Having my font color green, and the background black, the first thing I thought of was the last scene of The Matrix.
Even though this has been out a while, It's fun to play with.
If I were Apple (which I am not) I'd have this bundled with 10.2 and promote the living daylights out of it. This is the type of tool that PC users have been waiting for.
This is one of those rare software applications that would be worth it's weight in gold to the OS company to take under it's corporate wing.
I'd love to see as many "enterprise level" MacOS X apps as we can get. We can always use MacSQL of 4D or FileMaker, but to have another app that isn't shunned by corporate america is refreshing.
Having my font color green, and the background black, the first thing I thought of was the last scene of The Matrix. Even though this has been out a while, It's fun to play with.
That's what I meant...If it were a feature of 10.2 it would come with new Macs. I like the other idea about a 100% rebate though.
If I were Apple (which I am not) I'd have this bundled with 10.2 and promote the living daylights out of it. This is the type of tool that PC users have been waiting for. This is one of those rare software applications that would be worth it's weight in gold to the OS company to take under it's corporate wing.
I was in the same boat about a week ago. It took me about 10min of searching and I found the following info...
First, get the modem scripts Here. The one I used was the first one in the list...the GPRS one for the t68i.
Next get the D-Link Bluetooth USB do-dad.
Make a new "Location" and call it Bluetooth.
Choose "Bluetooth Modem" as your connection.
Under PPP Leave everything blank except the phone number and type "Proxy"
Next, pair the phone with the laptop, and choose "Connect".
The phone should say "Connecting" and you'll get a 10.x.x.x IP address.
You are in bidnes...
*I* didn't "get it wrong"...That text was copied directly from Apple.
And here I thought my Mac was impervious to the "Code Red" virus. ::Off to buy some Anti-Virus software so I don't end up with a Red TiBook:::
I'd love to see as many "enterprise level" MacOS X apps as we can get. We can always use MacSQL of 4D or FileMaker, but to have another app that isn't shunned by corporate america is refreshing.
...I think Journey's Steve Perry still owns the rights to Todd McFarlane's haircut.