Today, Apple, worth $120B, passed Google, worth $119B.
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Friday, August 31, 2007
Sunday, August 26, 2007
"Never Get Out of the Boat." - Apocalypse Now
"Never delete Safari." - Joe Moreno
Sounds obvious, but I never considered how important Safari is on Mac OS X (or having at least one Web browser) - especially since Mac OS X doesn't ship with any other Web browser.
Something happened to my father-in-law's iMac and Safari went missing. They're not sure if maybe they deleted it and emptied the trash or if the 10.4.10 update failed.
Regardless of how it happened - Safari was gone.
I tried, unsuccessfully, to
I was pretty stumped - I wanted to solve this problem right there on the spot without going home and downloading a DMG to a thumb drive.
As luck would have it, earlier that day, I had downloaded and installed both Safari 3.0b (public beta) and Firefox on one of my servers back home so I AFP'd into the servers and pulled the DMGs out of the trash.
So, I expected the story to end there after downloading both Web browsers. But, for some odd reason, only Firefox would install and run. Safari 3.0b installed couldn't be installed on the 10.4.10 volume. Well, at least having any Web browser is better than none - and Firefox isn't a bad one to have.
Once Firefox was installed I went to apple.com/safari and re-downloaded Safari 3.0b but it still wouldn't install. The installer simply said that Safari couldn't be installed on the Macintosh HD volume. So, I looked for Safari 2 to download. It seems that Apple not longer offers Safari 2.x as a download??? - only 2.x updates are available or the public beta of Safari 3.0.
Since my father-in-law was used to the Safari UI I downloaded Webkit and tried to install that. But, Webkit doesn't work without Safari. So, I manually copied the Safari 3.0b app onto my father-in-law's computer, via AFP, from my server. Although the Safari 3.0b app wouldn't run (it just bounced and then crashed with an undefined symbol error) it was enough to get Webkit up and running. Webkit was now working but not Safari - very odd.
I still wasn't satisfied so I manually downloaded System/Frameworks/WebKit.framework but that didn't fix the problem.
In the end, I remembered that I still had a server with Safari 2.04 and I manually copied that app to my father-in-law's computer and all seems to be working well.
Two questions come to mind:
Why couldn't I install Safari 3.0b on a 10.4.10 iMac?
Does Apple still offer Safari 2.x as a full download?
[digg this]
Sounds obvious, but I never considered how important Safari is on Mac OS X (or having at least one Web browser) - especially since Mac OS X doesn't ship with any other Web browser.
Something happened to my father-in-law's iMac and Safari went missing. They're not sure if maybe they deleted it and emptied the trash or if the 10.4.10 update failed.
Regardless of how it happened - Safari was gone.
I tried, unsuccessfully, to
curl
apple.com/safari to get the URL for their download page but I gave up after about 30 minutes of parsing HTML and redirects with my eyes.I was pretty stumped - I wanted to solve this problem right there on the spot without going home and downloading a DMG to a thumb drive.
As luck would have it, earlier that day, I had downloaded and installed both Safari 3.0b (public beta) and Firefox on one of my servers back home so I AFP'd into the servers and pulled the DMGs out of the trash.
So, I expected the story to end there after downloading both Web browsers. But, for some odd reason, only Firefox would install and run. Safari 3.0b installed couldn't be installed on the 10.4.10 volume. Well, at least having any Web browser is better than none - and Firefox isn't a bad one to have.
Once Firefox was installed I went to apple.com/safari and re-downloaded Safari 3.0b but it still wouldn't install. The installer simply said that Safari couldn't be installed on the Macintosh HD volume. So, I looked for Safari 2 to download. It seems that Apple not longer offers Safari 2.x as a download??? - only 2.x updates are available or the public beta of Safari 3.0.
Since my father-in-law was used to the Safari UI I downloaded Webkit and tried to install that. But, Webkit doesn't work without Safari. So, I manually copied the Safari 3.0b app onto my father-in-law's computer, via AFP, from my server. Although the Safari 3.0b app wouldn't run (it just bounced and then crashed with an undefined symbol error) it was enough to get Webkit up and running. Webkit was now working but not Safari - very odd.
I still wasn't satisfied so I manually downloaded System/Frameworks/WebKit.framework but that didn't fix the problem.
In the end, I remembered that I still had a server with Safari 2.04 and I manually copied that app to my father-in-law's computer and all seems to be working well.
Two questions come to mind:
Why couldn't I install Safari 3.0b on a 10.4.10 iMac?
Does Apple still offer Safari 2.x as a full download?
[digg this]
Saturday, August 18, 2007
Midlife Crisis
On my 40th birthday (Aug 4) I jumped out of a plane from two miles above Long Island. Accompanying me were my mother (actually, it was her idea to go) and my wife.
Labels:
Life
Friday, August 17, 2007
Saturday, August 11, 2007
Mom Skydiving (Not bad for 72 years old)
August 4, 2007 - East Moriches: Two miles above Long Island:
Friday, August 10, 2007
Three Years of Windows Uptime
I have an old Windows NT machine running a mail server which I only use when the main mail server goes down.
I couldn't remember the last time I rebooted it so I checked its uptime tonight:
26,850 hours of uptime.
Click to enlarge
Full screenshot:
digg this
I couldn't remember the last time I rebooted it so I checked its uptime tonight:
26,850 hours of uptime.
Full screenshot:
digg this
Labels:
Windows
Monday, August 6, 2007
Blood Chit
What happens when you're shot down over enemy territory? U.S. Service Members carry what is known as a Blood Chit. Blood Chits have been around for centuries.
Basically, it's a notice, written in several languages, that members of the armed forces can present to local nationals in order to receive assistance. In return for the assistance the service member will tear off a corner of the Blood Chit which has a specific serial number that the local national can turn in for a reward.
Blood Chit from one of my flights.
(Click to enlarge)
digg this
Basically, it's a notice, written in several languages, that members of the armed forces can present to local nationals in order to receive assistance. In return for the assistance the service member will tear off a corner of the Blood Chit which has a specific serial number that the local national can turn in for a reward.
(Click to enlarge)
digg this
Labels:
USMC
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