End Draws Near for Watson Vaporware Java Port From Sun Lost in Vapor ★ Thursday, 23 September 2004 Interview With Camino Project Head Mike Pinkerton ★īy Eric Bangeman at Ars Technica. (Via MacBlog.) Friday, 24 September 2004 BBEdit 8.0.1 ★īBEdit 8.0.1 is out, with the usual x.0.1 assortment of bug fixes and improvements. Now a native Cocoa app (!), and should be good to go for We kept gettingĮmail about this, and so we’ve ported it to Mac OS X. It ran happily for years, but Mac OS Xīroke it - it never ran well under Classic. One of the first color games for the new color Macs thatĬame out in 1988. Solarian II was first written about 15 years ago, and was Holy crap - Ben Haller has ported Solarian II (a Galaga-esqe (I’d previously been using xmllint for the same purpose.) Saturday, 25 September 2004 Solarian II for Mac OS X ★ Could be used to check for currupt preference files (as in the linked-to article at Mac OS X Hints) I’ve been using it to syntax-check my Codeless Language Modules for BBEdit. Plutil is a Mac OS X command-line tool that lets you syntax-check plist files. (Via Brian Christiansen, via email.) Mailsmith 2.1.4 ★ Preferential Treatment is specifically designed to look for corrupt preference files unlike the plutil tool, which can check any plist files. Preferential Treatment is a donation-ware app by Jonathan Nathan it’s a simple wrapper around the plutil command linked a few items ago. Monday, 27 September 2004 Preferential Treatment ★ The leading online aggregator and leading desktop aggregators are working together to reduce the bandwidth consumed by RSS polling. More about the syncing and bandwidth-saving. Tuesday, 28 September 2004 Brent Simmons on Bloglines Web Services ★ Up from 100 MB can be split between iDisk and email. BBEdit 8.0.2 ★Ī rare BBEdit update containing just one change: a fix for a bug when saving files via the built-in “Open From FTP/SFTP Server” command. Jonathan ‘Wolf’ Rentzsch examines Terminal’s “Secure Keyboard Entry” mode includes an example app he wrote that sniffs keyboard input system-wide. Hundreds of millions of dollars in settlement payments,Įven the use of its own name on music products, are way out ButĪnalyst predictions that the case could cost Apple Computer Trial and appeals because the costs are prohibitive. No oneīenefits from pushing a case all the way through a full Make no mistake: There will be a settlement. This time the outcome is far from a lock for Apple Corps. Leading it to shut down without warning, the official said.īusiness Week Online’s Alex Salkever with a look at the Beatles’ lawsuit Improperly trained employee failed to reset the system, Required to restart the system manually every 30 days. To avoid this automatic shutdown, technicians are Order to prevent a data overload, a union official told the The servers are timed to shut down after 49.7 days of use in Original Unix servers, according to the FAA. Over the past three years to replace the radio system’s The failure was ultimately down to a combination of humanĮrror and a design glitch in the Windows servers brought in Matthew Broersma, reporting for Techworld: Linked List: September 2004 Thursday, 30 September 2004 Windows Server Crash Nearly Causes 800-Plane Pile-Up ★
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