Simulate Internet Connection & Bandwidth Speeds with Network Link Conditioner in Mac OS X

Aug 10, 2011 - 10 Comments

Network Link Conditioner

A recent addition to Mac OS X and modern versions of Xcode development tools is a utility called Network Link Conditioner, a highly customizable tool that lets you simulate a variety of common internet connectivity speeds.

The utility is aimed at Mac and iOS developers so they can test their apps response times on a variety of network conditions, but it’s also extremely useful for IT admins, network administrators, and web developers. Basically anyone who needs to simulate any specific internet connection speed can benefit from the utility, and it’s a free download available from Apple.

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By William Pearson - Development, Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 10 Comments

MenuPop Gives Instant Access to Application Menus from Anywhere

Aug 9, 2011 - 3 Comments

MenuPop

Ever wish you could access an applications menubar immediately, from anywhere? MenuPop fulfills this desire, activating an apps menu from anywhere with the click of a hot key or mouse cursor, by creating a contextual menu out of the main menu. This means you can access the Apple  menu, File, Edit, everything, instantly from a quick shortcut.

MenuPop is a great tool especially for Mac users with multiple displays, because once you set the primary display, the menubar sticks on that screen only. It’s also very handy if you spend a lot of time in OS X Lion’s full screen apps. Less moving the cursor means more productivity, and plus it’s free to download, so why not give it a try?

Download MenuPop from the Mac App Store – free August 9 only, otherwise $4.99

The app works fine in nearly all applications in Mac OS X 10.6 and OS X 10.7, and you can adjust the font size of the popup menu to accomodate your preferences. It’s fairly customizable, so be sure to check out the preferences to get a feel for the apps abilities.

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By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 3 Comments

Apple is Now the Worlds Most Valuable Company

Aug 9, 2011 - 5 Comments

AAPL vs XOM

Apple’s market capitalization reached $341.5 billion today in trading, becoming the worlds largest and most valuable company. Apples new position in the top spot just barely edges out oil giant Exxon Mobil’s $341.4 billion, and is more of a function of the skittish behavior on Wall Street than any particular news today since both stocks are down quite a ways from their 52-week highs. Nonetheless, this is quite an amazing feat for a company that was just $7.68 a share a decade ago and on the verge of bankruptcy.

If you really want shareholder envy, check out what your net worth would be if you had invested in Apple stock rather than buying Apple equipment.

Just look at Apple’s 10 year chart when compared to cash-cow Exxon:
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By William Pearson - News - 5 Comments

Fix MacBook Pro 2010 Crashes, Kernel Panics, & Black Screens in OS X 10.7 Lion

Aug 9, 2011 - 104 Comments

Kernel Panic OS X Lion

A fair amount of MacBook Pro 2010 (and some 2011) users are reporting stability issues with their NVIDIA 330M equipped Macs and Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, with problems including kernel panics, random system crashes, blank or black screens, inability to wake from sleep, external displays not working, and assorted other headaches.

The Macs most affected by this seem to be the MacBook Pro 15″ and 17″ with Core i5 and Core i7 CPU’s and the switchable Intel HD 3000 and NVIDIA 330M GPU, with the majority of problems triggered once the NVIDIA GPU is activated. An attempted workaround has been to use gfxCardStatus to force Mac OS X to always use the Intel 3000 GPU, but that is not considered a consistently reliable solution.

The issues have been annoying enough for some users to downgrade back to 10.6 Snow Leopard until an official fix comes from Apple, but before you do that, try out this fix sent in by one of our readers.
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By William Pearson - Mac OS, Troubleshooting - 104 Comments

Redsn0w 0.9.8b5 Released to Jailbreak iOS 5 Beta 5

Aug 9, 2011 - Leave a Comment

redsn0w 0.9.8b5 The iPhone Dev Team has released Redsn0w 0.9.8b5 to jailbreak iOS 5 beta 5, the jailbreak is intended only for developers who want to assure their Cydia apps work fine in the newest iOS beta, and neither iOS 5 beta or this version of redsn0w are intended for widespread consumption. Supported hardware includes iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPod touch 3rd and 4th gen, and iPad 1.

Download Redsn0w 0.9.8b5

These are direct download links:

Point redsn0w directly at the beta 5 IPSW file and proceed with everything else as usual.

Understand the difference between a tethered vs untethered jailbreak, but in short you will need to connect your iOS hardware to a computer upon every reboot of the device. There are also various reports of quirkiness when attempting to SSH into the iOS device, iBooks and other apps may crash, some Cydia apps cause Springboard to refresh, and there is other behavior that is characteristic of an unfinished beta release, further emphasizing this is not yet ready for widespread adoption.

By Matt Chan - iPad, iPhone - Leave a Comment

Lion Recovery Disk Assistant Tool Makes External Lion Boot Recovery Drives

Aug 8, 2011 - 22 Comments

Lion Recovery Disk Assistant

Apple has released Lion Recovery Disk Assistant, a small utility that provides the ability to create an external bootable recovery drive for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion. This should quell some of the complaints from users who didn’t want to make a Lion USB install drive or boot DVD, or who were otherwise unsatisfied with the Lion Recovery HD partition because it existed on the same boot disk.

Even if you made your own Lion boot disk, it’s a good idea to create one of these Recovery disks as a troubleshooting tool.

Requirements to use Lion Recovery Disk Assistant:

  • Mac running OS X 10.7 Lion with an existing Recovery HD partition – if you have installed Mac OS X Lion you have this
  • An external USB hard drive or flash drive with at least 1GB of free disk space to hold the Recovery drive

You can download Lion Recovery Disk Assistant now (direct link) or check out Apple’s support page for the tool

Creating the Lion Recovery Disk

This is very easy, after you have downloaded the utility:

  • Plug a USB flash drive or external hard drive into your Mac
  • Launch Recovery Disk Assistant and select the drive
  • Wait about 5 minutes to copy the Recovery HD data over to the disk

When it’s done you’ll see this screen:
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Mac Wi-Fi Dropping? Use a Simple Keepalive Bash Script to Maintain Wireless Connection

Aug 8, 2011 - 49 Comments

Mac Wi-Fi Keepalive Script

Many users who upgraded to Mac OS X Lion discovered that their Wi-Fi connections were dropping periodically for no apparent reason. We published a reasonably thorough walkthrough with tips on fixing OS X Lion’s wireless dropping issues and that’s a recommended starting point because most tips are easy and less complicated, but among those was a trick to maintain data transfer by pinging an IP address.

The keepalive ping technique seems to work, but it turns out you don’t need to ping an external IP, you can also just occasionally ping your local wifi access point. With this in mind, we’re going to create a simple keepalive script that will run from the command line and ping your router every 5 seconds, allowing the wifi connection to maintain itself and prevent a drop.

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Quickly Display Invisible Files in Mac OS X with Bifocals

Aug 8, 2011 - 8 Comments

Show Invisible Files quickly with Bifocals for Mac OS X

The problem with traditional solutions like a defaults write command to show hidden files in Mac OS X is that they’re permanent unless another defaults write command is executed, this isn’t a big deal for some users but if you just want a quick glance at invisible files than busting out the command line is a pain. This is where apps like Bifocals come in, it sits in your menubar and shows hidden files when the eye icon is clicked, and hides them when it’s not. That simple.

Download Bifocals for free from Github, it’s open source if you want to peak at the code too.

Bifocals works a lot like Caffeine in that it’s activated only when clicked, there’s no other function to the menubar utility. If you are looking for a few more features than just showing and hiding files, DesktopUtility is a free menubar utility that also includes the ability to quickly show invisible files, in addition to hiding and showing the desktop, showing the user library (great for OS X Lion), and force empty the Trash.

This little app was found in our comments, thanks for the heads up!

Update: The app kills the Finder, so when you activate it your app focus may switch in the process. If you decide you don’t want Bifocals anymore, you can remove it from your menu bar by killing Bifocals in Activity Monitor, or just typing ‘killall Bifocals” from the command line. You’ll also want to remove the app from your Login Items, located in System Preferences > Users & Groups > Login Items. Ideally the developer will update the app with a simple removal tool, but until then those steps are easy enough.

By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 8 Comments

Create a New Folder Containing Selected Items in Mac OS X

Aug 7, 2011 - 13 Comments

You can make new folders containing selected files in Mac

You can now select any number of files from the Mac OS X desktop or a folder and create a new folder containing those selected items.

This is a wildly useful Finder trick for file management and organization, since you can quickly group a collection of files by selecting however many you want to within Finder, then quickly create a folder containing only those selected files or folders.

Making new directories of chosen files is super easy on the Mac, we’ll show you three different methods to create new folders containing selected files (or folders) within Finder on Mac OS.
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By William Pearson - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 13 Comments

Fix a Slow Mac App Store

Aug 7, 2011 - 23 Comments

Mac Beachball slow It’s unclear why, but the Mac App Store is running a lot slower in OS X Lion for some users, including myself. By slow I mean you’ll encounter nearly constant beachballs as you click from app to app, with the absolute worst offender being the main category sections.

I’m assuming there is an underlying bug or issue with the App Store backend, so a true fix will probably come from Apple to resolve this, but in the meantime I’ve found a couple troubleshooting tips that help to varying extents: deleting caches, and changing a security setting.

Delete Mac App Store Caches

I’ve had some success with deleting the caches, but over time things slow down again. Try this first because it’s the safest method.

  • Quit the Mac App Store
  • From the Mac desktop, hit Command+Shift+G and enter:
  • ~/Library/Caches/com.apple.appstore/

  • Delete everything in this folder
  • Relaunch the Mac App Store

Turn Off Certificate Revocation List in Keychain Access

Warning: this is more of a workaround than a fix, and it creates a potential security risk by disabling the systems revocation list, use at your own risk and read all steps before proceeding:

  • Quit the Mac App Store
  • Launch Keychain Access (use Spotlight or look in Applications > Utilities)
  • From the Keychain Access menu, select “Preferences” and then click on the “Certificates” tab
  • Change “Certificate Revocation List (CRL)” to “Off”
  • Quit Keychain Access
  • Relaunch the Mac App Store

Things should be a lot faster now, but because of the security risk it’s recommended to then go back and change the setting after you have relaunched the Mac App Store. There are mixed reports on if the fix actually sticks around with this method, but for security reasons it is highly recommended:

  • Keep the Mac App Store is still open
  • Open Keychain Access again, get back to the “Certificates” tab
  • Set “Certificate Revocation List (CRL)” back to “Best Attempt”
  • Quit Keychain Access

This second tip comes from MacStories, which I came across when reading @Viticci’s review of the new Core i5 MacBook Air. He also complained of the slowness of the App Store within Lion, and he’s not in the USA which shows this isn’t just a local server issue either.
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Mac Setups: Mac Pro with Three Displays

Aug 7, 2011 - 3 Comments

Mac Pro with Three Displays

A Mac Pro with two extra NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 video cards and 16GB of RAM is driving these three displays, making one heck of a Mac setup. The left screen is hosting a Windows 7 virtual machine in Parallels full time, while everything else is all Mac OS X. Also pictured: an iPad 1 and iPad 2, iPhone 4, Magic Trackpad and wireless keyboard, and assorted other hardware.

Great find from Flickr!

By William Pearson - Mac Setups - 3 Comments

Stuck in Chrome Full Screen? Exit Chromes Full Screen Mode in Mac OS X Lion

Aug 6, 2011 - 11 Comments

Exit full screen mode in Chrome under OS X Lion

If you’ve found yourself stuck in Chromes full screen mode, you’re not alone. Chrome has it’s benefits, like syncing and the native omnibar, but unfortunately Chrome does not play well with Full Screen Mode under Mac OS X Lion – at all. You are free to click the full screen button to get in, but trying to escape from it can be a fruitless endeavor, with the menubar inconsistently appearing or not appearing at all.

If you’re stuck in full screen, hit Command+Shift+F to escape. This is the only guaranteed way to escape, although you can try, often fruitlessly, to poke around in the area of the menu bar hoping it will appear so you can access the exit function from the View menu (see screenshot).

The word is that Chrome will get native true full screen support soon, but until then you can try using Maximizer which works across all apps. And just be sure to remember that keyboard shortcut, it’ll save you a headache or two.

Update: The latest Chrome Canary build includes Full Screen support for OS X Lion, although it behaves slightly differently than normal full screen mode.

iOS 5 Beta 5 Released to Developers

Aug 6, 2011 - 8 Comments

iOS 5 Beta 5

Apple has released iOS 5 beta 5, the latest build is 9A5288d and the same hardware is supported as prior iOS 5 betas, including iPad 2, iPad, iPhone 4 GSM & CDMA, iPhone 3GS, and iPod touch 3rd and 4th gen.

You can download iOS 5 beta 5 in one of two ways:

  • OTA delta update directly on your iOS device – this is the easiest way to get the update and also has the smallest bandwidth footprint. You can access Over-the-Air updates from iOS 5 beta 4 devices by tapping on Settings > General > Software Update
  • Download the device specific IPSW files from Apple’s iOS Dev Center

The OTA updates are by far the easiest, plus they allow you use one of the new and exciting features of iOS 5 in the process. If you’re not a developer, you’ll have to wait until the official iOS 5 release this fall.

In addition to iOS5 beta 5, a new version of Xcode 4.2 has been released for devs, as well as iTunes 10.5 beta 5 and a new version of iOS for Apple TV2.

By Matt Chan - iPad, iPhone, News - 8 Comments

Show Available Disk Space in Mac OS X by Showing the Folder Status Bar

Aug 5, 2011 - 27 Comments

Finder In Apple’s quest to simplify the Mac user experience, they hid the windows status bar in Mac OS X starting with Lion and continuing through with Mountain Lion, Mavericks, OS X Yosemite, El Capitan, and Sierra. Obviously that change is here for good, and while this definitely makes for a cleaner appearance when looking at folders on the Mac, if you actually like to know how much disk space you have available at a quick glance, it’s kind of annoying.

Fortunately, if you want to see those status details of any Finder windows, including the disk space and file counts of an active folder or directory, you can change the status bar visibility and make the available space indicator visible again. This is extremely easy and just a quick toggle adjustment away.

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By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 27 Comments

Fun with iPhone Chargers

Aug 5, 2011 - 5 Comments

iPhone Charger

We get a lot of silly submissions but this one from Reddit takes the weekly cake for it’s creative modification to the iPhone AC Adapter plugs. If you want to do this yourself, grab a couple of wiggly eyes and get sticking.

Thanks for sending this in Daniel

By Paul Horowitz - Fun, iPhone - 5 Comments

UDID Sellers and Non-Developers Running iOS 5 Beta Being Targeted by Apple?

Aug 5, 2011 - 4 Comments

UDID sales and improper iOS 5 beta usage crackdown Apple has begun to crack down on registered iOS developers who are selling UDID activation slots for iOS 5 betas to other users, in some cases sending email warnings to devs, but also deactivating other developer accounts completely. Apple is even flagging some individual UDID’s and making the devices unusable, forcing users to downgrade from iOS 5, in an effort to prevent non-developers from using the beta software.

This information comes from AppleInsider who cites a third party Kathrikk who apparently has second hand experience:

Many of my developer friends have reported that Apple has sent an email warning which said that they have identified the developer to be selling his slots for some users to get early preview of iOS.

And Apple has started closing the developer accounts for selling the slots and also, have flagged the UDIDs associated with that dev account, thus making the iOS 5 device unusable.

A little background information may be helpful to understand what is going on here. In order to run iOS 5 beta, you must have a devices UDID registered with Apple through their developer network. An iPhone or iPad UDID is a unique identification number that functions like a devices serial number, this number is then put onto a whitelist of sorts that allows a specified UDID to download and run the iOS beta software. Some developers have been selling these UDID activations to non-developers so that others could run iOS 5 betas, which is likely a violation of their iOS Developer Agreement.

The reason for all of this? Economics. In terms of costs, a UDID activation obtained through these grey-market methods may cost $10, whereas an officially sanctioned iOS Developer license costs $99 per year directly through Apple. Some developers may have been selling these slots to help recoup the costs of an iOS membership, whereas others were clearly just profiteering on the access to iOS 5 betas. AppleInsider notes a large market in UDID resellers, with one operation allegedly activating over 15,000 UDID’s, which at $10 a pop is a whole lot of cash. We here at OSXDaily actually had to set “UDID” as an automatic spam flag in our comments due to a massive influx of spammers trying to redirect anyone to these grey market sales sites.

Remember, the primary purpose of these transactions are for non-developers to run iOS 5 beta software, which, by the very nature of a beta, is not intended for usage outside of the registered iOS developer network. This is why Apple is cracking down, until iOS 5 is ready for release this fall, they don’t want unauthorized users muddying bug reports, clogging the Genius Bar and Apple Support, or leaving nonsensical complaints on the App Store from clearly illegitimate iOS 5 beta users who aren’t developers.

Editor Update: Some of the discussion on this is directly related to the iOS 5 beta 1 and 2 expiration occurring yesterday, August 4, which has nothing to do with any ‘crackdown’ from Apple.

Update 2: Both TUAW and 9to5mac are raising suspicions about the claim that individual non-developers are being targeted, although 9to5mac does report that one individual who was selling UDID slots confirmed his account was removed. As we and some of our commenters have pointed out, it’s more likely that the other non-developers are simply misinterpreting the scheduled expiration of iOS 5 betas.

By Matt Chan - iPad, iPhone, News - 4 Comments

Change the Terminal Background Picture

Aug 5, 2011 - 15 Comments

Set a Custom Terminal Background Picture

If you’re bored with the standard black text on a white background of Terminal, you can really spice up the command line interface by adding a custom background picture. One of our commenters recently asked how to do this, so here we’ll walk through the process. This was written for OS X 10.7 but it’s basically the same in 10.6 and prior, minus the full screen abilities.

Obviously the first thing to do is to find a picture you like, if you plan on using Lion’s full screen Terminal (which looks great) I would suggest using a high resolution image. For the sake of this walkthrough, I’ll use the iCloud.com beta wallpaper because it’s subtle and makes a nice background image, but you’re free to get crazy and use sharks like I did in the screenshot above.

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Combine Safari’s URL and Search Bars with Safari Omnibar

Aug 5, 2011 - 28 Comments

Safari Omnibar combines the Search and URL bars

One of the best things about Google Chrome’s user interface is the combined URL and search bar, where a single input bar serves both purposes, but is smart enough to know the difference between a search query and a URL. Safari doesn’t have this feature, but Omnibar fills that gap.

Safari Omnibar combines Safari’s URL bar and search bar into a single searchable input, stripping away the extra search box and simplifying the browsers interface.

Install Omnibar for Safari

Safari Omnibar works with Safari 5 and 5.1 for Mac OS X 10.6 and OS X 10.7. It’s a SIMBL plugin, but the installer also includes SIMBL.

You can download Omnibar here, it’s free and open source. All you need to do is quit Safari, run the pkg installer, and Omnibar will work upon next launch, with the search bar hiding on it’s own.

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By Paul Horowitz - Mac OS, Tips & Tricks - 28 Comments

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