Make mine Mint (dot com)
December 29, 2008 02:09 PM Filed under: iPhone
Wow, what a cool website: www.mint.com.
They call it “the best way to manage your money.” And it’s free.
Anyone can sign up for a mint.com account. You then enter information about your financial accounts-- savings, checking, investments, credit cards. Do that, and at a glance you can see ALL of your financial information in one place.
Better than that: you can see every transaction for every account, right there on the site. You can find every transaction that had to do with dining out, or gasoline, or presents for your uncle. Very handy. Download them if you want.
Better than THAT: you can get reminders emailed or text messaged to remind you to pay your credit card bill, or to alert you that a large purchase was made, or to tell you that a deposit is now available. How handy.
Better than THAT: you can download a copy of Mint for your iPhone and carry all this information around with you. It’s free. Here’s the link.
cboyce says “Check it out.”
They call it “the best way to manage your money.” And it’s free.
Anyone can sign up for a mint.com account. You then enter information about your financial accounts-- savings, checking, investments, credit cards. Do that, and at a glance you can see ALL of your financial information in one place.
Better than that: you can see every transaction for every account, right there on the site. You can find every transaction that had to do with dining out, or gasoline, or presents for your uncle. Very handy. Download them if you want.
Better than THAT: you can get reminders emailed or text messaged to remind you to pay your credit card bill, or to alert you that a large purchase was made, or to tell you that a deposit is now available. How handy.
Better than THAT: you can download a copy of Mint for your iPhone and carry all this information around with you. It’s free. Here’s the link.
cboyce says “Check it out.”
10.5.6 update-- do it (my way)
December 21, 2008 10:25 AM Filed under: Mac
Apple’s released the 10.5.6 update, so
naturally I am getting zillions of calls about
whether it’s safe to install or not. It is.
Just be careful, as usual.
Do it like this:
The updater will want you to restart when it’s done. Do that, then run Disk Utility again, and repair permissions again. That’s it.
(The updater is full of bug fixes, including some for Mail and iChat. You won’t notice much new but your machine will run better after the 10.5.6 update.)
Do it like this:
- Restart your computer.
- Find the Disk Utility (in the Utilities folder, in the Applications folder, on your hard disk) and “repair permissions.” If you don’t know how to do this have me do it with you over the phone one time.
- Download and install the 10.5.6 update (Apple menu, Software Update...)
The updater will want you to restart when it’s done. Do that, then run Disk Utility again, and repair permissions again. That’s it.
(The updater is full of bug fixes, including some for Mail and iChat. You won’t notice much new but your machine will run better after the 10.5.6 update.)
iFixit.com
December 21, 2008 09:55 AM Filed under: News
What a cool website, and gee don’t I wish
I’d found it before I took apart that iBook and
couldn’t put it back together again. Click the
picture and have a look.
How-to manuals. Parts. Friendly tips. cboyce says “Check it out.”
(Here’s the manual I should have read before taking apart the iBook):
How-to manuals. Parts. Friendly tips. cboyce says “Check it out.”
(Here’s the manual I should have read before taking apart the iBook):
Macworld Expo news
December 17, 2008 09:43 PM Filed under: News
Macworld Expo is still three weeks away and already
there is plenty of news, and all of it’s bad.
First, as you’ve surely heard by now, Apple CEO
Steve Jobs will NOT be giving the keynote speech this
time. That’s bad. Jobs’ keynotes have
been a big part of Macworld Expo, often the best
part.
Second, Phil Schiller, Apple’s head of worldwide marketing, WILL be giving the keynote speech. That’s also bad. Schiller’s robotic spin-meister marketspeak is a sad contrast to Jobs’ genuine enthusiasm for Apple’s hardware and software and people. I hadn’t thought about Jobs’ predecessor Gil Amelio’s last keynote speech for awhile (it was horrible-- boring, and long, and delivered in a sleep-inducing way) and I hadn’t ever thought that anything could be worse... but I am thinking that maybe it might be this time. Phil, if you’re listening, here’s some friendly advice: when you give the talk, lay off the marketing hype. Just play it straight. The products are good enough.
Third, Apple has already announced that they aren’t going to be part of Macworld 2010. I do not expect the show to survive beyond 2010. I completely understand what Apple is saying about how the whole notion of the trade show isn’t important in the Internet Age, and how they can now release information and introduce products on their own schedule instead of trying to come through every January with new and exciting stuff-- but understanding the reasons doesn’t mean I like the result. Macworld Expo gave people like me-- and people not at all like me-- the chance to meet face to face. And that was a good thing.
Second, Phil Schiller, Apple’s head of worldwide marketing, WILL be giving the keynote speech. That’s also bad. Schiller’s robotic spin-meister marketspeak is a sad contrast to Jobs’ genuine enthusiasm for Apple’s hardware and software and people. I hadn’t thought about Jobs’ predecessor Gil Amelio’s last keynote speech for awhile (it was horrible-- boring, and long, and delivered in a sleep-inducing way) and I hadn’t ever thought that anything could be worse... but I am thinking that maybe it might be this time. Phil, if you’re listening, here’s some friendly advice: when you give the talk, lay off the marketing hype. Just play it straight. The products are good enough.
Third, Apple has already announced that they aren’t going to be part of Macworld 2010. I do not expect the show to survive beyond 2010. I completely understand what Apple is saying about how the whole notion of the trade show isn’t important in the Internet Age, and how they can now release information and introduce products on their own schedule instead of trying to come through every January with new and exciting stuff-- but understanding the reasons doesn’t mean I like the result. Macworld Expo gave people like me-- and people not at all like me-- the chance to meet face to face. And that was a good thing.
AppShopper website
Here’s a handy website for you iPhone users.
It’s called “AppShopper.” With more
than 10,000 iPhone applications available
it’s getting harder and harder to find
just the one you want via the iTunes Store.
AppShopper makes it easy. Here’s a screen
shot.
Free AT&T WiFi for iPhones
October 30, 2008 09:21 PM Filed under: iPhone
Maybe they got tired of hearing us complain about how
slow the AT&T Edge network is and how 3G
isn’t so much better. Regardless, AT&T is
now providing free WiFi connections (many times
faster than the Edge and 3G networks) in
“thousands of hotspots nationwide”
including airports, McDonald’s, and Starbucks.
Click here for a map of
AT&T’s hotspots. Click here for AT&T’s
instructions on how to make the connection.
Stuff You Ought to Know
Newer Macs come with little pictures on the function
keys (top row of keys, with names like
“F1”) and they are supposed to tell you
what the keys do. The pictures aren’t all that
clear, and on older keyboards the pictures
aren’t there at all. Here are some
explanations.
Newer keyboards:
F1: make the screen dimmer
F2: make the screen brighter
F3: show all windows (Exposé)
F4: show Dashboard widgets
F5: nothing
F6: nothing
F7: go back (in iTunes)
F8: play/pause (in iTunes)
F9: skip forward (in iTunes)
F10: mute/unmute all sounds
F11: make the sounds softer
F12: make the sounds louder
F13: nothing
F14: nothing
F15: nothing
F16: nothing
Older keyboards:
F1: nothing
F2: nothing
F3: nothing
F4: nothing
F5: nothing
F6: nothing
F7: nothing
F8: nothing
F9: show all windows (Exposé)
F10: show all windows for current application (Exposé)
F11: show the Desktop
F12: show Dashboard widgets
F13: nothing
F14: make the screen dimmer
F15: make the screen brighter
If the keys don’t do these things for you it’s probably because someone’s made some changes in your Keyboard preferences. Go to the Apple menu, then to System Preferences, then to Keyboard & Mouse, then to Keyboard Shortcuts. You’ll figure it out from there. Of course, if you don’t, you can always click here to send me an email.
Newer keyboards:
F1: make the screen dimmer
F2: make the screen brighter
F3: show all windows (Exposé)
F4: show Dashboard widgets
F5: nothing
F6: nothing
F7: go back (in iTunes)
F8: play/pause (in iTunes)
F9: skip forward (in iTunes)
F10: mute/unmute all sounds
F11: make the sounds softer
F12: make the sounds louder
F13: nothing
F14: nothing
F15: nothing
F16: nothing
Older keyboards:
F1: nothing
F2: nothing
F3: nothing
F4: nothing
F5: nothing
F6: nothing
F7: nothing
F8: nothing
F9: show all windows (Exposé)
F10: show all windows for current application (Exposé)
F11: show the Desktop
F12: show Dashboard widgets
F13: nothing
F14: make the screen dimmer
F15: make the screen brighter
If the keys don’t do these things for you it’s probably because someone’s made some changes in your Keyboard preferences. Go to the Apple menu, then to System Preferences, then to Keyboard & Mouse, then to Keyboard Shortcuts. You’ll figure it out from there. Of course, if you don’t, you can always click here to send me an email.
iPhone Goodies
October 21, 2008 01:32 PM Filed under: iPhone
Sorry to have been gone so long. I had a million
things to write about and couldn’t decide which
one to do first. You might call it a
“blogjam.”
Today we have more in my short-yet-continuing series of Things I Like. Specifically, we have some iPhone applications. So here we go.
1. i.TV
It’s a TV guide on your iPhone. Incredible. Knows which services are in your area. Bring it with you when you visit Mom so you can know what’s on TV at her house. Free free free.
2. Gas Hound
Shows you where the nearest cheapest gas is. Once again, it knows where you are... so it shows you gas prices at Stations Near You. Very handy, and free free free.
3. Plusmo College Football
Everything you want to know about college football, including schedules, up to the minute scores, realtime play-by-play, rankings, news, everything. If you like college football you will love this application. Free.
4. 100 Words to Make You Sound Smart
I don’t know if this thing will really help you sound smart but it’s worth a try. As far as I’m concerned, if you are fastidious about avoiding euphemisms and equivocating, sounding smart is a fait accompli. Pay attention to the definitions lest you commit an esoteric faux pas fiasco.
(I think it’s working!)
This one’s also free.
Today we have more in my short-yet-continuing series of Things I Like. Specifically, we have some iPhone applications. So here we go.
1. i.TV
It’s a TV guide on your iPhone. Incredible. Knows which services are in your area. Bring it with you when you visit Mom so you can know what’s on TV at her house. Free free free.
2. Gas Hound
Shows you where the nearest cheapest gas is. Once again, it knows where you are... so it shows you gas prices at Stations Near You. Very handy, and free free free.
3. Plusmo College Football
Everything you want to know about college football, including schedules, up to the minute scores, realtime play-by-play, rankings, news, everything. If you like college football you will love this application. Free.
4. 100 Words to Make You Sound Smart
I don’t know if this thing will really help you sound smart but it’s worth a try. As far as I’m concerned, if you are fastidious about avoiding euphemisms and equivocating, sounding smart is a fait accompli. Pay attention to the definitions lest you commit an esoteric faux pas fiasco.
(I think it’s working!)
This one’s also free.
10.5.5 update
September 16, 2008 07:01 PM Filed under: Mac
Hard to recommend the 10.5.5 update just yet. There
seem to be some installation issues. Half of the
machines at Boyceworld took the installation without
incident and are working fine. The other half took
forever to restart after the install, then went to a
blue screen, then turned themselves off. After
restarting a few times all seems normal but
everything leading up to that certainly wasn’t
pleasant. I think you can live without it, but if you
are daring and want to install 10.5.5 at the very
least be sure you are completely backed up, AND
repair permissions before you install, AND be sure
nothing is running when you do the install (hint:
restart first, then do the Software Update), AND be
sure that all external disks are disconnected.
Personally, given all that, if you still want to do 10.5.5, I think you should have me do it.
Personally, given all that, if you still want to do 10.5.5, I think you should have me do it.
iPhone 2.1 Software
September 14, 2008 11:46 PM Filed under: iPhone
Thumbs UP to the iPhone 2.1
software. It’s working perfectly here.
According to the documentation, the 2.1 update provides:
1. Faster backing up of the iPhone
2. Faster synching
3. Faster Contacts browsing
4. No more crashes
Other than that, it doesn’t do anything.
If you are on any other version of iPhone software starting with a 2, get this update. You won’t be sorry. If you are on a 1.0 version of the iPhone software, contact me and I’ll explain why you might want to upgrade.
According to the documentation, the 2.1 update provides:
1. Faster backing up of the iPhone
2. Faster synching
3. Faster Contacts browsing
4. No more crashes
Other than that, it doesn’t do anything.
If you are on any other version of iPhone software starting with a 2, get this update. You won’t be sorry. If you are on a 1.0 version of the iPhone software, contact me and I’ll explain why you might want to upgrade.
Stuff You Didn't Know You Had
September 08, 2008 11:56 PM Filed under: Mac
And now, something completely different!
Apple loads new Macs with a lot of software that we all use (iPhoto, Safari, Mail, iTunes, etc.). They also load new Macs with a lot of software that almost no one uses. But if more of us knew about it, more of us would use it. I think. My goal is to put that software to use, one Boyce Blog reader at a time.
Today’s program that You Didn’t Know You Had is “Grapher.” It’s probably in your Utilities folder (which is in your Applications folder). The icon looks like this (though not as big).
Double-click it, and you get this:
Click the “Open” button and you get this:
Type in an equation (it starts with “y=”), hit Return, and voila! Your equation is graphed. Here’s one, a 2-D example:
Here’s another, this time a 3-D example.
Yes, that’s z=(1/6) * x*x + (1/6) * y * y. Very good.
If you happen to be taking high school math-- you know who you are-- this will be incredibly useful.
Apple loads new Macs with a lot of software that we all use (iPhoto, Safari, Mail, iTunes, etc.). They also load new Macs with a lot of software that almost no one uses. But if more of us knew about it, more of us would use it. I think. My goal is to put that software to use, one Boyce Blog reader at a time.
Today’s program that You Didn’t Know You Had is “Grapher.” It’s probably in your Utilities folder (which is in your Applications folder). The icon looks like this (though not as big).
Double-click it, and you get this:
Click the “Open” button and you get this:
Type in an equation (it starts with “y=”), hit Return, and voila! Your equation is graphed. Here’s one, a 2-D example:
Here’s another, this time a 3-D example.
Yes, that’s z=(1/6) * x*x + (1/6) * y * y. Very good.
If you happen to be taking high school math-- you know who you are-- this will be incredibly useful.
Tip of the Day, September 3rd, 2008
Today’s topic: The Desktop.
We love The Desktop. We put all of our stuff there. And then we open up Safari, or Mail, or something else, and we cover everything up. When we need something from The Desktop, Step One (and Step Two, and Step 3) is “move all those windows out of the way so you can see The Desktop.” Very inefficient. No one likes it.
Today we are going to learn how to use “Exposé.” Exposé allows us to get to The Desktop with a single keystroke. It will save you a ton of time.
Exposé can be configured using the System Preferences (under the Apple menu). Click on the “Exposé and Spaces” button in 10.5 (“Dashboard & Exposé” in 10.4), then the Exposé button, and you’ll get something like this:
See where it says “Show Desktop”? You can click there and choose the keyboard shortcut that you want to use to trigger the showing of The Desktop. On my Mac, it’s Shift-F3 (the arrow means “Shift”). When I press that combination of keys, everything scoots off the screen-- temporarily, revealing my Desktop. I can double-click an icon from there or do anything else I want. Another press of Shift-F3 will bring the windows back. Pretty handy.
All you have to do is pick the key(s) you want to use as the trigger. It could be plain old F9. Or Shift-F10. Or just about anything you want. Hint: try holding down a modifier key (Command, Option, Shift, or Control) when you have that “Show Desktop” menu clicked. The menu will change to reflect what you’re holding down.
Once you’ve chosen a key to show The Desktop, close up the preferences and try the key out. Fun, yes?
Bonus Hint: Click and HOLD your “Show Desktop” key. The Desktop appears. Let go of the key and the windows come back. This saves you one keystroke if all you want to do is LOOK at your desktop. Think one little keystroke isn’t worth saving? One day, when your wrists are burning and your hands are falling off from overuse you’ll say “Dang it, he was right.” Save yourself some pain and say it now, before you get Carpal Tunnel Syndrome like everyone else.
We love The Desktop. We put all of our stuff there. And then we open up Safari, or Mail, or something else, and we cover everything up. When we need something from The Desktop, Step One (and Step Two, and Step 3) is “move all those windows out of the way so you can see The Desktop.” Very inefficient. No one likes it.
Today we are going to learn how to use “Exposé.” Exposé allows us to get to The Desktop with a single keystroke. It will save you a ton of time.
Exposé can be configured using the System Preferences (under the Apple menu). Click on the “Exposé and Spaces” button in 10.5 (“Dashboard & Exposé” in 10.4), then the Exposé button, and you’ll get something like this:
See where it says “Show Desktop”? You can click there and choose the keyboard shortcut that you want to use to trigger the showing of The Desktop. On my Mac, it’s Shift-F3 (the arrow means “Shift”). When I press that combination of keys, everything scoots off the screen-- temporarily, revealing my Desktop. I can double-click an icon from there or do anything else I want. Another press of Shift-F3 will bring the windows back. Pretty handy.
All you have to do is pick the key(s) you want to use as the trigger. It could be plain old F9. Or Shift-F10. Or just about anything you want. Hint: try holding down a modifier key (Command, Option, Shift, or Control) when you have that “Show Desktop” menu clicked. The menu will change to reflect what you’re holding down.
Once you’ve chosen a key to show The Desktop, close up the preferences and try the key out. Fun, yes?
Bonus Hint: Click and HOLD your “Show Desktop” key. The Desktop appears. Let go of the key and the windows come back. This saves you one keystroke if all you want to do is LOOK at your desktop. Think one little keystroke isn’t worth saving? One day, when your wrists are burning and your hands are falling off from overuse you’ll say “Dang it, he was right.” Save yourself some pain and say it now, before you get Carpal Tunnel Syndrome like everyone else.
I love football, part 2
August 30, 2008 10:04 AM Filed under: Mac
The football season is finally here! And with that
comes the complex time-management task of watching
all the important games with a limited number of TVs
in the house. My method: keep tabs on the games via
the internet, and if a game starts to look
interesting, switch over to it on the TV. I use
this page on ESPN’s
website because it lets you see the scores of
all the games, real-time.
I particular like the “GameCast” feature, which gives you a graphic of the field so you can see where the ball is, and a description of the last play. Here’s how it looks:
You can open up a couple of “GameCast” windows and keep an eye on all of them at once. If you have a TV in the same room as your Mac you’re all set-- put one game on the TV, and watch the rest on the internet. When GameCast shows you that someone’s about to score, or that the game’s almost over but still very close, you’ll know about it in time to switch the TV to that game. Sort of the poor man’s “picture in a picture.”
This works for the Pro’s too, of course.
I particular like the “GameCast” feature, which gives you a graphic of the field so you can see where the ball is, and a description of the last play. Here’s how it looks:
You can open up a couple of “GameCast” windows and keep an eye on all of them at once. If you have a TV in the same room as your Mac you’re all set-- put one game on the TV, and watch the rest on the internet. When GameCast shows you that someone’s about to score, or that the game’s almost over but still very close, you’ll know about it in time to switch the TV to that game. Sort of the poor man’s “picture in a picture.”
This works for the Pro’s too, of course.
iPhone, uPhone, we all scream at our iPhones
August 27, 2008 11:39 PM Filed under: iPhone
Especially if we’ve installed the 2.0 software,
which you can’t avoid if you bought a 3G
iPhone. Basically, the software’s not ready,
but we’re using it. And that leads to very bad
behavior. I spent most of the weekend with my iPhone
connected to my iMac, trying to get it iworking
again. And still it’s not right. Let that be a
lesson to you.
Meanwhile, I can’t wait for the new iPhone 2.1 software, which supposedly solves all kinds of problems. I’d be happy if it just solves one: the one where one program crashes and from that point forward, NONE of your apps work.
By the way, the backups that the iPhone does during synching aren’t very useful. Don’t think that they will save the day for you. Odds are that they are corrupt in some way. Mine were. So, when I wiped out my iPhone and “started over” I was putting bad stuff back onto the iPhone. Nice.
Drop in on an Apple Store at the end of the day when the Geniuses are tired of trying to solve iPhone problems and you may get one of them to tell you something like “look, it doesn’t work right, we know it, and we want to see the new 2.1 software more than you do.” That’s what they told me tonight. I believe them.
Meanwhile, I can’t wait for the new iPhone 2.1 software, which supposedly solves all kinds of problems. I’d be happy if it just solves one: the one where one program crashes and from that point forward, NONE of your apps work.
By the way, the backups that the iPhone does during synching aren’t very useful. Don’t think that they will save the day for you. Odds are that they are corrupt in some way. Mine were. So, when I wiped out my iPhone and “started over” I was putting bad stuff back onto the iPhone. Nice.
Drop in on an Apple Store at the end of the day when the Geniuses are tired of trying to solve iPhone problems and you may get one of them to tell you something like “look, it doesn’t work right, we know it, and we want to see the new 2.1 software more than you do.” That’s what they told me tonight. I believe them.
Tip of the Day, August 25th 2008
Here’s one for all the Apple Mail
users.
Ever send someone an email with an attachment? Of course you have. Most people write the message, then click the Attach button, then climb around in what some of you call “the dead-end box” (where you’re supposed to somehow track down the thing you want to attach).
Here are two methods that are a lot easier. You start in the Finder, not in Mail. In this example, I have a document I want to email, and I’ve clicked on it ONCE to select it. Here’s a picture, and you can see what I’ve selected.
Now we have two choices. One choice is to click and DRAG the document to the Mail icon in the Dock. When the Mail icon highlights, let go. Presto-- you’ll get a new document, with the attachment attached.
The other choice requires less dragging. Leave the soon-to-be attachment where it is (still highlighted) and go to the Finder menu (next to the Apple menu), slide down to “Services,” choose “Mail” and then “Send File.” It’s really just one move-- takes less effort for you to do it than for me to tell you how.
Believe it or not, I only “discovered” this second method TODAY. That Services menu has been around a few years, but it hasn’t been very useful... at least that’s what I thought. Now I think I am going to take a good look at Services and see whether I can “discover” something else cool.
The key to these methods is you start with the attachment, not with Mail. Try it once or twice and you’ll be a convert.
Ever send someone an email with an attachment? Of course you have. Most people write the message, then click the Attach button, then climb around in what some of you call “the dead-end box” (where you’re supposed to somehow track down the thing you want to attach).
Here are two methods that are a lot easier. You start in the Finder, not in Mail. In this example, I have a document I want to email, and I’ve clicked on it ONCE to select it. Here’s a picture, and you can see what I’ve selected.
Now we have two choices. One choice is to click and DRAG the document to the Mail icon in the Dock. When the Mail icon highlights, let go. Presto-- you’ll get a new document, with the attachment attached.
The other choice requires less dragging. Leave the soon-to-be attachment where it is (still highlighted) and go to the Finder menu (next to the Apple menu), slide down to “Services,” choose “Mail” and then “Send File.” It’s really just one move-- takes less effort for you to do it than for me to tell you how.
Believe it or not, I only “discovered” this second method TODAY. That Services menu has been around a few years, but it hasn’t been very useful... at least that’s what I thought. Now I think I am going to take a good look at Services and see whether I can “discover” something else cool.
The key to these methods is you start with the attachment, not with Mail. Try it once or twice and you’ll be a convert.
Tip of the Day, August 24th, 2008
Did You Know-- ?
The Preview program that comes with OS X 10.5 can do some pretty spiffy things. In fact, it can do some of the things Photoshop can do, and some of the stuff that Acrobat can do, and a whole bunch of stuff that neither can do. And it’s free.
In Part I of this tip (today’s blog entry) I’ll outline some of the really handy features built into Preview. Part II will explain how to use these features. Email me and tell me which features you want explained first-- this is your chance to influence the blog.
You can use Preview to...
That’s it for now. Vote for the features you want explained. We’ll follow up within a few days.
The Preview program that comes with OS X 10.5 can do some pretty spiffy things. In fact, it can do some of the things Photoshop can do, and some of the stuff that Acrobat can do, and a whole bunch of stuff that neither can do. And it’s free.
In Part I of this tip (today’s blog entry) I’ll outline some of the really handy features built into Preview. Part II will explain how to use these features. Email me and tell me which features you want explained first-- this is your chance to influence the blog.
You can use Preview to...
- combine two or more PDF documents.
- delete one or morepages from a PDF document.
- rotate one or all pages in a PDF document.
- crop one or more pages in a PDF document.
- mark up or otherwise highlight a PDF document.
- adjust color/brightness/shadows/etc. in a JPG document.
- adjust size and resolution in a JPG document.
- save documents as PDF, JPG, GIF, TIFF, PNG... and Photoshop format.
That’s it for now. Vote for the features you want explained. We’ll follow up within a few days.
Tip of the Day, August 21st 2008
Ever get a weird error message on your Mac and then
try to tell someone (me) about it? The conversation
goes like this:
You: “I got a weird error message on my Mac.”
Me: “Oh really. What did it say?”
You: “Something about an error.”
Me: “Right. Can you tell me a little more?”
You: “No, it just said there was an error. What do you suppose it was?”
Me: “Aaargh.”
Today we are going to learn how to take pictures of the screen-- of the whole screen, of parts of the screen, of particular windows. Here goes.
Double Bonus: do any of the above but also include the CONTROL key. When you do that, the picture is put onto the Clipboard, ready to be pasted into an email (or anywhere else). It does not save a copy on the desktop.
So... next time you get a weird error message on your screen, do this: Command-Shift-CONTROL-4, then spacebar, then get your cursor over the error message, then click. Write me an email, and paste the picture in.
It sounds complicated but after you’ve done it once or twice it becomes almost automatic. Sort of like breathing.
You: “I got a weird error message on my Mac.”
Me: “Oh really. What did it say?”
You: “Something about an error.”
Me: “Right. Can you tell me a little more?”
You: “No, it just said there was an error. What do you suppose it was?”
Me: “Aaargh.”
Today we are going to learn how to take pictures of the screen-- of the whole screen, of parts of the screen, of particular windows. Here goes.
- Take a picture of the ENTIRE screen by holding down Command and Shift and 3. If the sound is up on your Mac you’ll hear a camera shutter sound, useful to those of you who have heard a camera with a shutter. The picture will be saved on your desktop with a name like “Picture 1.” From there, do anything you want with it-- open it, print it, email it.
- Take a picture of PART of the screen by holding down Command and Shift and 4. You’ll get a cross-hair cursor. Click and drag to highlight part of the screen, then let go. You’ll hear the shutter sound again, and there’ll be an icon with “Picture 1” (or 2, or 10) on the desktop, ready for you to work with.
Double Bonus: do any of the above but also include the CONTROL key. When you do that, the picture is put onto the Clipboard, ready to be pasted into an email (or anywhere else). It does not save a copy on the desktop.
So... next time you get a weird error message on your screen, do this: Command-Shift-CONTROL-4, then spacebar, then get your cursor over the error message, then click. Write me an email, and paste the picture in.
It sounds complicated but after you’ve done it once or twice it becomes almost automatic. Sort of like breathing.
Tip of the Day, August 20th 2008
Assuming you’re using Leopard (Mac OS X 10.5):
One of the very handy features introduced in 10.5 is “QuickLook.” With it, you can VERY quickly pop open a document and see what’s in it, without the delay of launching a program such as Preview or Word. Here’s how you use it.
1. Click ONCE on a document icon in the Finder. Here, I’m clicking on what looks to be a picture.
2. Now, with the icon highlighted, press the spacebar. Yes, the spacebar. Don’t ask me why it’s the spacebar. The document pops open, like so:
Any resemblance to Macintosh Consultants living or dead is a miracle, since this picture is from 1991.
You can stretch things from the lower right corner. You can go full screen with the two-headed arrow. You can add this item to iPhoto via the icon at bottom right. Or you can press the spacebar again and make the thing go back to being an icon. (Or click the x in the circle, top left corner.)
You can even double-click on the preview and open it up for real, if that’s what you want to do.
This works with pictures, word processing documents, email messages, you name it. Even Excel documents. Amazing.
One of the very handy features introduced in 10.5 is “QuickLook.” With it, you can VERY quickly pop open a document and see what’s in it, without the delay of launching a program such as Preview or Word. Here’s how you use it.
1. Click ONCE on a document icon in the Finder. Here, I’m clicking on what looks to be a picture.
2. Now, with the icon highlighted, press the spacebar. Yes, the spacebar. Don’t ask me why it’s the spacebar. The document pops open, like so:
Any resemblance to Macintosh Consultants living or dead is a miracle, since this picture is from 1991.
You can stretch things from the lower right corner. You can go full screen with the two-headed arrow. You can add this item to iPhoto via the icon at bottom right. Or you can press the spacebar again and make the thing go back to being an icon. (Or click the x in the circle, top left corner.)
You can even double-click on the preview and open it up for real, if that’s what you want to do.
This works with pictures, word processing documents, email messages, you name it. Even Excel documents. Amazing.
Uncle Steve says "We'll fix it"
I hear that Steve Jobs sent “someone” an
email saying he knows about the iPhone problem
reported here-- the one where all applications
(except the default Apple ones) open for two seconds
and then slam shut. He says the problem will be fixed
in September, via a Software Update. Yahoo!
New iPhone Software! Yahoo!
Apple put out iPhone software 2.0.2 last evening. I
of course installed it, and I of course am still
having problems. If you were hoping (as I was) that
everything would be fixed the next time Apple put out
new iPhone software, you will be disappointed.
Apple doesn’t say much about this release. All they will tell us is “bug fixes.” That’s nice. They didn’t fix the bugs I care the most about, though. On the other hand, it’s free.
And it’s easy to get. Connect your iPhone to your Mac with the USB cable and when iTunes comes up you can check for updates right there. It took a few hours here-- more than an hour to back up my iPhone, then some more time to put the new software on, then a lot more time after that to put my old stuff back on. And it got stuck restarting-- that went most of the night, until the battery died. So then I had to do the “restore” which took another couple of hours.
Not sure what I got for my 18 hour effort but at least things are no worse than they were before. I think.
If you have an older iPhone I wouldn’t do the update. If you have a newer one I would, because (despite Apple’s secrecy) I think the improvements have to do with the 3G reception, which doesn’t do anything for the older, non-3G models. Just be sure you have plenty of time.
Apple doesn’t say much about this release. All they will tell us is “bug fixes.” That’s nice. They didn’t fix the bugs I care the most about, though. On the other hand, it’s free.
And it’s easy to get. Connect your iPhone to your Mac with the USB cable and when iTunes comes up you can check for updates right there. It took a few hours here-- more than an hour to back up my iPhone, then some more time to put the new software on, then a lot more time after that to put my old stuff back on. And it got stuck restarting-- that went most of the night, until the battery died. So then I had to do the “restore” which took another couple of hours.
Not sure what I got for my 18 hour effort but at least things are no worse than they were before. I think.
If you have an older iPhone I wouldn’t do the update. If you have a newer one I would, because (despite Apple’s secrecy) I think the improvements have to do with the 3G reception, which doesn’t do anything for the older, non-3G models. Just be sure you have plenty of time.
Living in a Modern World
In the olden days, you watched the Olympics on TV and
you only got to see what they wanted you to see, when
they wanted you to see it. If you were away from the
TV you didn’t get to see it. Life was hard.
But NOW, you can watch the Olympics on your computer, and see what YOU want to see, when YOU want to see it. Provided that the event isn’t in the future. All you have to do is click this link. You’ll need the “Silverlight” plug-in from Microsoft, and if you don’t have it, you’ll get the chance to download it for free. Remember to install it after you download it.
I’m watching Poland vs. Germany in women’s team Table Tennis right now (LIVE). Smooth video, and NO ANNOUNCERS! It’s like being there (I think). You can also watch archived stuff, such as the men’s swimming relay race that was so sensational a couple of nights back. So give it a whirl and take advantage of this modern world we live in.
But NOW, you can watch the Olympics on your computer, and see what YOU want to see, when YOU want to see it. Provided that the event isn’t in the future. All you have to do is click this link. You’ll need the “Silverlight” plug-in from Microsoft, and if you don’t have it, you’ll get the chance to download it for free. Remember to install it after you download it.
I’m watching Poland vs. Germany in women’s team Table Tennis right now (LIVE). Smooth video, and NO ANNOUNCERS! It’s like being there (I think). You can also watch archived stuff, such as the men’s swimming relay race that was so sensational a couple of nights back. So give it a whirl and take advantage of this modern world we live in.
My iPhone Adventure
August 08, 2008 09:22 PM Filed under: iPhone
When YOU have Apple troubles, you call me. When I
have Apple troubles, I call... actually, I call me
too. At the moment, I am trying to figure out what
makes the iPhone crash, and more importantly, how to
make it work again. The kinds of crashes I’m
talking about are the ones where an application opens
part way, then dumps you back at the Home screen, and
then NO applications work except for the original
ones from Apple.
Here’s what DOESN’T make it work again:
Here’s what DOESN’T make it work again:
- Turning it off and on again via the top button (holding down until you see “Slide to turn off,” then sliding, then turning it on again). Problem is still there.
- Force-restarting (holding the Home button, then pressing the top button until the iPhone restarts by itself). Problem is still there.
- Deleting the last program you installed. Problem is still there.
- Installing the 2.0.1 iPhone update doesn’t do it either.
- Restoring via the “Restore” button in iTunes. It works, but it takes HOURS. First it backs up your iPhone, then it re-downloads and reinstalls the latest iPhone software, then it asks you whether you want to put all your stuff back on (and you’d think you’d be putting the problem back on too, but go ahead and do it), and then, when you say yes, you wait another hour or so while it finishes. Not the sort of thing you do between planes in the Phoenix airport. Though I’ve tried.
Stuff I Like
Here’s something that I really like:
anti-glare film from Power Support.
The film is exactly the right size for whatever it is
you want to cover-- in my case, my iPhone and my
MacBook. The glare on my MacBook screen, especially,
was a constant irritation-- but not any more! Wow,
does this stuff work.
Took me two tries to get the bubbles out on the iPhone’s film but I did the MacBook right the first time. It even feels good to the tapping/sliding finger on the iPhone. I think it’s a little more slippery than the original glass. A bonus.
I wish they had it for the new iMacs but so far, they don’t. Bummer. But that doesn’t make the stuff that they DO have any less good.
You can get Power Support film via Amazon.com. Here’s the link.
Took me two tries to get the bubbles out on the iPhone’s film but I did the MacBook right the first time. It even feels good to the tapping/sliding finger on the iPhone. I think it’s a little more slippery than the original glass. A bonus.
I wish they had it for the new iMacs but so far, they don’t. Bummer. But that doesn’t make the stuff that they DO have any less good.
You can get Power Support film via Amazon.com. Here’s the link.
iPhone software 2.0.1, part 2
August 06, 2008 08:57 AM Filed under: iPhone
The good news: iPhone software 2.0.1 didn’t
make anything worse. The bad news: applications still
crash the iPhone, and once you’ve crashed with
one application you can’t open any of the
others- just like before. Turning off the iPhone and
turning it back on doesn’t solve the problem-
also just like before. I’m working here to
figure out what WILL solve the problem. It would
appear easier to figure out how to run a car on
coffee grounds.
So, go ahead and do the 2.0.1 update, but don’t expect miracles. If I get an answer for the crashing, or for how to run a car on coffee grounds, I will let you know.
So, go ahead and do the 2.0.1 update, but don’t expect miracles. If I get an answer for the crashing, or for how to run a car on coffee grounds, I will let you know.
iPhone software 2.0.1
August 04, 2008 10:03 PM Filed under: iPhone
It’s here! They say it fixes some bugs.
We’ll see.
Do yourself a favor and wait until I’ve tried it and given it a thumbs-up. Look for info here withing 24 hours.
Do yourself a favor and wait until I’ve tried it and given it a thumbs-up. Look for info here withing 24 hours.
eBay on the iPhone
August 03, 2008 01:45 PM Filed under: iPhone
If you’re an eBayer, having eBay on your iPhone
is about the handiest thing ever. Here’s what
it looks like on the iPhone.
Click this link and get it.
Click this link and get it.
Tip of the Day, August 3rd, 2008
Command-Spacebar. That’s it.
See you tomorrow.
OK, here’s a little more info. When you press Command-Spacebar, you get a little search box at the top right of your screen. Looks like this:
Type something in, and as you type, Spotlight searches your hard disk(s) for matches. Big deal? Well, yeah, because it searches INSIDE documents in addition to searching document titles. So, if you’re wondering what you gave your nephew for Christmas last year, you can search for his name and find it in a document called “Naughty and Nice 2007.” Good luck finding that document some other way.
Of course you could do this by clicking the Spotlight magnifying glass at the top right of your screen, but Command-Spacebar is faster. By far.
Bonus cool thing: do a Spotlight search, then use arrow keys to run down (or back up) to the matching item you want, and then hit Enter. The item pops right up, whether it’s a Word document, an email, or a calendar item. Now that’s handy.
Try it.
OK, here’s a little more info. When you press Command-Spacebar, you get a little search box at the top right of your screen. Looks like this:
Type something in, and as you type, Spotlight searches your hard disk(s) for matches. Big deal? Well, yeah, because it searches INSIDE documents in addition to searching document titles. So, if you’re wondering what you gave your nephew for Christmas last year, you can search for his name and find it in a document called “Naughty and Nice 2007.” Good luck finding that document some other way.
Of course you could do this by clicking the Spotlight magnifying glass at the top right of your screen, but Command-Spacebar is faster. By far.
Bonus cool thing: do a Spotlight search, then use arrow keys to run down (or back up) to the matching item you want, and then hit Enter. The item pops right up, whether it’s a Word document, an email, or a calendar item. Now that’s handy.
Try it.
Big Wednesday
August 01, 2008 08:59 PM Filed under: News
Wednesday July 30th, 2008 was
www.christianboyce.com’s biggest day ever in
terms of “site visits.” We had 50, which
means that someone came to the site 50 times. Now,
that could be ME going to the site, closing my
browser, coming back a little later, etc., 50
times... but it wasn’t. I like to think it was
Steve Jobs, Mom, my nephew, and 47 of YOU. So
“thanks.”
The Boyce Blog page was the most-requested page on the site, even more than the home page. Which means that people are coming straight to the Blog without going through the home page. Interesting.
Today (actually, Wednesday) 50, tomorrow 100. Tell a friend. Let’s do it.
The Boyce Blog page was the most-requested page on the site, even more than the home page. Which means that people are coming straight to the Blog without going through the home page. Interesting.
Today (actually, Wednesday) 50, tomorrow 100. Tell a friend. Let’s do it.
iPhone Improvement of the Day
August 01, 2008 08:51 PM Filed under: iPhone
The iPhone lets you program the Home
button so that a double-click takes you
either to the Home screen, to your favorite phone
numbers, or to the iPod application. The first choice
is simply what a single click does, so that’s
not really “a choice” at all. The other
two are OK, but wouldn’t it be better if the
choices included...
Keep your fingers crossed for the iPhone 2.1 software. If it includes ANY of the things I’ve written about here it will be a big improvement.
- go to SETTINGS (which means I could set the brightness in a hurry)
- go to the program you were using before this one
- go to the FIRST page of the Home screen
Keep your fingers crossed for the iPhone 2.1 software. If it includes ANY of the things I’ve written about here it will be a big improvement.
I Thought I Was Going Nuts
August 01, 2008 08:36 PM Filed under: iPhone
All this week I’ve been showing people my
iPhone and how to do cool stuff with the applications
that I’ve downloaded. And all this week
I’ve had trouble finding the applications. None
of them seemed to be where I thought they were. I
wasn’t sure, but it seemed to me that they
moved overnight. (And that’s a real drag,
consdering how hard it is to arrange the apps in an
order that I like.)
The first time this happened, I thought “I need more sleep, I’m forgetting where I put things.” The next time it happened (Tuesday) I thought the same thing. Eventually, I started to consider another possiblity: my nightly synching of iPhone and iMac was messing things up.
Show of Hands: if your iPhone applications are moving around, is the correct answer....
Let’s say you have an iPhone program on the first screen, and let’s say you have five other screens. You would rightly expect to find those “first screen” programs on the first screen forever, or at least until you moved them yourself. But that’s not how it works! When you get updates for a program on the first screen, and you do it by tapping the “App Store” button (on the iPhone) and then the “Updates” button, the programs that you update go to the last page of you iPhone. The last page! It’s insane. And an outrage.
Given that (a) we can’t sort programs by name or date (or by anything else), and that (b) moving them around is a giant pain, you would think (c) that Apple wouldn’t be moving our apps (and not telling us about it either). But move them around they are-- just another in a growing list of “features” in the iPhone that are very, very non-Apple.
The first time this happened, I thought “I need more sleep, I’m forgetting where I put things.” The next time it happened (Tuesday) I thought the same thing. Eventually, I started to consider another possiblity: my nightly synching of iPhone and iMac was messing things up.
Show of Hands: if your iPhone applications are moving around, is the correct answer....
- They aren’t moving around, you’re just losing your mind
- They are moving around, and Apple’s doing it behind your back
Let’s say you have an iPhone program on the first screen, and let’s say you have five other screens. You would rightly expect to find those “first screen” programs on the first screen forever, or at least until you moved them yourself. But that’s not how it works! When you get updates for a program on the first screen, and you do it by tapping the “App Store” button (on the iPhone) and then the “Updates” button, the programs that you update go to the last page of you iPhone. The last page! It’s insane. And an outrage.
Given that (a) we can’t sort programs by name or date (or by anything else), and that (b) moving them around is a giant pain, you would think (c) that Apple wouldn’t be moving our apps (and not telling us about it either). But move them around they are-- just another in a growing list of “features” in the iPhone that are very, very non-Apple.
Tip of the Day, July 30th, 2008
See that row of keys across the top of your keyboard?
The row you never use? How about making those keys do
something useful, like opening your mail program, or
Safari, or (yuck) Microsoft Word? Here’s how
you do it using a FREE program called
“Spark.”
Step One: go to versiontracker.com and download Spark. Here’s the link.
Step Two: double-click the download from Step One, and if things go right you’ll see something called Spark on your desktop. It will look like this:
Open that, revealing this.
That’s the Spark
application. Drag it to your Applications
folder.
Step Three: open up the Applications folder and open up Spark. You’ll see something like this (without the shortcuts yet):
Step Four: click the little gear at top left, hold it down, and slide down to “Application.” Now you get another box:
All you need to do is fill in the box. Click where it says “click to edit” and then press the “trigger” key. Click where it says “Choose...” and choose a program to open. “Calculator” is a nice one-- why not make Calculator be F5? Try it-- there’s really nothing like getting your hands a little dirty.
From that point on, your key will work-- forever, for free. Pretty neat.
If you have trouble, click the link at the bottom of the page and send me an email.
Step One: go to versiontracker.com and download Spark. Here’s the link.
Step Two: double-click the download from Step One, and if things go right you’ll see something called Spark on your desktop. It will look like this:
Open that, revealing this.
That’s the Spark
application. Drag it to your Applications
folder.
Step Three: open up the Applications folder and open up Spark. You’ll see something like this (without the shortcuts yet):
Step Four: click the little gear at top left, hold it down, and slide down to “Application.” Now you get another box:
All you need to do is fill in the box. Click where it says “click to edit” and then press the “trigger” key. Click where it says “Choose...” and choose a program to open. “Calculator” is a nice one-- why not make Calculator be F5? Try it-- there’s really nothing like getting your hands a little dirty.
From that point on, your key will work-- forever, for free. Pretty neat.
If you have trouble, click the link at the bottom of the page and send me an email.
Tip of the Day, July 29th, 2008
Supposing you wanted to put your Mac to sleep. Or to
shut it down. Or maybe restart it. Do it the way the
cool kids do: press the Eject button (top row of
keys, a triangle with a line under it) while also
holding pressing Control (either one of the Control
keys). You get a box asking “Are you sure you
want to shut down your computer now?”
If that’s what you want, hit Enter on your keyboard, and voila, the computer shuts down. If you want to put it to sleep, you can click the Sleep button... or just type “s.” Want to restart instead? Type “r.”
If you change your mind about shutting down/sleeping/restarting you can click the Cancel button... or, better yet, press the “Esc” key. Pretty darned neat. Once you get the hang of it, you can do Control-Eject and then Enter lickety split, faster than anyone can choose “Shut Down” with the mouse.
I “discovered” this tip accidentally. I was trying to eject a CD, and when I pressed Eject I got the “Are you sure you want to shut down your computer now?” box. I was surprised to see that box, so I cancelled and tried again-- with the same result! I kept pressing Eject and I kept getting the box asking me whether I really wanted to shut down. I was mystified. Mystified, that is, until I realized that Charlie the Cat, who I thought was sitting beside the keyboard, was really sitting on it-- more precisely, on the Control key, way off at the bottom left corner of the keyboard. When Charlie moved, the Eject key did what it used to do (Eject things). And that’s when I figured it out.
Anyhow, Charlie the Cat gets credit for this one. She’s not much of a typist so this is really a team effort.
If that’s what you want, hit Enter on your keyboard, and voila, the computer shuts down. If you want to put it to sleep, you can click the Sleep button... or just type “s.” Want to restart instead? Type “r.”
If you change your mind about shutting down/sleeping/restarting you can click the Cancel button... or, better yet, press the “Esc” key. Pretty darned neat. Once you get the hang of it, you can do Control-Eject and then Enter lickety split, faster than anyone can choose “Shut Down” with the mouse.
I “discovered” this tip accidentally. I was trying to eject a CD, and when I pressed Eject I got the “Are you sure you want to shut down your computer now?” box. I was surprised to see that box, so I cancelled and tried again-- with the same result! I kept pressing Eject and I kept getting the box asking me whether I really wanted to shut down. I was mystified. Mystified, that is, until I realized that Charlie the Cat, who I thought was sitting beside the keyboard, was really sitting on it-- more precisely, on the Control key, way off at the bottom left corner of the keyboard. When Charlie moved, the Eject key did what it used to do (Eject things). And that’s when I figured it out.
Anyhow, Charlie the Cat gets credit for this one. She’s not much of a typist so this is really a team effort.
Groovy new search engine
July 28, 2008 08:50 AM Filed under: News
There’s a new search engine-- www.cuil.com. It’s
really cool. In fact, that’s how you
pronounce it. Give it a whirl.
And Another Thing
July 27, 2008 03:00 PM Filed under: iPhone
Speaking of making big improvements to the
iPhone via some VERY simple changes:
wouldn’t it be cool if you could scroll past
the last page of your iPhone apps, and have it wrap
around to the beginning? Currently, going from page 1
to page 7 takes six swipes to the left, and from page
7 to page 1 take six swipes to the right. If you
could “wrap around” you’d be able
to do either in ONE swipe.
Probably too late to get a patent on the “wrap around” idea but when you see it on your iPhone just remember you heard it here first.
Probably too late to get a patent on the “wrap around” idea but when you see it on your iPhone just remember you heard it here first.
If I Were King
July 27, 2008 09:28 AM Filed under: iPhone
Why can’t I be in charge for just a few
minutes? I know everything would be better for
everyone. Here’s what I’d do to improve
the iPhone (and I’ll bet it could be done in a
day):
1. Provide the OPTION to sort applications by name. Or by date downloaded. A to Z, or Z to A, newest in front, or newest in back. User’s choice.
2. Provide an EASIER way to access the settings. On my iPhone, the settings are on page 1. So, if I’m using a program on page 7, as I was last night, and while I’m using that program I decide to adjust the brightness of the screen, the process goes like this:
3. Provide a QUICK way to get back to recently-used programs. That would help with the problem in #2 above. Scrolling through multiple pages, back and forth, gets old the first day.
4. Provide a QUICK way to move a program from page 7 to page 1. When everything was on one screen, as it was when the iPhone first came out, dragging an icon to place was easy. When you have to jump past six or seven pages to get where you’re going, it’s not easy at all. I end up doing the old “15 puzzle” trick, where you stash something down in the bottom of the screen and then pick it up later from another page.
The iPhone interface is only a year old but it’s creaking already. It worked at first, but in the new “App Store” world it needs some changes. If you happen to talk with Steve Jobs, mention this post. Thank you.
1. Provide the OPTION to sort applications by name. Or by date downloaded. A to Z, or Z to A, newest in front, or newest in back. User’s choice.
2. Provide an EASIER way to access the settings. On my iPhone, the settings are on page 1. So, if I’m using a program on page 7, as I was last night, and while I’m using that program I decide to adjust the brightness of the screen, the process goes like this:
- Press the Home button
- Swipe right (moving one page closer to the front)
- Swipe right again (another page closer)
- Swipe right again (another page closer)
- Swipe right again (another page closer)
- Swipe right again (another page closer)
- Swipe right again (another page closer)
- Tap Settings
- Tap Brightness
- Slide to adjust the brightness
- Press the Home button
- Swipe LEFT (trying to get back to where I was)
- Swipe left (getting closer)
- Swipe left (getting closer)
- Swipe left (getting closer)
- Swipe left (getting closer)
- Swipe left (getting closer)
- Tap the program I was using
3. Provide a QUICK way to get back to recently-used programs. That would help with the problem in #2 above. Scrolling through multiple pages, back and forth, gets old the first day.
4. Provide a QUICK way to move a program from page 7 to page 1. When everything was on one screen, as it was when the iPhone first came out, dragging an icon to place was easy. When you have to jump past six or seven pages to get where you’re going, it’s not easy at all. I end up doing the old “15 puzzle” trick, where you stash something down in the bottom of the screen and then pick it up later from another page.
The iPhone interface is only a year old but it’s creaking already. It worked at first, but in the new “App Store” world it needs some changes. If you happen to talk with Steve Jobs, mention this post. Thank you.
Tip of the Day, July 26th, 2008
I would imagine that you have a few icons on your
desktop. Maybe more than a few. Maybe a lot. Turns
out that “a lot” is bad. The problem is
that the Finder (which displays the icons) is not
very good at dealing with a large number of icons at
once. The effect is your machine slows down, just a
little, for every icon on the desktop. Incredible,
but true. So, if you want your machine to be
fast again, reduce the number of items on your
desktop. It’s OK to put a couple of
folders onto your desktop, and to toss zillions of
items into those folders, because when the Finder
looks at the desktop it will only “see”
the folders (not what’s inside).
iPhone Stuff I Like
July 24, 2008 09:29 PM Filed under: iPhone
If you have an iPhone, even an old one, you surely
know that (as of July 11th) there are gobs of new
programs that you can add to an iPhone to make it do
cool stuff. Being a “cool stuff” person,
and also a “I would rather not pay for
something if I don’t have to” person, I
have tried just about every FREE iPhone application,
and I’m here to tell you what I like. So here
we go. Remember, they’re all FREE.
Remote
Lets you drive your iTunes library through the air, using your iPhone. Which means you can change songs, adjust volume, or just plain turn it off, all from your iPhone. You’ll need an Airport network, and it’s most effective when the music is being piped from your computer to a set of speakers far from the computer (otherwise, you’d just adjust things on the computer, right?).
AIM (AOL Instant
Messenger)
It has your buddy list and everything, just like iChat. And it doesn’t count against your SMS limit, if you have one. Don’t know what an SMS limit is? Send me an email and I’ll tell you.
Cube Runner
It’s a game, of all things. A game where you fly around through a world of cubes. You try to avoid smashing into the cubes, and you do it by tipping the iPhone this way and that. Amazingly fun.
Movies.app
Specify a zip code and they’ll tell you which movies are playing, and where, and when. You can even buy tickets. Just what you need, assuming you need to go to the movies.
Shazam
Hold your iPhone up to the radio and Shazam tells you the name of the song, and the artist. A couple of taps later you’re buying the song from iTunes. Incredible.
Urbanspoon
Helps you pick a restaurant. Like a slot machine, with one wheel being cities, one wheel being the kind of food, and one wheel being how much money you want to spend. Shake the iPhone to spin the wheels. When the wheels stop you’ll see a restaurant name, and when you tap the name you’ll get reviews and a map. Neat.
Remote
Lets you drive your iTunes library through the air, using your iPhone. Which means you can change songs, adjust volume, or just plain turn it off, all from your iPhone. You’ll need an Airport network, and it’s most effective when the music is being piped from your computer to a set of speakers far from the computer (otherwise, you’d just adjust things on the computer, right?).
AIM (AOL Instant
Messenger)
It has your buddy list and everything, just like iChat. And it doesn’t count against your SMS limit, if you have one. Don’t know what an SMS limit is? Send me an email and I’ll tell you.
Cube Runner
It’s a game, of all things. A game where you fly around through a world of cubes. You try to avoid smashing into the cubes, and you do it by tipping the iPhone this way and that. Amazingly fun.
Movies.app
Specify a zip code and they’ll tell you which movies are playing, and where, and when. You can even buy tickets. Just what you need, assuming you need to go to the movies.
Shazam
Hold your iPhone up to the radio and Shazam tells you the name of the song, and the artist. A couple of taps later you’re buying the song from iTunes. Incredible.
Urbanspoon
Helps you pick a restaurant. Like a slot machine, with one wheel being cities, one wheel being the kind of food, and one wheel being how much money you want to spend. Shake the iPhone to spin the wheels. When the wheels stop you’ll see a restaurant name, and when you tap the name you’ll get reviews and a map. Neat.
Blogging His Way to Millions
July 22, 2008 05:25 PM Filed under: News
I’ve been hearing (from everyone) that the guy
who runs Mac Rumors has quit his doctoring job and is
now supporting himself via his daily blogging.
Incredible. The key, of course, is traffic-- you need
to have lots of people coming to your site so you can
get advertisers interested in paying you to display
their ads. The more traffic you get, the more money
you get. Pretty simple equation.
We don’t have a lot of traffic. Not yet. But we can dream. Tell a friend to check out the Boyce Blog. Who knows, one day you may be saying “I knew him when.”
In the meantime, our advertising rates are going to be “among the most competive in their class.” Whatever that means.
We don’t have a lot of traffic. Not yet. But we can dream. Tell a friend to check out the Boyce Blog. Who knows, one day you may be saying “I knew him when.”
In the meantime, our advertising rates are going to be “among the most competive in their class.” Whatever that means.
Hickory Dickory Dock
Apple loves the Dock. Actually, I
think Steve Jobs loves the Dock. That’s one way
that you can tell us apart: Steve loves the Dock.
Plus, he’s a billionaire.
Love it or not, we’re stuck with the Dock. So here’s how to make the best of it. Start by opening up the Dock’s preferences (Apple menu/Dock/Dock Preferences...), and then...
Special Note to Friends of CBoyce (“FoCB”): it’s OK with me if you do things your own way as long as you try it my way first.
Love it or not, we’re stuck with the Dock. So here’s how to make the best of it. Start by opening up the Dock’s preferences (Apple menu/Dock/Dock Preferences...), and then...
- Turn OFF magnification. That will keep the Dock’s items from squirming around when you point at them
- Turn OFF “Automatically hide and show the Dock.” It’s easier to hit a target when you can see it. Plus, when your friendly neighborhood computer consultant comes over (ahem) he won’t have to mouse around the perimeter of your screen like a fool, trying to make the Dock appear.
- Position the Dock on the RIGHT. You ALWAYS have room to the right, and you ALWAYS run out of room at the bottom. So use what you have an excess of. (Positioning on the LEFT seems like a good idea until a window opens up and to the left... under the Dock... leaving you unable to click the close box.)
- Set the Size to LARGE. The Dock will adjust the icons to make them fit. Why squint if you don’t have to?
Special Note to Friends of CBoyce (“FoCB”): it’s OK with me if you do things your own way as long as you try it my way first.
More iPhone stuff
July 19, 2008 03:37 PM Filed under: iPhone
I hate to say that I’m disappointed in the new
iPhone, but I’m disappointed in the new iPhone.
And in the new 2.0 software. The new phone just
isn’t very much better than the old one. If you
don’t have an iPhone at all, I say go get one.
But if you have one of the original models, I say
don’t bother with the new one.
My original-model iPhone, with the 2.0 software, locks up at least once each day. It never used to. And, the synching takes forever, and when you delete something from the iPhone it mysteriously reappears when you sync, AND when you get a notification on the iPhone that there are software updates, iTunes won’t know anything about it.
This is a GREAT time to be sitting on the sidelines watching it all play out. I am sure that in a few weeks all will be well, but I can tell you that it ain’t well now. Listen to the Voice of Experience.
My original-model iPhone, with the 2.0 software, locks up at least once each day. It never used to. And, the synching takes forever, and when you delete something from the iPhone it mysteriously reappears when you sync, AND when you get a notification on the iPhone that there are software updates, iTunes won’t know anything about it.
This is a GREAT time to be sitting on the sidelines watching it all play out. I am sure that in a few weeks all will be well, but I can tell you that it ain’t well now. Listen to the Voice of Experience.
Shortcut of the day, July 16th, 2008
You can do a Google search without going to Google
first. In Safari, look for the search area at the top
right of the screen.
Type in what you’re looking for, hit Enter (or Return) on the keyboard, and there you are, a page full of search results. Sure, you can go to www.google.com and do the search there, but why bother?
Bonus Tip: there’s a tiny triangle pointing down at the far left of Safari’s search area. Click it and you’ll see the last ten things you searched for. Choose something from that list and you’ll do the search again. There’s also a “Clear Recent Searches...” option, in case you want to cover your tracks.
Double-Bonus Tip: try holding the Control key down and clicking on ANY word on a web page. A little menu appears, and one of the options is “Search in Google.” Which means that you can do a Google search without typing anything! Incredible.
Type in what you’re looking for, hit Enter (or Return) on the keyboard, and there you are, a page full of search results. Sure, you can go to www.google.com and do the search there, but why bother?
Bonus Tip: there’s a tiny triangle pointing down at the far left of Safari’s search area. Click it and you’ll see the last ten things you searched for. Choose something from that list and you’ll do the search again. There’s also a “Clear Recent Searches...” option, in case you want to cover your tracks.
Double-Bonus Tip: try holding the Control key down and clicking on ANY word on a web page. A little menu appears, and one of the options is “Search in Google.” Which means that you can do a Google search without typing anything! Incredible.
iPhone 3G
July 16, 2008 12:53 PM Filed under: iPhone
I don’t have one yet. Based on what I’ve
read, I don’t really need one. The 3G network
is nicely fast, when you can get it to work.
I’ve read about a lot of people being surprised
(disappointed) that 3G doesn’t seem to be in
effect in their area even though AT&T’s map
says it is. I don’t need that.
I know it’s “only” $200, but I’d still have to go to the store to get it, AND the service plan costs more ($10 more) per month. If I didn’t have an iPhone already I’d run out and get the 3G right now. But since I already have one... I’m in no hurry. The old one, once upgraded to the 2.0 software, is just as capable.
Advice: watch for used first-edition iPhones on eBay etc. I would guess that you could get one for $100.
I know it’s “only” $200, but I’d still have to go to the store to get it, AND the service plan costs more ($10 more) per month. If I didn’t have an iPhone already I’d run out and get the 3G right now. But since I already have one... I’m in no hurry. The old one, once upgraded to the 2.0 software, is just as capable.
Advice: watch for used first-edition iPhones on eBay etc. I would guess that you could get one for $100.
iPhone 2.0 software
July 16, 2008 12:44 PM Filed under: iPhone
Well, it’s here: the new 2.0 software for the
iPhone. It comes installed on the new iPhone 3G, but
it can be downloaded for free and installed on ANY
iPhone. So I did it. You should too.
You get a couple of improvements:
1. It’s easier to delete a bunch of emails now.
2. Your iPhone now synchronizes through the air, so when you make a change to your iCal or Address Book it shows up on your iPhone without you having to connect with a cord
3. You get access to the new Apple iPhone Application Store, available through iTunes. Which means you can add programs to your iPhone without having to hack it.
My favorite free applications: a reader for the New York Times, and the Mobile News reader (which can be customized to show news stories for your favorite locations). I also like the talking Spanish-English phrase book from lastminute.com, and AOL’s AIM (instant messenger) which knows your buddy list and saves you money because the text messages you send do not count as “SMS” messages, which you pay for through AT&T.
Would you believe that there is still no copy and paste, that it still takes three taps to get to the brightness adjustment (and then two more, at least, to get back to where you were), and that there’s no voice-dialing? Not good. But what you get, you get for free, so I say get it.
You get a couple of improvements:
1. It’s easier to delete a bunch of emails now.
2. Your iPhone now synchronizes through the air, so when you make a change to your iCal or Address Book it shows up on your iPhone without you having to connect with a cord
3. You get access to the new Apple iPhone Application Store, available through iTunes. Which means you can add programs to your iPhone without having to hack it.
My favorite free applications: a reader for the New York Times, and the Mobile News reader (which can be customized to show news stories for your favorite locations). I also like the talking Spanish-English phrase book from lastminute.com, and AOL’s AIM (instant messenger) which knows your buddy list and saves you money because the text messages you send do not count as “SMS” messages, which you pay for through AT&T.
Would you believe that there is still no copy and paste, that it still takes three taps to get to the brightness adjustment (and then two more, at least, to get back to where you were), and that there’s no voice-dialing? Not good. But what you get, you get for free, so I say get it.
If I were you
I would never let my Mac sleep. Let
the screen go black but keep the machine up and
alive. Waking up from sleep has been a problem for
Apple over the years-- sometimes machines won’t
wake up at all, sometimes their
keyboards/mice/printers won’t work, sometimes
other problems. If you are connected to another
machine (file sharing, or maybe a remote database)
going to sleep will drop the connection, causing
inconvenience at the least and maybe even data loss.
So do it my way. Go to the Energy Saver Preference Pane (Apple menu, System Preferences, Energy Saver)
and tell it you NEVER want the computer to sleep. Do what you want with the SCREEN sleeping (this will turn the screen black-- in between, you’ll see the Screen SAVER, which is a different affair altogether), but DON’T set screen sleeping to Never. You don’t want the screen to show the same picture forever because it’s hard on the screen.
So do it my way. Go to the Energy Saver Preference Pane (Apple menu, System Preferences, Energy Saver)
and tell it you NEVER want the computer to sleep. Do what you want with the SCREEN sleeping (this will turn the screen black-- in between, you’ll see the Screen SAVER, which is a different affair altogether), but DON’T set screen sleeping to Never. You don’t want the screen to show the same picture forever because it’s hard on the screen.
Shortcut of the day, July 10th, 2008
I love football, part 1 (of hundreds)
I love football, and I especially like the
“glamour” games on Monday Night, Sunday
Night, and now Thursday Night. I thought it would be
handy to have the NFL Prime Time schedule in my
iPhone’s calendar, so I got the info from
NFL.com and massaged it into an iCal calendar (which
then uploads to my iPhone when I sync). You can have
the calendar without doing the work: just click the
link below.
webcal://ical.mac.com/christianboyce/NFL%20Primetime%202008.ics
webcal://ical.mac.com/christianboyce/NFL%20Primetime%202008.ics
iPhone 3G musings
July 08, 2008 02:36 PM Filed under: iPhone
You probably know that Apple is coming out with a new
iPhone, the “iPhone 3G,” this Friday. It
looks like the original iPhone. It’s actually a
little thicker. It costs less to buy, but the service
costs more. What’s a guy with an original
iPhone to do?
Here’s what I’m going to do.
1. Download the FREE iPhone 2.0 software update on Friday July 10th. That will give my “old” iPhone new capabilities, and I’d tell you all about them here except that I don’t know what they are. Wait until Friday.
2. Fool around with the old iPhone and the new software. Maybe buy some stuff from Apple’s new “iPhone App” store, online, available via iTunes.
3. Wait for the lines to go away at the Apple store, then get the iPhone 3G.
4. Give “old” iPhone to newphew Spencer, assuming I can squeeze a few buckos out of his parents. The thing cost me $599, remember.
Here’s what I’m going to do.
1. Download the FREE iPhone 2.0 software update on Friday July 10th. That will give my “old” iPhone new capabilities, and I’d tell you all about them here except that I don’t know what they are. Wait until Friday.
2. Fool around with the old iPhone and the new software. Maybe buy some stuff from Apple’s new “iPhone App” store, online, available via iTunes.
3. Wait for the lines to go away at the Apple store, then get the iPhone 3G.
4. Give “old” iPhone to newphew Spencer, assuming I can squeeze a few buckos out of his parents. The thing cost me $599, remember.
Shortcut of the day, July 6th, 2008
Hit the Escape key (esc, at top left of keyboard)
instead of mousing to and clicking on the
“Cancel” button in any dialog box.
Bonus Shortcut: Enter (or Return)
almost always clicks the default button (the one with
the heavier border) in a dialog box.
Double-Bonus Shortcut: Command-D
almost always clicks the “Don’t
Save” button.
Shortcut of the day, July 4th 2008
Command-click links in Safari to open them in new
tabs. Here’s a link to practice with.
Command-click it, and look near the top of your
Safari window. You’ll see two
“tabs” and you can click back and
forth between them. Neater and cleaner than
opening separate windows.
