Monday, February 16, 2009
Fonts Too Small in Apple Mail?
1. Quit Mail
2. Open the Terminal and type in the following:
defaults write com.apple.mail MinimumHTMLFontSize 12
3. Restart Mail.app and your HTML messages are readable.
You don't have to choose 12 point. Select whatever you like.
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Thursday, February 12, 2009
Apple Mac Mini DisplayPort to HDMI adapters
But that left people with new unibody Macbooks (released from October 2008) without a way to output to their perfectly good monitors and TVs. (Hey we spent good money on our LG, Dell and Samsung HDTV monitors, Mr Jobs.)
Soon those with newer Apple Macbooks and Macbook Pros sporting the Mini DisplayPort will have an easy way to output video to their HDMI LCD screen or TV.
American discount cable website Monoprice.com will sell the Mini DisplayPort to HDMI adapters for $14.25 from 15 March.
And if you have a desire to connect your shiny new Mac laptop to a monitor or TV with a DVI or VGA input but have balked at Apple's $29 price tag for such a device, then you're in luck. Another two new offerings will convert the Mini DisplayPort signal for DVI or VGA but at half the asking price of Apple's adapters.
TIP:
In the meantime, if you need a quick and dirty workaround to get Mini DisplayPort to HDMI, try a Mini DisplayPort to DVI adapter piggybacked to a DVI to HDMI cable. But be ready to fork out the cash for two adapters to end up with some nasty looking plastic.
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Friday, February 6, 2009
Log out Gmail sessions remotely
Little known fact: Gmail does NOT time out. Gmail sessions will stay open until you log out, even if you have another session open.
The problem:
Here's a scenario: you open your Google Mail and check your emails at a computer at work but forget to log out. Later at home, you check your Gmail again and log out.
The session at work is STILL OPEN. It will stay open until it is logged, even if that is years. If somebody doesn't delete or send anything, you will never know that the session is still open.
GMail does not have the option to set a time out. What Gmail has is a little-known ability to log out sessions remotely. That means, in the above scenario, you can go home and log out the session at work. You can also check to see what sessions have been opened and where. Learn how to keep safe online with these instructions.
How to log out Gmail remotely:
At the bottom of your list of emails is a line that says something like:
Last account activity: 1 minute ago at this IP (XX.XX.XX.XX) Details
Click on the word Details
You will be taken to a window that shows all your recent Google Mail activity. You can check to see if the IP address is all the same (and therefore from the same computer, as long as you have a static IP address).
To sign out remotely, click on the button Sign out all other sessions.
You can now breathe easily knowing the open Gmail session is the one in front of you.
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Tuesday, January 27, 2009
iLife 09 released today (iPhoto 09, iMovie 09, GarageBand 09, iWeb 09, iDVD 09)
Apple today released iLife'09, which is a software package that includes the updated iPhoto '09, GarageBand '09, iWeb '09, iDVD '09 and iMovie '09. I'll take an in-depth look at iPhoto '09 as soon as I put it through its paces, but for now, take a look at what's new.
'iLife continues to be one of the biggest reasons our customers choose to get a Mac,' said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, before he went for a long lie down.
'With iLife ’09, we’ve made working with photos, making movies and learning to play music a lot more fun, and iMovie users are especially going to love the advanced but easy-to-use new features.'
iPhoto ’09 adds face detection. This looks like one of those novelty features that will waste away hours of your time as you help iPhoto to recognise who is who in your iPhoto album. It also adds GPS geo-tagging.
iMovie ’09 adds a Precision Editor, video stabilisation, advanced drag and drop, and animated travel maps.
GarageBand ’09 introduces a new way to help you learn to play piano and guitar with 18 basic lessons and optional lessons from top musicians such as Sara Bareilles, John Fogerty, Norah Jones and Sting.
New integrated FTP publishing allows you to publish your website to virtually any hosting service and updates to your site can now be automatically added to your Facebook profile. (Check out some other great Mac Facebook plugins in our reviews.)
iLife ’09 is yours for $79/£69 or free if you buy a new Mac from today.
If you bought a Mac on or after January 6, 2009 you can get an iLife ’09 upgrade for a $9.99/£7.95 delivery fee.
iLife ’09 requires Mac OS X version 10.5.6 or later.
Take a look at the iLife ’09 video tutorials. There are 70 of them and they really give you a good idea of whether iLife '09 is a worthwhile upgrade.
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Monday, January 26, 2009
Reviews: Mac Facebook plugins
Want to share your photos on Facebook easily on a Mac? Want to know what your friends are up to blow by blow? (OK, that sounds more like Twitter, so maybe day-by-day.) Just download these free Mac OS X plugins and you can lose even more hours lost in a Facebook loop.
Facebook Exporter for iPhoto
Mac Brainiac Rating
Download Now (191K) Developer: Facebook
Clever:
Made by Facebook
Works well when it works.
Stupid:
Can be buggy
Not necessary with iPhoto'09.
This free plugin for iPhoto enables you to export photos (with tags) directly to your Facebook account. Though if you have iPhoto'09, this feature is now built-in.
Mac Brainiac rating
Download Now (1.1MB) Developer: Paul Borokhov
Discreet and simple
Quick access to Facebook
Keeps in sync with Facebook.
Unstable in Leopard.
This free Mac program integrates itself into the menu bar and brings up cool Growl notifications about Facebook events.
You can also access common Facebook pages and see how many messages you have. Not to mention how many events, pokes, friend requests, photo comments and wall posts. (Oops, I just mentioned it.) It's fast and scans Facebook for what's new every 30 seconds.
FacebookWidget
Mac Brainiac rating
Download Now (49K) Developer: Ed-Shiro
This widget is made to live in your Mac OS X dashboard. It keeps you up to date with all the usual Facebook notifications such as pokes, messages, friend requests, group invites, and event invites.
Facebook Toolbar for Firefox
Mac Brainiac rating
Download Now Developer: Mozilla Firefox
This free extension for Firefox brings Facebook into your web browsing. You can look up and see how many new pokes, friend requests, and messages you have next to the little pictured icons. A pop-up will notify you when your friends update their statuses or write something to you.
The most interesting feature is the share button, which lets you share the page that you are currently browsing by sending it to friends or posting it to your profile.
FacebookSync
Mac Brainiac rating
Download Now Developer: FSB Software
Clever:
Address Book contact photos are synced.
Stupid:
Doesn't always work!
This application syncs your Apple Address Book with your Facebook account. What does that mean? All your contacts' details are kept matching: names, addresses, email addresses, telephone numbers and even photos.
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Firefox: use tabs as multiple home pages
Have a group of tabs open by default when you launch Firefox.
Go to Firefox > Preferences > Main
under 'Home Page' enter the addresses of the pages you'd like to launch every time you start Firefox. Separate each web address with the pipe symbol (which looks like this |)
Eghttp://www.macbrainiac.blogspot.com|www.apple.com
Another way to do this:
You can also simply open up all the tabs you want to launch automatically as your homepage and in Firefox preferences (again Firefox > Preferences > Main) select 'Use Current Pages'
What groups of tabs do you have set up? Let me know in the comments.
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Windows 7 with VMWare Fusion on Macbook white
Clever: Works off Boot Camp installation without installing a different copy.
Stupid: Unusably slow on a non-pro Macbook.
My experiences:
Although it loads eventually, it is sloooooowww. When I boot to Windows 7 directly (without Fusion) the system is usable and runs nearly as fast as a Windows XP box, but booting up in Fusion is filled with black screens and the spinning blue disc thing from Vista. It also drags down Mac OSX.
When you first boot up, you're asked to update with VMWare Tools. This helped the mouse pointer and graphics speed a little, but it is still like operating Windows 3.1 standing in treacle (ah, memories).
My measly 1GB RAM is no way enough for Windows 7 because Fusion shares that RAM with Mac OSX, cutting it down to 512MB.
Mac Brainiac verdict: Running Windows 7 on a vanilla Macbook through VMWare Fusion is only recommended for those with more RAM and processor grunt. However, Windows 7 runs smoothly on a Macbook with Boot Camp. Windows XP is also happy to run side-by-side with Mac OSX with Fusion.
What I used: I installed Windows 7 beta build 7000 on my Macbook white first generation 1.83GHz Intel with 1GB RAM.
I used VMWare Fusion 2.0.1 to run Windows 7 virtually from within Mac OSX Leopard 10.5.6.
Share your experiences with running Windows 7 on a Mac in the comments below, but make sure you leave your machine's specs.
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