four months put back into the timeline, not two. And in actuality the postponement gave Apple over six more months of Leopard development time, counted from the announcement on April 12th to the revised ship date on October 26th.
Apple had only borrowed a few key people, remember? Presumably the rest weren't just sitting around waiting for the others to get back to work.
Even with the extra time, Apple didn't have enough time to fix all of the problems. So as the October release date loomed, Apple rushed one more final candidate past developers, patched and polished a few last-minute issues, determined that it was "good enough", and shipped OS X 10.5 Leopard to the public.
So short was the time frame that few outside of Apple saw the gold master. Even major software development firms like Adobe received their final copies at nearly the same time as everyone else.
Is that the profile of a company that isn't rushing a product to market? Nope, 10.5.2 is what Leopard should have been.
Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
What's included?
.Mac syncing of iCal calendars.
This update delivers several improvements for both PowerPC- and Intel-based Macs (as well as improvements provided in the Mac OS X 10.5.1 update.)
Active Directory
* Addresses issues which could hinder or prevent binding Mac OS X 10.5.x clients to Active Directory domains.
AirPort
* Improves connection reliability and stability
* Includes 802.1X improvements.
* Resolves certain kernel panics.
Back to my Mac
* Adds support for more third-party routers, as detailed in this article.
Dashboard
* Improves performance of certain Apple Dashboard widgets (such as Dictionary).
* Addresses an issue in which Dashboard widgets may no longer be accessible after switching to or from an account that has Parental Controls enabled.
Dock
* Updates Stacks with a List view option, a Folder view option, and an updated background for Grid view.
Desktop
* Addresses legibility issues with the menu bar with an option to turn off transparency in Desktop & Screen Saver preferences.
* Adjusts menus to be slightly-less translucent overall.
iCal
* Improves iCal so that it accurately reflects responses to recurring meetings.
* Addresses an issue in which a meeting may remain on the calendar after being cancelled.
* Addresses stability issues related to
* Resolves an intermittent issue in which editing an event with attendees would cause the event to shrink and not register that the event was updated.
iChat
* Addresses an issue with simultaneously-logged in accounts in which iChat sounds generated from one account might be heard in another account.
* Fixes an issue in which iChat idle time is affected by Time Machine backups.
* Improves connectivity when running iChat behind a router that doesn't preserve ports.
* Enables logged chats from previous versions of iChat to open faster and more reliably.
* Addresses an issue with text chats in which users may be unable to receive messages from the sender.
* Addresses an issue that may prevent rejoining an AIM chat room without reopening iChat.
* Addresses video chat compatibility issues with AIM 6 and third-party routers.
* Fixes an issue with case-sensitivity of AIM handles.
iSync
* Adds support for Samsung D600E and D900i phones.
Finder
* Addresses an issue in which Finder could unexpectedly quit when displaying folder contents in Column view.
* Addresses an issue in which Finder could unexpectedly quit when accessing Users and Groups in a Get Info pane.
* Resolves an issue that prevented setting permissions on a folder alias.
* Resolves an issue in which the Eject command could write to a disc in the optical drive.
* Fixes an issue in which the scroll bar might disappear when deleting a file within a folder that includes files that are out of view.
* Fixes an issue in the Sharing & Permissions section of Get Info windows, in which the gear icon appears to be gray/disabled after authentication.
* Addresses an issue in which the Show Icon Preview preference might not be not sa
Spaces has a very annoying behavior, much worse than translucent menu bars IMO. Say you're working in workspace #1, and you launch an application that you've set up to always launch in workspace #2. You keep working in space #1, and all of a sudden you're jerked out of it into space #2. This is theft of focus, plain and simple, but allowing it in spaces just makes it twice as aggravating. The rule should be: Only change spaces when the user requests the change.
I don't see it on the list. Please, Apple, fix this problem!
But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
Click backup now, and the arrow spins around counter-clockwise, and the clock goes backwards in time. Nice little illustration. I hope whoever designed the icon gets a raise.
The CB App. What's your 20?
Have they done anything about the crappy font smoothing yet? I had someone insist I'd broken their monitor when I gave them a new Mac.
People often gush over how pretty things look on a Mac but font rendering on current Apple offerings can't come close to my humble linux box.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
Great tip, but make sure that you don't overwrite your Leopard copy of Terminal. When you copy the Tiger version, be sure to rename it from "Terminal.app" to something else like "Terminal (Tiger).app". If you don't do this, you could potentially have issues with future patches that are released for Terminal (bug fixes, security updates, etc.) and the installer will naturally look for the Leopard version and might cause problems if the Tiger version was there instead.
the JoshMeister on Security
http://iterm.sourceforge.net/ - tabbed terminals! \o/
Not the same as what you did, but I find it extremely useful - often having multiple terminals, some to do work, so to tail -f log files.
Hey ! Now that I'm in the company of macintosh fans; how do I make a quick-link/shortcut/menu-item on the desktop/menu/dock to connect to an SAMBA server anonymously ? I run Linux at home (with one central linux based NAS) but my wife has a macbook. I can easily configure my X-desktop to contain such links (one link opens a nautilus window to the right SAMBA path), but I cannot for the life of me find out how to make such a thing a one-click event on her machine. It wants you to take the full route of browsing through layers of network namespace and then you cannot make it accept that one doesn't need an account without expressly leaving options blank. Too much trouble for her - she hardly uses it. But I want her to use this storage because it gets backed up. Please mac-fans ? How ?
Religion is what happens when nature strikes and groupthink goes wrong.
Incidentally, 10.5.2 does contain drivers for both the USB Ethernet dongle available for the MacBook Air and also the USB-connected SuperDrive. The ethernet dongle works just fine (plugging it in prompts you to open the System Preferences to configure the new Ethernet port) but the SuperDrive does not. It seems that the SuperDrive device driver gets loaded but chooses not to fire up the rest of the Mass Storage device stack :-(
If intelligent life is too complex to evolve on its own, who designed God?
Damn if there is one thing I hate about Leopard is damn seizures the system has. I'll be fine and suddenly the system is locked up and the mouse is all flaky acting. About 15 to 30 seconds and its fine. It comes out of the blue. No data loss because of it, just inability to use the system.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
It's just unsupported.
defaults write com.apple.systempreferences TMShowUnsupportedNetworkVolumes 1
will tell Time Machine it can use all volumes visible to it, including network shares. I'm going to try this with sshfs tomorrow.
+++ATH0
Can we mod the parent post +5 Lives In The Real World?
Is there a mod for that?
I mean, we may not like it in every single way, but it's the *real* world!
I'm annoyed to no end that the engineers at Apple managed to screw up Stacks. Again. Okay, so now we get a list view that sorta kinda works like it did in Tiger. That's a good thing. But unfortunately, the people developing Stacks apparently never heard of aliases and symbolic links. Yes, Stacks' list view doesn't resolve those, it just presents them as a clickable file. Thus, Stacks are marginally less useless than before but still mere fluff that just takes up space in the Dock without being of any actual value.
One would think that Apple's engineers haven't forgotten how to manage symbolic links and aliases since Tiger, but apparently they have.
Combine that with the "Num-Lock and Caps-Lock randomly get inverted at boot time" bug and 10.5.2 is pretty underwhelming.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Apparently someone at Apple also uses VMWare Fusion in a different Space - in 10.5.2 VMWare's progress bar now just causes the icon to bounce instead of forcing you to remain its Space.
USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
Goatse!
Two other responders call you a liar, but I have the same problem in 10.4. Open Finder, go to List view, mouse over the divider between column headings. No resize icon until I click.
Not just the Dock. It causes any app or system process that asks for a non-system font to freeze. This includes SystemUIServer and virtually any application that displays text.
You can fix the problem by 1) quitting FEX and 2) force-quitting and relaunching affected processes, including the Dock and SystemUIServer.
Does Java work properly now?
I suppose its too late as I purchased a vista machine when my old laptop died. But the fact that Java had some serious problems and not even JOptionPane worked properly is why I did not pick a mac this time. JOptionPane is kind of important if you write Java based software.
http://saveie6.com/
Xserve, running OS X Server.
My Mistake. I don't have the apple naming conventions down yet.MacOS X Server does in fact come with a standard VNC server. You need to enable it and set a password.
Incorrect.http://www.realvnc.com/pipermail/vnc-list/2006-September/055897.html
I've read its possible to get it to work, but it doesn't work out of the box with a standard VNC client. That kind of goes against apples "it just works" philosophy.
The three xServes I've worked on over the years on 2 different KVMs have worked just fine- in fact, better than the HP rackmount gear- this includes high-end Raritan stuff and low-end "iogear" stuff. Maybe you have a crappy KVM, or you haven't configured it properly.
It's possible. On my KVM I have two lights for each computer, one for "is it present", and another for "this is the one selected". Attaching the XServe to my KVM does not make the first light activate, even though it should. I've tested this against known good working ports, with known good working cables...Then stop whining and fix the problem, chief. Wipe the box and reinstall with a restore (easy to do with Time Machine) and then if that doesn't work, call Apple and have the machine serviced.
So your solution to software bugs is to reinstall the OS? It sounds to me like you have spent too much time maintaining Windows machines.Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
Right click and select "open."
The pursuit of absolute tolerance leads to the most rigorous and ludicrous intolerance. - REX MURPHY
Sometimes I am really amazed at how stupid and ignorant some Mac users can be.
I know what you mean. The ones who assume that every decision that Apple makes (even the ones they later back down on) are perfect, and call people who actually have experience with more than just Apple's software "dumbass" are the absolute worst.
(Your post was a parody, right? Right?)
* Improves connection reliability and stability
If by "improves", you mean "renders Airport unable to see the router sitting three feet away", then sure. I spent two hours today rolling back to 10.5.1 so I could regain my wireless capabilities. I'll wait for 10.5.3 before updating again, thanks.
In Tiger, you could copy a section of a PDF and paste it into (for example) a Keynote presentation or a new (cropped) PDF document. Leopard somehow totally screws this up: try to copy a section of a PDF and you get the entire page instead.
Incredibly disappointing that this update didn't fix this. At the very least, I wish Apple would acknowledge the problem: it's a huge, huge bug for those of us who write papers or make lots of presentations.
Apple intentionally destroyed the ability to theme in leopard by radically changing the UI rendering system and refusing to release a relevant api.
this, along with the lack of options to turn off the safari/'downloaded app' nag screens and the removal of split term view, is a slap in the face to advanced users.
for god sake apple, even windows me had better theming support than leopard offers. At least make an API available to let third party devs offer theming tools, especially considering leopard is by far the UGLIEST os since os9.x If I want uniform grey i'll move back to detroit!
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
99% of the really annoying stuff in Finder was indeed fixed in 10.5
What, in particular, are you thinking of?
The most annoying features of Finder for me, in Tiger, are:
* No plain file name search - search always goes through spotlight, which means it misses files that spotlight doesn't like and finds erroneous files when I'm looking for a file by name. Forgot that in my original list. Bummer.
* Limited information about selected files and folders. "1 of 32 selected, 16 GB available" is nice, but I frequently want to know the total size of the selected files... more frequently than I want to know the free space on the drive.
* No way to eliminate the sidebar without going to the silly pseudo-spacial view.
* Icons pile up in the lower right corner of the desktop, even when there's plenty of room elsewhere.
Have they been fixed?
No?
What actually *has* been fixed in Finder in Leopard? Quick View is a new feature, not a fix, and the fact that it does an even worse job of tracking the current view of folders is definitely not a fix. So what am I missing?
I haven't had any of the problems you've had, since it actually does come with VNC, so your problem must be elsewhere with remote admin, and anything more complex than the simple setups of any of the tools can be done via the command line (all of this is in Apple's documentation. Every Gui tool has a command line backend which is more powerful and flexible than the GUI. Just calm down and read the manuals. I'm sure you'll find a solution to your problems.
I also have to admin Linux machines and they also have a learning curve, just like any server does, even Win2k3.
While I have heard of a number of problems with the initial Leopard release (particularly with Adobe products), I do know a large number of people, myself included, found the release to be fantastic and largely bug-free.
My only problem was with Keychains; they renamed the default keychain to "login" and created a new one since my old one was named after my user account. That took around 5 minutes to fix (just rename my old one to "login").
I do agree the industry should strive for better, but I think you're overstating the relative number of problems with Leopard compared to other major operating system releases.
-Stu
The intermittent keyboard 'drops' still isn't fixed. To those unfamiliar, the problem is akin to the keyboard going into energy saver mode prematurely (however the rest of the laptop is still going). You have to hit a key once for the keyboard to turn back on before the keyboard starts working. Very frustrating if you're reading a page of comments on slashdot and hit the space bar to scroll down a page, and nothing happens. (you then have to hit it again now that the keyboard is 'woken up')
Also seems to have fixed a problem that some of us iMac users were having where the mouse would get jumpy when the video card was bogged down, such as when using Aperture or watching a video while switching between other windows etc.
Everyone's favourite videophone works again. Hmmmm.
Nick Waterman, Sr Tech Director, #include <stddisclaimer>
Tell that to my wife, who got furious when I updated her iTunes to a more recent version that omitted that functionality.
Dog is my co-pilot.
I don't know what you've done to your terminal preferences, but on mine there's a little button at the bottom of the "Settings" pane that says "Default". If I click that, then new windows will open with the selected style. This has been in place since 10.5.0, at least.
I named mine vTerminal.app, and also edited the Info.plist file to change the bundle ID so the preferences would also save in a different location.
:)
I also changed Visor to look for the renamed bundle ID so now I have a nice drop-down terminal I can use at the press of a key!
Click and hold and select "open". Presto, one click open.
The pursuit of absolute tolerance leads to the most rigorous and ludicrous intolerance. - REX MURPHY