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Reactor
10-26-2007, 09:12 PM
I have leopard and I am begining my install....

http://images.apple.com/home/2007/images/leopardavailable_20071026.jpg

greenchris
10-26-2007, 09:13 PM
whats the difference between that and mac os x... i have a newer macbook pro but am completely naive...

greenchris
10-26-2007, 09:14 PM
and your title sounded pretty gay...

stinkyboy
10-26-2007, 09:20 PM
A chick at work today trashed a working file. I told her she should have waited a day, but she was not amused.

stevew
10-26-2007, 09:21 PM
Quiet, he's getting pussy.

greenchris
10-26-2007, 09:23 PM
Quiet, he's getting pussy.

Instructions for install:
1. Insert member into slot drive :think:

stevew
10-26-2007, 09:28 PM
Do PC guys get geeky enough to start a thread "Hey, I'm installing Vista", while touching themselves the same way apple geeks do over a new product?

stinkyboy
10-26-2007, 09:46 PM
Do PC guys get geeky enough to start a thread "Hey, I'm installing Vista", while touching themselves the same way apple geeks do over a new product?

Usually, it's "How Do I Uninstall Vista"

Reactor
10-26-2007, 09:49 PM
Do PC guys get geeky enough to start a thread "Hey, I'm installing Vista", while touching themselves the same way apple geeks do over a new product?

No, they usually have to use only one hand, because the other is holding a picture like this:
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/graphics/packageart/mugshots/gatesmug.jpg

Reactor
10-26-2007, 09:50 PM
whats the difference between that and mac os x... i have a newer macbook pro but am completely naive...

Leopard is the Newest version of OS-X, can out at 6:00 PM today. I got a discount, and two tee shirts for standing in line for all of five minutes.

Reactor
10-26-2007, 09:51 PM
A chick at work today trashed a working file. I told her she should have waited a day, but she was not amused.

But did you hit it?:pirate2:

stinkyboy
10-26-2007, 10:20 PM
But did you hit it?:pirate2:

Too stressed from work.

Lemme know how the new OS works!

loco-gringo
10-26-2007, 10:54 PM
Too stressed from work.

Lemme know how the new OS works!

Why wait to see what it's about??? A real fan boi would just start dry humping his keyboard without knowing. :think:

Reactor
10-27-2007, 01:34 AM
I'm done, plus a little.

The install verifies the integerity of the install disk before it starts changing your mac. I've always thought an install should do that. So far so good.

Silver
10-27-2007, 03:05 AM
Do PC guys get geeky enough to start a thread "Hey, I'm installing Vista", while touching themselves the same way apple geeks do over a new product?

Yes, yes they do.

www.anandtech.com for starters.

syadasti
10-27-2007, 07:38 AM
Gibbon FTW.

Last week on the release day I opened the update manager and clicked the button and then it upgraded from the web. No standing in lines.

I haven't seen too many instances lately where buying an OS or software suite upgrade has a key feature that makes it really worthwhile for an end-user. It happens more often for businesses for support reasons - EOL stuff.

Its best to buy when its bundled with a new computer and wait for at least the first revision, paying to be a beta tester sucks (http://www.engadget.com/2007/10/26/leopard-will-it-blend/#comments). I have no reason to upgrade my Mini.

http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b398/syadasti/misc/gutsy.png

http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b398/syadasti/misc/gutsy2.png

http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b398/syadasti/misc/uggss.jpg

splat
10-27-2007, 08:13 AM
wait for at least the first revision, paying to be a beta tester sucks. I have no reason to upgrade my Mini.


I never put the latest version of any software on any of my computer till it has been out at least 3 - 6 months !
I've seen to many issues with initial release. be it Window, Linux , Solaris , HP-UX, Netware, AIX even MAC to take any chances.

Reactor
10-27-2007, 08:53 AM
Gibbon FTW.

Last week on the release day I opened the update manager and clicked the button and then it upgraded from the web. No standing in lines.

I haven't seen too many instances lately where buying an OS or software suite upgrade has a key feature that makes it really worthwhile for an end-user. It happens more often for businesses for support reasons - EOL stuff.

Its best to buy when its bundled with a new computer and wait for at least the first revision, paying to be a beta tester sucks (http://www.engadget.com/2007/10/26/leopard-will-it-blend/#comments). I have no reason to upgrade my Mini.



I have half a dozen flavors of linux I run in virtual machines on my Imac or Vista machine. I like linux, but there are still things I need a Windoze machine for (like direct-x games). I also have half a dozen versions of Windoze, like server 2003 I run in virtual machines. The nice thing about running a virtual machine is you can usually download a package with an already installed distro for custom purposes, connect to the virtual hard drive and viola.

I really wanted some of the features in the new release of OS-X like time machine, (my wife has a habit of destroying files on her mac), Spaces(linux has had something similar for a many years time), the new finder, might use boot camp. I have an image of my original drive backed up on a 800gb NAS, so I'm not too worried about being a 'beta' tester. The 10.4 to 10.5 upgrade doesn't seem too risky anyway.

syadasti
10-27-2007, 08:59 AM
I really wanted some of the features in the new release of OS-X like time machine, Spaces(linux has had something similar for a many years time), the new finder, might use boot camp.

Still better to wait for the first rev. unless you are just testing it on the side. Initial releases are never good for primary usage on any platform - not everything will "just work". Leopard feedback is mixed (http://www.engadget.com/2007/10/26/leopard-will-it-blend/#comments) just like any other OS release.

I've used VM's to perform major upgrades in production environments.

Reactor
10-27-2007, 09:08 AM
Still better to wait for the first rev. unless you are just testing it on the side. Initial releases are never good for primary usage on any platform.

I've used VM's to perform major upgrades in production environments.

We have evert thing from Unix to NT to Server 2003, to a Unisys mainframe. Vm's are one of the coolest things to come to the micro side in years. You can actually use a windows server for more than one app without having software conflicts. We have a many, many, terabyte SAN. Once we get people finish virtualizing we'll be able to shuffle VHDs around when the we have a rack server go bad. The only bad thing is the head of the micro people is stuck on using microsoft's virtual server instead of a more capable product like VMware. I'm really hoping the Citrix buyout of xensource will prove out.

Edit: We have some old software, and some really ignorant apps on windows boxes. My Imac at home has no problems, time machine is flawless although the first backup (250 gb) took several hours. No app problems, and the only major app I see people reporting broken is the Cisco VPN client. For "security" reasons everyone at work who has permission to VPN in has to have a work owned laptop with the VPN client and whatever work tools they need on it, so the Cisco client isn't an issue for me.

syadasti
10-27-2007, 09:21 AM
If you read that 5 page thread you will see a range of problems not just the cisco VPN client in the first post. As you know configurations vary and small sample (especially just considering yourself) won't show the big picture. The 7.1 upgrade went smooth for me but I know it won't for everyone. Its true for any OS as splat noted above.

Reactor
10-27-2007, 09:53 AM
If you read that 5 page thread you will see a range of problems not just the cisco VPN client in the first post. As you know configurations vary and small sample (especially just considering yourself) won't show the big picture. The 7.1 upgrade went smooth for me but I know it won't for everyone. Its true for any OS as splat noted above.

I've been a beta tester for every microsoft product since windows 2.0. Give it a rest. I know what bad software/.0 releases looks like, and the risks involved.

I'm also sure you know that 90%(if not more) of home users (of all computers) are incompetent so having 90% of the comments positive is amazing in it's self. Especially when most of the users without problems won't post anything.

The only problems I'm seeing:

1. A couple of old machines, probably with file system problems, can't get the install to run properly.

2.Some old machines (probably too old to meet minimum requirements) can't get the install to run.

3. Some Adium users that can't connect to MSN (seems to be a problem off and on for years).

4. A couple of users have a problem with time machine, probably a file system issue, since it touches every file during the inital backup and preps for the inital backup. I had over a well over million files.

5. People with old versions of software, like the Cisco VPN client had it stop working, newer versions work


Edit: I'm seeing a lot fewer problems than the Vista roll out.

syadasti
10-27-2007, 10:16 AM
Its fine for testing but I just won't run the new stuff as primary. I didn't do it for Vista and I'm not going for Leopard either. One major problem or a bunch of little ones - still annoying and I rather not waste my free time. Mature stuff for me.

Reactor
10-27-2007, 10:43 AM
Its fine for testing but I just won't run the new stuff as primary. I didn't do it for Vista and I'm not going for Leopard either. One major problem or a bunch of little ones - still annoying and I rather not waste my free time. Mature stuff for me.

That's fine with me. This is the first time in forever that I've gone with a day zero upgrade. The risks with this upgrade seem minimal, I have a full backup, and another machine if this one pukes. I'm covered.

johnbryanpeters
10-28-2007, 05:49 PM
From slashdot:

: Leopard Upgraders Getting "Blue Screen of Death"
Posted by kdawson on Saturday October 27, @03:58PM
from the they're-called-haxies-for-a-reason dept.
Z80xxc! writes
"Some Mac users upgrading to Apple's new Leopard operating system are encountering long delays on reboot — an experience they liken to the Windows 'Blue Screen of Death.' While some of those upgrading were able to access their computer after waiting for as long as several hours, others were forced to do a complete reinstall. Some suspect that a framework called 'Application Enhancer' by Unsanity LLC may be causing the problem, but there has been no official word from Apple at this point."

Transcend
10-28-2007, 05:59 PM
From slashdot:

: Leopard Upgraders Getting "Blue Screen of Death"
Posted by kdawson on Saturday October 27, @03:58PM
from the they're-called-haxies-for-a-reason dept.
Z80xxc! writes
"Some Mac users upgrading to Apple's new Leopard operating system are encountering long delays on reboot — an experience they liken to the Windows 'Blue Screen of Death.' While some of those upgrading were able to access their computer after waiting for as long as several hours, others were forced to do a complete reinstall. Some suspect that a framework called 'Application Enhancer' by Unsanity LLC may be causing the problem, but there has been no official word from Apple at this point."

Unsanity software has been destroying system upgrades for years now, and idiots STILL install their crap, even after seeing what happens. Unbelieveable. APE modifies how apps work at the kernel level, injecting code into running applications (including finder). No wonder it crashes with new systems. Apparently they are too stupid to do a system version check on load and have it NOT load up with a different version.

Easy fix BTW if anyone has the problem, boot into target mode or terminal, and delete all of the APE related files. Reboot.

The other major install issue appears to be related to an older release of Divx. You have to rename the divxnetworks folder to anything but what it is, and all will be well.

I upgraded on 2 machines with no problem. (An Intel MacPro and an older Powerbook G4 PPC). A fresh install would have avoided all of those problems for people, and is also why an archive and install avoids those problems. Unlike windows however, Mac users don't usually have to be wary of upgrades.

syadasti
10-28-2007, 06:09 PM
Yeah at least its not wiping your external hard drive after upgrading (http://www.macintouch.com/panfirewire.html) only Windows, I mean OSX would do that...

SK6
10-28-2007, 06:17 PM
Do PC guys get geeky enough to start a thread "Hey, I'm installing Vista", while touching themselves the same way apple geeks do over a new product?

We only touch ourselves when the sh!t works....:D

Reactor
10-28-2007, 07:46 PM
We only touch ourselves when the sh!t works....:D

So there are a lot of 40 year old virgins on vista, eh?

Reactor
10-28-2007, 07:49 PM
Just got the daughter a mac mini. Connected up her monitor, my old bluetooth apple keyboard, and a microsoft wireless mouse...Viola. We are a three mac family. her old 3ghz p4 will probably be sold to a friend who needs a machine that isn't duo core for a project.

SK6
10-28-2007, 08:38 PM
So there are a lot of 40 year old virgins on vista, eh?


In the computer geek world...yes.

Reactor
10-28-2007, 10:26 PM
In the computer geek world...yes.

:rofl::rofl::rofl:

Edit: By the way I work with one, he's about 35 and still lives with his mother...VB programmer..:rolleyes:...drives a SAAB.

Silver
10-29-2007, 01:50 AM
:rofl::rofl::rofl:

Edit: By the way I work with one, he's about 35 and still lives with his mother...VB programmer..:rolleyes:...drives a SAAB.

How big is the closet in his bedroom at home?

Reactor
10-29-2007, 09:46 PM
How big is the closet in his bedroom at home?

I think SAAB says it all.....

Toshi
10-29-2007, 10:27 PM
i just picked up leopard for $29, thanks to my iPhone early adopter discount.

i'll hold off to install it until GPGmail is updated... i like my communications private. that is, besides the spewage that i publicly post here, on xanga, on my mailing list, etc.

:D

Toshi
10-29-2007, 10:27 PM
i just picked up leopard for $29, thanks to my iPhone early adopter discount.

i'll hold off to install it until GPGmail is updated... i like my communications private. that is, besides the spewage that i publicly post here, on xanga, on my mailing list, etc.

:D

stinkyboy
10-29-2007, 10:33 PM
:think:

stinkyboy
10-29-2007, 10:35 PM
:think:

I'm waiting for CS3 updates. My Mail messages are not worth encrypting...

Transcend
10-29-2007, 10:41 PM
:think:

I'm waiting for CS3 updates. My Mail messages are not worth encrypting...

Unless you use video apps, there is no need to wait. Adobe finally announced they compatibility list the other day. Only the video apps and audio apps need to be updated.

Silver
10-30-2007, 12:57 AM
I like it. I don't care for the translucent menu bar though, and I'm not sold on stacks yet.

Toshi
10-30-2007, 01:26 AM
ok, i caved in and installed. no encryption for me without going through gpgtools. boohoo.

on the other hand the install went smoothly since i disabled Unsanity's APE beforehand. that would have been unpleasant...

first impressions:

- Stacks isn't that useful, i agree with Silver
- Spaces is AWESOME. i now have 1920x1200 of goodness just for Safari (+ Sys Prefs + the Finder + modal dialogs); another for Mail and IM; a third for iTunes; a fourth for iCal. i dig greatly.
- signal strength is better on my wireless network somehow? :D
- Time Machine will be a nice adjunct to my scheduled Backup.app backups to offsite storage

Transcend
10-30-2007, 01:35 AM
- Stacks isn't that useful, i agree with Silver
- Spaces is AWESOME. i now have 1920x1200 of goodness just for Safari (+ Sys Prefs + the Finder + modal dialogs); another for Mail and IM; a third for iTunes; a fourth for iCal. i dig greatly.
- signal strength is better on my wireless network somehow? :D
- Time Machine will be a nice adjunct to my scheduled Backup.app backups to offsite storage

I agree on everything but stacks, i like them for opening my sub folders in my docs folder, but that is about it. Not as useful as they could be, that's for sure.

Spaces does rule, I have been using a 3rd party app in Tiger to get basically the same thing, super handy when i am working on my laptop, and still useful on my desktop.

I ditched quicksilver, spotlight is much faster now and actually a viable application launcher which is all I really use QS for anyways.

I can't stand the translucent menu bar either, I am going to run the command line to make it opaque (it happens automagically on low end systems apparently).

Silver
10-30-2007, 02:27 AM
I'm just starting to figure out spaces. It was a little confusing with 2 monitors at first. I had to remember that each 2 section space is just one.

That useless mouse squeeze is perfect for bringing up spaces. Beats the hell out of dashboard.

Transcend
10-30-2007, 11:41 AM
I have always used my mouse squeeze for expose. Works very well.

Toshi
10-30-2007, 11:45 AM
mouse squeeze? Bah. Just use a real mouse ;)

SK6
10-30-2007, 11:52 AM
I think SAAB says it all.....

It says a lot, thats for sure! :busted:

Silver
10-30-2007, 03:57 PM
I have always used my mouse squeeze for expose. Works very well.

I prefer pushing the scroll wheel down for that. I'm starting to think that using spaces may render expose less useful than it was before though.

Silver
10-30-2007, 04:19 PM
Cool...you can also drag windows from one space to another empty one, and the display automatically changes.

Transcend
10-30-2007, 06:05 PM
I prefer pushing the scroll wheel down for that. I'm starting to think that using spaces may render expose less useful than it was before though.

My mouse wheel click brings up the dashboard, heh.

I am using expose AND spaces now. My god, I like having a lot of windows open.

SkaredShtles
10-30-2007, 11:03 PM
My mouse wheel click brings up the dashboard, heh.

I am using expose AND spaces now. My god, I like having a lot of windows open.
What is this "Spaces" thing? Is it a virtual desktop utility?

Transcend
10-30-2007, 11:25 PM
SS, Exactly. There has been ported 3rd party stuff from BSD forever, but this is apple's own implementation of it. It is really nice, fast and gets the job done.

Toshi
10-30-2007, 11:31 PM
What is this "Spaces" thing? Is it a virtual desktop utility?

yes, but it's very well done. good keyboard shortcuts, easy manipulation of windows when moving between "spaces", straightforward ways to pin particular apps to open in a designated space, and good integration with the Dock: IM is open in the rightmost space, and when i click on its dock icon indicating a new message i'm whisked over there.

http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/spaces.html

SkaredShtles
10-30-2007, 11:32 PM
SS, Exactly. There has been ported 3rd party stuff from BSD forever, but this is apple's own implementation of it. It is really nice, fast and gets the job done.
Ah... nice. That was one thing I really missed about moving from Linux to Winders - Gnome had an *awesome* virtual desktop. Hell - I used to have 8 virtuals all with at least 4 application windows running in them. :disgust1::disgust1::disgust1:

Transcend
10-30-2007, 11:34 PM
Ah... nice. That was one thing I really missed about moving from Linux to Winders - Gnome had an *awesome* virtual desktop. Hell - I used to have 8 virtuals all with at least 4 application windows running in them. :disgust1::disgust1::disgust1:

Leopard is limited to 16 "spaces" I think. I have a ton running and it's making me rebuild my workflow, in a good way. Mail and IM in one window, lightroom fullscreen in another, photoshop in yet another and finally my browser and FTP client in a 4rth.

SkaredShtles
10-30-2007, 11:56 PM
Leopard is limited to 16 "spaces" I think. I have a ton running and it's making me rebuild my workflow, in a good way. Mail and IM in one window, lightroom fullscreen in another, photoshop in yet another and finally my browser and FTP client in a 4rth.
WTF? Only 16? A travesty, I tell you... pure travesty. :D

Silver
10-31-2007, 01:09 AM
WTF? Only 16? A travesty, I tell you... pure travesty. :D

Yeah, unless you're running two monitors. I'm using my laptop as an second monitor when I'm at home, so I have 8 effective screens from 4 spaces.

Transcend
10-31-2007, 01:46 AM
Yeah, unless you're running two monitors. I'm using my laptop as an second monitor when I'm at home, so I have 8 effective screens from 4 spaces.

How are you using the laptop as a second monitor? I was under the impression there was no way to do this on Apple hardware. You can have to monitors with the laptop as the primary, but not use the laptop SOLELY as a monitor for a desktop.

Or are you using some software that simply creates a second display via a network connection that allows you to drag your mouse across? I used to use something like this with VNC to run my in house server.

syadasti
10-31-2007, 06:20 AM
Leopard's highly touted security :busted:

-Firewall in a default state of off even if you upgraded from configuration with it enabled
-Questionable functionality of application mode
-Use of older open source software with known bugs

Apple is using security in general and the new firewall in particular to promote Leopard, the latest version of Mac OS X. However, initial functional testing has already uncovered cause for concern.

The most important task for any firewall is to keep out uninvited guests. In particular, this means sealing off local services to prevent access from potentially hostile networks, such as the internet or wireless networks.

But a quick look at the firewall configuration in the Mac OS X Leopard shows that it is unable to do this. By default it is set to "Allow all incoming connections," i.e. it is deactivated. Worse still, a user who, for security purposes, has previously activated the firewall on his or her Mac will find that, after upgrading to Leopard, the system restarts with the firewall deactivated.

In contrast to, for example, Windows Vista, the Leopard firewall settings fail to distinguish between trusted networks, such as a protected company network, and potentially dangerous wireless networks in airports or even direct internet connections. Leopard initially takes the magnanimous position of trusting all networks equally.

...

The Mac OS X Leopard firewall failed every test. It is not activated by default and, even when activated, it does not behave as expected. Network connections to non-authorised services can still be established and even under the most restrictive setting, "Block all incoming connections," it allows access to system services from the internet. Although the problems and peculiarities described here are not security vulnerabilities in the sense that they can be exploited to break into a Mac, Apple would be well advised to sort them out pronto.

Apple is showing here a casual attitude with regard to security questions which strongly recalls that of Microsoft four years ago. Back then Microsoft was supplying Windows XP with a firewall, which was, however, deactivated by default and was sometimes again deactivated when updates were installed. It was also the case that system services representing potential access points for malware were accessible via the internet interface by default. Despite years of warnings from security experts, the predominant attitude was that security must not get in the way of the great new networking functions.

Then along came worms such as Lovsan/Blaster and Sasser, which rapidly infected millions of Windows computers via security vulnerabilities in system services, causing millions worth of damage. Even today, an unpatched Windows system with no active firewall will be infected within a matter of minutes. However, Microsoft has since learnt its lesson -- a serviceable firewall, activated by default, has been included since Service Pack 2. With the standard configuration, no services are accessible from the internet on a Windows system.

binary visions
10-31-2007, 08:12 AM
Gee, 6 posts in this thread by syadasti so far, and all of them the same old Mac-bashing rhetoric. Don't pay for your upgrades, don't upgrade to new releases, look at these bugs, look at this problem...

I'm shocked and astonished :rolleyes:

Get a hobby.

syadasti
10-31-2007, 08:21 AM
Gee, 6 posts in this thread by syadasti so far, and all of them the same old Mac-bashing rhetoric. Don't pay for your upgrades, don't upgrade to new releases, look at these bugs, look at this problem...

I'm shocked and astonished :rolleyes:

Get a hobby.

Its the reality of any first release from any company. Get real, things are not all roses :rolleyes:

I support Macs and even personally own one and other Apple products (starting 1984) do you?

I beta tested Vista too - I didn't buy it on release and I don't run it either. I have an MSDN subscription from work so I can run it for free. Almost no one needs to run out and buy the first release software the moment it comes out.

I am not a cheerleader/fanboy, sue me.

binary visions
10-31-2007, 09:11 AM
Sometimes I wonder what planet you live on.

Here's a clue: I wasn't talking about or denying the existence of flaws in a program.

syadasti
10-31-2007, 09:28 AM
Nice edit. Sorry you don't like my cynical comments but its no different than people putting down other biking or computer products in other threads.

Apple Co-founder Woz isn't that impressed with this [or other] evolutionary OS releases:

LAPTOP: You were recently quoted as saying that a lot of the intuitiveness had gone away from Apple's programs. Do you think Leopard might change that?
SW: Early on with the first Apples, we had these dreams that the computer would let you know what you wanted to do. The idea was that little icons or words would suggest what you wanted to do, but now I have to find my way around to odd little icons that aren't positioned in the prominent places. When conducting a common task, I have to go searching around in folders or the bottom of the screen. I don't think any of it will be solved with Leopard because I don't think there is incentive to. They want to make things easy, and if it seems easy and it can be demonstrated quickly then it's okay. The real dreams of how it will work for someone who knows nothing about the computer have been lost and don't get addressed anymore.

L: Do you think Leopard will provide a boost?
SW: I don't think any operating system, despite all its promises, is what sells a computer nowadays. I think OS changes are just done to keep your loyal people happy. Learning an entirely new operating system is something no one wants to do. You get stuck on a platform, and you don't want to start learning a whole new computer system.

Silver
10-31-2007, 09:40 AM
How are you using the laptop as a second monitor? I was under the impression there was no way to do this on Apple hardware. You can have to monitors with the laptop as the primary, but not use the laptop SOLELY as a monitor for a desktop.

Or are you using some software that simply creates a second display via a network connection that allows you to drag your mouse across? I used to use something like this with VNC to run my in house server.

I'm not running a tower anymore. The Macbook pro sits on my desk off to the left, and I have my big lcd plugged into it. That's it. I do have the dock moved off to the right, so that it stays on the 24 inch panel all the time. I use the laptop to park mail and itunes on.

I guess that since you can't have the dock on both screens it's not a true second monitor. It that what you meant?

Silver
10-31-2007, 09:44 AM
Apple Co-founder Woz isn't that impressed with this [or other] evolutionary OS releases:

Well, I'm a sample size of one, but I went ahead and did exactly that Wozniak said people don't do. I learned a new OS. It took less than a day to feel comfortable. Huge learning curve.

Have you ever seen a porno where the guy slaps his dick on the face of the girl? I always figured that most of the girls don't like that, but that they put up with it because it's part of the job. It's a nice metaphor for Vista. A big dick slapping you in the face over and over and over again, but you put up with it because you're getting paid.

binary visions
10-31-2007, 09:57 AM
I guess that since you can't have the dock on both screens it's not a true second monitor. It that what you meant?

Nah, he meant that your laptop screen isn't really a secondary monitor. It's your primary monitor and it's the laptop that you're working off of, with the 24" screen being your secondary monitor.

That's a fairly... colorful analogy. I feel the same way, only about Apple machines.

syadasti
10-31-2007, 10:40 AM
That's a fairly... colorful analogy. I feel the same way, only about Apple machines.

I think he's just upset because he didn't know how to turn off annoying features in Vista. I wouldn't doubt for most average users the out of the box experience of OSX is better.

There is nothing really wrong with Apple machines other than they are slightly more expensive for a nicer design aesthetic, quality control seems to be often lax, some machines are harder to replace/upgrade simple things like HDD and/or RAM (see Mac Mini [HDD and RAM], MacBook Pro[HDD], or iMac[HDD]), and they don't offer a regular headless desktop model. Who wants notebook components on a desktop machine - they cost more and are slower :twitch:

The only negative I can see is their integration into large computing environments. They are a whole lot better than they use to be in many corporate integration respects but they still require more effort to administer when dealing in large numbers of machines and plus their server products are way overpriced.

Silver
10-31-2007, 08:57 PM
I think he's just upset because he didn't know how to turn off annoying features in Vista. I wouldn't doubt for most average users the out of the box experience of OSX is better.



I'm fully capable of doing that. Vista's got bigger problems than that.

Most of the interface, for starters...

Reactor
10-31-2007, 11:33 PM
Leopard's highly touted security :busted:

-Firewall in a default state of off even if you upgraded from configuration with it enabled
-Questionable functionality of application mode
-Use of older open source software with known bugs

I read the same article. I'm going to fire up my pen testing stuff and a sniffer this weekend and have a look at it. It wouldn't surprise me if a last minute code or configuration change resulted in firewall problems. Good thing I have a hardware firewall too.

syadasti
11-01-2007, 05:56 AM
I read the same article. I'm going to fire up my pen testing stuff and a sniffer this weekend and have a look at it. It wouldn't surprise me if a last minute code or configuration change resulted in firewall problems. Good thing I have a hardware firewall too.

Some of the other points were sensational/questionable but those seem to have merit.

Userbase has grown large enough to start attracting more malware in the wild: http://www.news.com/8301-13579_3-9808489-37.html

edit: No java 6 either - developers aren't happy (http://weblogs.java.net/blog/robogeek/archive/2007/10/the_ifs_and_whe.html)

stevew
11-01-2007, 06:44 AM
Have you ever seen a porno where the guy slaps his dick on the face of the girl? I always figured that most of the girls don't like that, but that they put up with it because it's part of the job. It's a nice metaphor for Vista. A big dick slapping you in the face over and over and over again, but you put up with it because you're getting paid.

BV, we really need to have larger signatures.

Reactor
11-02-2007, 11:18 PM
Some of the other points were sensational/questionable but those seem to have merit.

Userbase has grown large enough to start attracting more malware in the wild: http://www.news.com/8301-13579_3-9808489-37.html

edit: No java 6 either - developers aren't happy (http://weblogs.java.net/blog/robogeek/archive/2007/10/the_ifs_and_whe.html)

So I setup the firewall and turned it on, and probed it with Nessus and NMAP, and a couple of other tools. I was only port I was able find is the printer sharing port, which I did setup to allow. I think Heise is smoking some crack. Nmap couldn't even be sure of the OS and guessed openBSD, which is close.

At this point the leopard firewall is good, Heise's analytical ability .. not so much. Tomorrow I'll try some really obscure stealth scans, just in case.

EDIT: Not only did the firewall work, it also recorded the stealth scan attempts in the logs. Here's one of the nmap runs:

Interesting ports on 192.168.0.126:
Not shown: 65534 closed ports

PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION
631/tcp open ipp CUPS 1.2

MAC Address: 00:16:CB:9F:24:3E (Apple Computer)
No exact OS matches for host (If you know what OS is running on it, see http://i
nsecure.org/nmap/submit/ ).

Reactor
11-02-2007, 11:47 PM
Well, I'm a sample size of one, but I went ahead and did exactly that Wozniak said people don't do. I learned a new OS. It took less than a day to feel comfortable. Huge learning curve.


I'm another. I'd never touched a mac before last year, Now I use the Mac 95% of the time at home.

Edit: Well I've used VMS and Linux in the past so the command line stuff wasn't too different.

ZoRo
11-06-2007, 03:49 PM
A certain kook that would make data loss a probable issue...
Be cautious of that serious data loss bug in Leopard

"By Jeff Smykil | Published: November 06, 2007 - 08:55AM CT
Perhaps on par with the infamous file-deleting iTunes update of several years back, some users of Apple's OS X 10.5 are reporting that the updated operating system has a serious flaw. We have read several accounts of serious data loss resulting from interrupted connections when transferring large files over FireWire 800, network shares, and a variety of other storage options. The problem occurs when the connection between the Leopard machine and receiving device's connection is disrupted during the moving of large files. The result is a deletion of files on both the sending and receiving drive.

The issue is reproducible, but does not occur under the same conditions in OS X 10.4 Tiger or when the same files are moved in OS X 10.5 via the terminal. While I am always leery of any connection being disrupted during file transfer, I suppose most modern operating systems have checks in place to prevent data loss from occurring. Making sure a disconnect does not occur between a computer and an external hard drive may be easy enough, but it isn't always as straightforward when working with network shares.

It's unfortunate that something like this was overlooked in developer seeds; we can only expect Apple to release an update sometime in the very near future."

On ARS: http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars

I'll just wait before upgrading.

Anyone feedback on Timemachine?

syadasti
11-16-2007, 07:41 AM
So I setup the firewall and turned it on, and probed it with Nessus and NMAP, and a couple of other tools. I was only port I was able find is the printer sharing port, which I did setup to allow. I think Heise is smoking some crack. Nmap couldn't even be sure of the OS and guessed openBSD, which is close.

10.5.1, released yesterday, includes numerous updates including the firewall:

http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=307004

*Application Firewall

CVE-ID: CVE-2007-4702

Available for: Mac OS X v10.5, Mac OS X Server v10.5

Impact: The "Block all incoming connections" setting for the firewall is misleading

Description: The "Block all incoming connections" setting for the Application Firewall allows any process running as user "root" (UID 0) to receive incoming connections, and also allows mDNSResponder to receive connections. This could result in the unexpected exposure of network services. This update addresses the issue by more accurately describing the option as "Allow only essential services, and by limiting the processes permitted to receive incoming connections under this setting to a small fixed set of system services: configd (for DHCP and other network configuration protocols), mDNSResponder (for Bonjour), and racoon (for IPSec). The "Help" content for the Application Firewall is also updated to provide further information. This issue does not affect systems prior to Mac OS X v10.5.

*Application Firewall

CVE-ID: CVE-2007-4703

Available for: Mac OS X v10.5, Mac OS X Server v10.5

Impact: Processes running as user "root" (UID 0) cannot be blocked when the firewall is set to "Set access for specific services and applications"

Description: The "Set access for specific services and applications" setting for the Application Firewall allows any process running as user "root" (UID 0) to receive incoming connections, even if its executable is specifically added to the list of programs and its entry in the list is marked as "Block incoming connections". This could result in the unexpected exposure of network services. This update corrects the issue so that any executable so marked is blocked. This issue does not affect systems prior to Mac OS X v10.5.

*Application Firewall

CVE-ID: CVE-2007-4704

Available for: Mac OS X v10.5, Mac OS X Server v10.5

Impact: Changes to Application Firewall settings do not affect processes started by launchd until they are restarted

Description: When the Application Firewall settings are changed, a running process started by launchd will not be affected until it is restarted. A user might expect changes to take effect immediately and so leave their system exposed to network access. This update corrects the issue so that changes take effect immediately. This issue does not affect systems prior to Mac OS X v10.5.

blue
11-16-2007, 08:38 AM
Leopard is being bitchy and refuses to recognize the primary FAT32 partition I have set up for it. It wants to nuke my whole hard drive and THEEEN install.

Bastard machine.

syadasti
11-16-2007, 08:42 AM
Leopard is being bitchy and refuses to recognize the primary FAT32 partition I have set up for it. It wants to nuke my whole hard drive and THEEEN install.

Bastard machine.

I doubt it. Are you using the disk utility from the install DVD to reformat (it incorrectly calls it erase) the fat32 partition to hfs+ before you run the installer?

blue
11-16-2007, 08:50 AM
That would be the one...It says it has to nuke the whole disk, not just the partition. Tried it with my other drive, too.

Guess I'll just have to buy another HDD sooner than I thought...how many SATA drives does OSX recognize, anyway? Two? Only one HDD and the DVD drive show up during install.

*stab*

syadasti
11-16-2007, 09:02 AM
Are you sure you are using the utility correctly? It shows the drive and under that it shows the partitions, you select the partition, and then choose the erase category...

http://latourfl.com/panther/images/DiskUtility.jpg

binary visions
11-16-2007, 09:04 AM
I had the previous version (not Leopard) installed briefly and it certainly didn't try to erase my whole drive upon install.

I had the partition set up for it in advance, though. There was a separate utility I downloaded to set the partition to primary and change it to hfs+ before I even rebooted to do the install. No idea of Leopard is different, just giving you something to look around for.

syadasti
11-16-2007, 09:07 AM
I had the partition set up for it in advance, though. There was a separate utility I downloaded to set the partition to primary and change it to hfs+ before I even rebooted to do the install. No idea of Leopard is different, just giving you something to look around for.

He should have no problem using disk utility from the Leopard install DVD to reformat a fat32 partition to HFS+. I've done that in Tiger too when I got my mini and never used the stock HDD - had to format the new drive from the install DVD using the disk utility.

skinny mike
12-31-2007, 01:03 AM
i just installed leopard 10.6 and i am already in love with it. the install went flawlessly and didn't take too long and i didn't disable that APE program or whatever.

i've noticed that firefox seems to run more smoothly on leopard than it did on tiger. spaces kicks ass, hooray for easy organization!

syadasti
12-31-2007, 06:27 AM
i just installed leopard 10.6

Leopard is 10.5, I don't know what 10.6 is called but I doubt its even in pre-alpha.

N8
01-01-2008, 05:35 PM
I need to buy a copy of Leopard from Apple using meh gov employee discount...

uggg.. it's still $107.10 even at that...

skinny mike
01-01-2008, 08:05 PM
Leopard is 10.5, I don't know what 10.6 is called but I doubt its even in pre-alpha.
10.6, 10.5, whatever. i guess i read off the wrong thing on the box.