Maybe You Ain’t So Different After All
Friday, March 14th, 2008 9:51 AMExpansion on Craig Hockenberry’s comparison of iTunes Store partnerships and App Store partnerships.
spontaneous expressions of mediocrity
Expansion on Craig Hockenberry’s comparison of iTunes Store partnerships and App Store partnerships.
I haven’t been able to access my Google Calendar in Safari for nearly two months. I probably spent about 20 to 40 minutes a week over the past few months trying to track down the cause or a fix. Today I finally found the solution in the Google Calendar Help Group. It was posted on January 29th of this year. I don’t know why it took me so long to find. I looked pretty hard.
Hold down the command key, click and drag the icon off of the menu bar, and let go. Poof.
My buddy Ivan and I ditched out on work at the last minuted yesterday and tooted down to San Francisco for Macworld. We missed out last year. Both of us had started new jobs and were wary of bringing up the subject of a frivolous day off to our employers. That was completely lame, though. Since both of us actually use, and make/help make purchasing recommendations for just the kinds of things they hock at Macworld, there is an actual professional benefit to us going. So we did, and these are my impressions of the things we saw.
After ditching out on work yesterday, I came in to find my desk all rearranged …
What is the purpose of syncing your data? What is the definition of sync?
I can’t live without xScope. I use it every single day. It greatly increases my productivity and it is a pleasure to use. It does everything I want it to do, and there isn’t anything that I wish it did that it currently doesn’t.
Hoorah! I finally brought my household into the 21st century. A brand new shiny iMac is blazing bright in the corner of our living room. It replaces a dual 800MHz PowerMac G4 Qucksilver that was the super hotness back in 1999 or something.
I installed Leopard on my MacBook today. It took two hours to make a full clone my hard drive. It took two hours to run the upgrade. It took two hours for me to realize there was no way in hell I was going to get MySQL running today.
I estimate two hours for my Tiger restore to complete.
Do two 800 MHz PowerPC processors count collectively against a single 867 MHz PowerPC system requirement? In Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, 800*2 != 1600.