Archive for the 'Tips' Category

Friday, April 6, 2007

I’m always telling people, “It’s the little things that makes Apple stand far and wide beyond the competition.” From the way it packages its product to the ability to make any of its computers an external hard drive with a press of a key. Man, I wish all the time that I could put Windows-dead PCs into Target Mode instead of having to physically take apart the PC to gain access to the hard drive with my IDE-to-USB connector. Dell, are you reading?

Today I found another sweet “little thing”. Many Apple users know that if they have more than one bootable partition on their hard drive, they can select which on to boot from at power-up. By holding the OPTION (or ALT) key down after the Mac tone plays, a screen will appear with the various boot up options (including bootable CD or DVDs if present in the drives.) Well, what’s one to do when they purchase a non-Apple keyboard that doesn’t respond in time or the Bluetooth keyboard hasn’t yet bonded? Dig out the original keyboard? Nope, find their remote!

If you are unable to select your bootable partition with a keyboard, then simply press and hold the Menu key on your Apple Remote after the boot tone. Within seconds, you’ll see that familiar boot manager and then you’ll be able to use the volume up (+) key to make your selection and then the Play/Pause to accept that choice. Presto! Up starts your Mac in your selected drive.

Knowing that there had to be further goodies with the remote, I searched and found Wikipedia is there to give you all the delicious things you can do with your Apple Remote. Enjoy!



Winter (Cell) Phone Tips

Author: Sven Rafferty
Friday, January 19, 2007

With temperatures dropping and the snow piling up, skiers and snowboarders are making their way to the mountains. When they do, Verizon Wireless, owner and operator of the nation’s most reliable wireless network, urges winter sports enthusiasts to remember they can count on their wireless service if they keep some wireless winter wisdom in mind:

  • Charge your phone or PDA frequently. Cold temperatures can run down the phone’s battery charge more quickly.
  • Handle your handset with care. The display cover can become brittle when exposed to cold temperatures for long periods of time.
  • Keep your phone in a warm place; avoid leaving it in an outside pocket of your parka or backpack, or in the car overnight.
  • Prolonged exposure to the cold may affect the phone’s display screen. When on the mountain, carry it in an inside jacket pocket, keeping it close to your body for warmth.
  • Check your phone’s signal strength in a non-emergency situation to know where the signal is strong and where it’s not. Ski area and back bowl coverage may vary depending on topography and altitudes.
  • If you hold a yard sale, pick up your phone first to keep snow from melting into the keypad.

“Our ongoing investment in Verizon Wireless’ coast-to-coast digital network makes it possible for winter vacationers to use their wireless phones from the Western Rockies and Cascades to the Green and White Mountains of New England,” said Jack Plating, executive vice president and COO for Verizon Wireless. “Skiers can maximize their time at their favorite mountain by using their wireless phone to check in with families, get in touch with friends in a neighboring condo, receive the latest snow report or make reservations at a nearby restaurant whether they’re in the lodge or on a lift.”



Friday, August 11, 2006

Homes and businesses are inundated with calls from telemarketers. It’s become such a problem that even TV sitcoms such as Seinfeld have added the concern into their story lines. While Jerry was able to make us laugh about this pickle, most aren’t hee-hawing when they pick up the phone at home when it happens to them.

My home number has been swamped with calls from someone trying to sell me something for years. Every year, it seems to get worse. The do not call list, known as the Do Not Call Registry, never helped to a noticeably different state and the answering machine still doesn’t prevent the phone from ringing through the day needlessly.

What to do? Get Packet8.

Packet8 offers a business package called Virtual Office. One of the many features of Virtual Office is Auto Attendant. You all know what auto attendant is. When you’ve called Best Buy or some business and it answers immediately and warns us to listen carefully for the menus have changed (talk about a boy cry wolf, I hear this ALL the time!) and then we make our selection by pressing a number on the keypad. Well, you can add this to your home number and then listen to the results. Silence!

See, the trick lies in using the same ammunition as the telemarketers use: computers. When you receive a call from a telemarketer, a computer dialed your number and then transfers the call to an agent when you pick up the call and activate it by saying “hello” or how ever you answer your phone. When their computer reaches the automated attendant, the transfer may or may not occur. If it doesn’t, then the call is dropped. If it does, the agent then hears a menu and figures it’s a business and hangs up. If neither happens, the auto attendant hangs up the line within a specified time frame and then the call is dropped by it.

In the month I have had this on my personal line (I need to answer all business calls and not frighten off potential customers with an auto attendant,) I have not received one telemarketer call. A blissful thing since I would get on the average about five calls a day! Everyday. Friends and family haven’t complained about this, either. In fact, you still need a direct line, so you can add another number and give that out only to a select few.

Once the agents start pressing one to get to our live phone extension, then we’ll have to figure a new trick, but for now, this works great and it will most likely work for you, too!



Thursday, August 3, 2006

I love the On-the-Go playlist on my iPod but have added a song or two by accident I didn’t want in my list. Well now thanks to shadownight’s post at macosxhints, I can remove them on-the-spot instead of having to wait when I get back to my Mac and delete it via iTunes.

Select the song in the playlist, and like the way you added that song, simply hold the select button (middle button) and watch it quickly disappear in just but a second! Just like that. Repeat where necessary.



Clean Install of XP Without a Format

Author: Sven Rafferty
Friday, July 21, 2006

The title is a bit misleading, but this is basically the cleanest install you’ll get of Windows XP on your system without having to format your hard drive. Many need to do a destructive install of XP, destructive because you’re formatting your hard drive and thus losing all that’s on it, due to root-kit type spyware or other problems that prevent ones install from being productive. We do it week in and week out as Microsoft has kept us well employed in the day time. While we back up data files, we can’t backup program installs and some customers dread this. If you’re such a person, then this non-destructive reinstall of Windows XP may be what you’re looking for.

In short, the article shows you how to navigate through Microsoft’s confusing messages during install that helps you basically wipe out the C:\Windows directory and then re-install it. The article does not mention the fact that this means there could still be infected files or spyware living elsewhere on your drive that could re-appear after this procedure has been completed. It does state that your registry file is pretty much kept in tact, which is another security problem, that once again the article neglects to mention. But with that said, if you just want to try this as a last ditch effort, try it.

After you have performed this re-install, download and install anti-spyware such as Ad-aware and Search and Destroy as well as Microsoft’s Windows Defender after you patch your system via Windows Update. If any pests still linger, these helpers may get what’s left.



Tuesday, July 18, 2006

It’s a well known fact that Verizon is not a friend of the Bluetooth camp. It likes to retard the Dail-up Networking (DUN) feature as well any file transferring (OBEX Exchange). Sometimes you find just simple syncing isn’t the easiest thing in the world, either.

Some find iSync and RAZRs compatibility less than desireable. Even though Apple’s iSync Devices page shows the RAZR line as supported, the footnotes indicate some trouble ahead for you ultra-thin phone users. Calander sync seems to be a biggie as one such problem for the v3c. But thankfully Brian Toth documented how to get the iCal and iSync to get (i)RAZR to get that important to one and another. It’s not a difficult task, but it’s not for the faint at heart, too. There’s some blood involved. You’ll need to do some package opening and file editing, but it’s nothing too major and within a few minutes, you’ll be syncing your days events with your phone! Give it a try and remember who helped make this happen…Brian. :)



Thursday, July 6, 2006

If you don’t have a MacBook or MacBook Pro, then you can’t put your Mac to sleep as easy as closing a lid. You’ll have to go to the menu and click the Apple and then click “Sleep…” and then acknowledge the dialog box that yes you really are sane and understand your actions. Some know the trick of holding the option key while selecting Sleep will remove the three trailing periods to cancel the dialog box (works on the shut down and restart option, too) but you still have to go through the menu. Well now you don’t.

The good folks at Lifehacker found a sweet keyboard shortcut that lets you put your Mac into nighty-night mode in just two seconds! Simply hold down your Command key, Option key, and Eject key all at the same time and within two seconds, your white LED will be glowing indicating that the instant Sominex has taken effect! Sweet dreams.



Wednesday, July 5, 2006

Monday SvenOnTech warned you of a tip that had you alter your My Documents folder in your Windows VM of Parallels Desktop to point to your Mac Documents folder. Today, we’ll give you a tip that will actually save you time and frustration in case your world of Windows comes crashing down due to trojans, viruses, and spyware.

One tricky thing with Windows is that if you’re infected with one of the above pests, you need to remove it before worse things happen to your system. Viruses for the most part are easy to remove and trojans can be a bit more difficult but can also be removed from you system for the most part. Spyware is a bit tougher with Browser Help Objects (BHO) or even worse if they are root kits. In many cases, a fresh install is the only safe way to insure you have a clean system. For PC owners, one back-up trick is to make an image of your system when its clean. Re-imaging a PC usually can bring a user back up an running in about 30 to 40 minutes to where they once were. It’s a smart trick that saves many time and money.

Mac users have a similar trick but instead of taking about a half an hour to be back in business, it’ll only take but a few seconds to be back in the VM game. The trick is much like the image one PC users do but the great thing is with Parallels Desktop, you don’t have to create an image as it’s already there. Found as an HDD extension, your image file will be found in the ~/Library/Parallels/ folder. In our case, we have ours in the ~/Library/Parallels/win98/ folder since we don’t have a need for the two or three programs that run only on XP with the added overhead of that operating system. So we made a copy of your win98.hdd file and left it the same directory. That’s it.

Now if we get zapped with a really bad Windows treat, we just shrug our shoulders and delete the win98.hdd and copy our backup to the same name. We restart Parallels Desktop and –bam!– we’re back in business. With this kind of ease, who needs protection? (Just kidding, we’d never recommend playing naked on the Internet.)

We’d recommend making back-up copies of your HDD file often so you at least have the most current version of your VM if things do go bad. It’s also good to keep at least one copy of your first install so you have a “sanitized” version of your install so you have a clean version of your VM in case gremlins sneak up on you with a VM that seemed fine a week ago.

Thanks Parallels for making it easy for us to re-image our VM nice and fast. :)



Saturday, July 1, 2006

Hey, so you’re a bit bummed that your snazzy MacBook looks like trailer trash worked on it and want it cleaned, now, then there’s some hope. Go into the bathroom and grab your wife’s finger nail polish remover. Apply it to a cloth and do some rubbing and bingo, you’re back in business. With all the bad press Apple is getting for the dirty white MacBooks in the wild, hey, this may help keep you happy until Apple fixes your new baby.

[Via Lifehacker]



Friday, June 30, 2006

Looks like Tigers latest update, 10.4.7, didn’t just fix the Firefox font rendering issue but also added a new preference to the trackpad. MacBook users got to see this great feature ahead of the cutting edge crew as those with the iBook replacement have been enjoying the feature since its release. But no longer, MacBook Pro users now can place two fingers on the trackpad and then click the button and, presto!, up comes a context sensitive menu as if you had just hit a right mouse button! Woo hoo! How great is this?

All you need to do is download the update and then go to System Preferences. Go to Keyboard & Mouse settings and select the Trackpad button. Enable the “Place two fingers on trackpad and click button for secondary click” check box and you’re set. After that, simply put two fingers on the trackpad and then click the button (while your two fingers are still on the pad) and there you go. This trick also works if you click the button first and then tap with your two fingers; however, if there is an applicable left mouse button event, this won’t work as the left action will happen. :)

Enjoy the new added trick for all y’all MacBook Pro users!