Funny. I made one of those two, but without the lightscribed label.
What was the other one you didn't make?
Funny. I made one of those two, but without the lightscribed label.
What was the other one you didn't make?
Do the folks at Ars Technica ever write anything that doesn't go on for page after page?
One of the things that seemed to be missing with Lion was in Mission Control's 'spaces' functionality. I could find no way to assign an app to a desktop and have it always open there. I had about given up and a friend showed me something that put me on the right track.
Here's how to assign an app to a desktop :
1. Open the application
2. Click on Mission Control
3. Drag the application window to the Desktop you want it on
4. then right-click (2-finger tap) on the Dock Icon for that app
5. Under 'Options' select 'This Desktop'
That's it, you're done.
One caution, for some reason some apps won't show desktop assignment in 'options' in the dock icon. I have no clue why. But it does work for most the apps I tried it with.
Well, considering Apple sells the newly updated Mac Mini and 11" Mac Book Air with Lion and 2 GB, I would think 2 GB should be "fine" (as in it will work, but may not be optimal). Here's the Apple page for Lion's Requirements: Apple - OS X Lion - Technical specificationsWhat are the new memory requirements?
My iMac had been running very slowly and safari was crashing often. Looked into it a couple of weeks ago and found that it only had 2 gB installed. Went to Fry's and they told me the only upgrade available to me was 4 GB. Installed that, but if the minimum for Lion is 4, I wonder if performance will be acceptable?
Just for the heck of it (and I was a bit bored <G>), I made a bootable DVD of OSX Lion installation. Pretty simple to do. Then I decided to make a virgin Lion to an empty HD, no upgrade, just straight up full install. Here's what I found in doing it:
1. Booting the DVD took about 20 minutes! -- unreal...
2. The first part of the install creates a hidden partition and stuffs a recovery system into it. All of this take about 40 minutes
3. THEN it does a reboot and installs from that hidden partition.
All in all a little less than an hour and a half.
The installation is about 5Gb on the HD. No real value in this except that you now know that it is a full install and not just an upgrade over SL.
Nice to know that. Very slow though. Sounds like a Windows install.
Regarding the scroll direction: I had my wife and son log in and I cleared the "scroll in the direction of movement" checkmark in the Mouse properties. I left it on for my account so I can get used to it.
Now I need to change my vote from "I don't use a Mac" to "I plan on Updating." Currently downloading the free update now