Thursday, October 29, 2009

Snow Leopard (OS 10.6 ) is HERE! My findings...


From Neighbors Paper Issue 87, Oct 09

Usually when a major update is released I’m not willing to jump on board right away as I don’t need to tell you there are usually lots of compatibility issues. But Snow leopard was not considered a major update so for some reason I decided to take the plunge and install it.

Everything seemed ok, at least at the beginning. But as I began to use 10.6 I noticed several of my apps didn’t work. Apple says:

Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard is designed to protect your Mac from certain incompatible software that can quit unexpectedly or cause other issues in Mac OS X v10.6.

When you install Snow Leopard or migrate to Snow Leopard, known-incompatible software is moved to a folder named Incompatible Software on your hard drive.

Snow Leopard also prevents known-incompatible software from opening. If you see an "Incompatible software" message, contact the software's vendor or visit their website for a later, compatible version.

Snow Leopard moves known-incompatible software such as; Parallels Desktop, VirusScan, Norton AntiVirus, Internet Cleanup 5, Application Enhancer, AT&T Laptop Connect Card, launch2net, iWOW plug-in for iTunes, Missing Sync for Palm Sony CLIE Driver, TonePort UX8 Driver, ioHD Driver, and Silicon Image SiI3132 Drivers to a folder named Incompatible Software at the root level of the hard drive.

You will need to check the vendor’s website to see if there’s an update.

The biggest problem I’m hearing about Snow Leopard is printer compatibility. My Epson Photo R280 did not work properly after the upgrade. A quick visit to Epson’s website and I found an update to fix the problem. I downloaded and installed the update but the problem remained. At this point I tried the old tried and true “fix” which was to uninstall the old drivers and reinstall the new download from Epson. It worked. However Epson failed to mention this little trick to all it’s adoring users.

How do you uninstall a printer driver you ask? In the blue Apple icon menu open your System Preferences, then click on the Print and Fax icon. It will open a new window called Print and Fax so from here on the left side of the pane you should see a list of printers that your mac can access. Click on the printer you’d like to uninstall, then click the “-” minus (subtract) button just below. You just removed the old driver and printer connection.

Although it’s usually not required, I like to restart the mac and this point with the printer off. Once it’s up and running fine, turn on the printer making sure it’s connected via USB (or ethernet). (Sometimes I noticed HP printers like to be on before the mac boots, especially older HP printers connected to older Macs.)

Now go ahead and install the latest printer driver software from the vendor’s website. Follow the prompts if there are any. Now let’s go back to add the printer if it’s not there.

Again, in the blue Apple icon menu open your System Preferences, then click on the Print and Fax icon. It will open a new window called Print and Fax so from here on the left side of the pane you should see a list of printers. If your printer is there, you are done. Try printing something.

If not, click on “+” plus (add) button just below. Be patient as you’ll see some messages about searching for driver... Keep in mind most printers are bundled with some kind of print interface or multi-purpose software that scans , prints and performs all sorts of output options like printing 3 up on a sheet of paper or making greeting cards. Be sure this software is updated and compatible with the system you are using.

While I’m at it there’s a special considerations for you when buy a new printer. Never install the CD software that comes with the printer. You should first go to the company's website and check to what the latest software is for your printer. The CD in the box is probably ancient.

To see what printers are compatible with OS 10.6 see:

http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3669

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Snow Leopard (OS 10.6 ) is HERE!


From Neighbors Paper Issue 86, Sept 09

Surprise! OS 10.6 Snow Leopard has been released early—today, August 28! I am very excited about Snow Leopard, even though Apple is not heavily promoting its launch with pre-press, etc.

Snow Leopard is designed to make day-to-day tasks on your Mac easier, faster and more accessible. It delivers a wide range of enhancements, next-generation technologies, out-of-the-box support for Microsoft Exchange Server, and new accessibility features. Snow Leopard is the most powerful and refined version of Mac OS X ever.

Our Favorite Features

Some of the most exciting new features and overall system enhancements in OS 10.6 Snow Leopard include:

64-bit support, the next big step for the Mac. All key system applications are now 64-bit so they can take advantage of all the memory in your Mac. Translation: Your applications will run faster...

Out-of-the-box support for Microsoft Exchange. Mac OS X Snow Leopard delivers built-in support for the latest version of Microsoft Exchange Server, something even Windows PCs don’t have.

Smaller footprint. Snow Leopard takes up less than half the disk space of the previous version, freeing about 7GB for you—enough for about 1,750 more songs or a few thousand more photos.

The Finder has been completely rewritten using Cocoa to take advantage of the new technologies in Snow Leopard, including 64-bit support and Grand Central Dispatch. It’s more responsive from top to bottom, with snappier performance throughout the Finder.

Quicker Time Machine backup. Snow Leopard makes Time Machine up to 80 percent faster and reduces the time it takes to complete your initial backup to Time Capsule. (Time Capsule is Apple’s backup hard drive.)

Faster to wake up and shut down. Your Mac wakes from sleep up to twice as quickly when you have screen locking enabled. And shutting down is up to 80 percent faster.

QuickTime X: As the next generation of media players, it’s built on new core technologies and advances modern media and Internet standards.

More efficient file sharing.

Multi-Touch gestures in older Mac models. All Mac notebooks with Multi-Touch trackpads now support three- and four-finger gestures.

A new technology called Grand Central Dispatch takes full advantage of multicore systems by making all of Mac OS X multicore aware and optimizing it for allocating tasks across multiple cores and processors.

Universal Access: Every Mac comes with built-in technologies designed to help people with disabilities experience it. Innovations in Snow Leopard advance accessibility even further..

How to Purchase and Upgrade to OS 10.6 Snow Leopard

Snow Leopard is an upgrade for Leopard users and requires a Mac computer (duh) with an Intel processor, 1GB of memory (though at least 2GB is highly recommended), 5GB of available disk space, and a DVD drive for installation.

If you’ve purchased a qualifying Mac or Xserve on or after June 8, 2009 that didn’t include Mac OS X Snow Leopard, you can upgrade to Snow Leopard for $9.95 exclusively from Apple via the Mac OS X Up-to-Date Program.

If you have OS 10.5 Leopard installed on a Mac purchased before June 8, 2009, you can upgrade to the Snow Leopard Single User Edition, on sale for $29.99.

If you have multiple Macs running OS 10.5 Leopard, you can upgrade to Snow Leopard with the Snow Leopard Family Pack. This can be installed on up to five Macs and is on sale for $49.99.

If you have Mac OS 10.4 Tiger or earlier, the only way to upgrade to Snow Leopard is with the Snow Leopard Mac Box Set. This includes OS 10.6 Snow Leopard, along with iWork ’09 and iLife ’09. Purchasing those separately would cost $289! See the Snow Leopard Mac Box Set on sale for $169.99.

Amazon.com has some great deals on Snow Leopard (last I saw it was $29 shipped) and also Best Buy had the upgrade for $25 with in store pickup. They were sold out so they shipped it for free...

Be sure to tune in next month about how I lost 3,000 pictures from my iPhoto library using the critically hailed “fail safe” back up utility called Time Machine. Yes even backing up isn’t fool proof. I’ll tell you how it happened and how you can prevent it.
Learn from my emotionally costly mistakes next month...