Nov 15

I’m a web developer and photographer, and I’m moving to Leopard full-time after a week of testing on my PowerMac G5. My critical apps that work with 10.5:

Have you moved to 10.5? Waiting for an app to be Leopardized?

Nov 14

Apple updated Aperture to version 1.5.6 on October 26th.

Besides stability tweaks and modifications to make Aperture work smoothly with OS X 10.5 “Leopard”, changes include compatibility improvements with iPhoto, iLife Media Browser and with reliability when recovering an Aperture Library from a Vault.

Run Software Update to get the update.

Nov 11

If you add a To Do item when offline, Mail.app might crash repeatedly when you go online, with no way out of the crashing loop (!).

I found the solution to this nasty Mail.app crash here.

Start Terminal application: it’s in Applications/Utitlities/ folder. In the following, do not type the quotes, just type what’s in the quotes.

Go to ~/Library/Mail/IMAP-email_address@mailserver/.OfflineCache like this

"cd ~/Library/Mail/IMAP-email_address@mailserver/.OfflineCache

and list the contents like this

"ls -al

Then delete all the files with numbers, like this

"rm 1

WARNING: this worked for me. If you’re not comfortable with any of this, don’t do it. Back up the .OfflineCache folder first if you’re uncomfortable, but brave.

Nov 02

OS X has never had a mouse tracking setting I can use with any accuracy. Leopard’s no different.

I don’t remember pre-10.2 or OS 9, but certainly with OS 10.2 and newer I’ve turned to IntelliPoint 6.22 For Mac. I use MS mice so there’s no problems with hardware/driver compatibility.

So what’s my problem? It’s the rate of acceleration the Apple driver gets all wrong. It’s like it has two speeds, slow and fast. You move the mouse very slowly — no problem. Move it quickly — no problem. But going through the mathematical line that separates these two states causes a jump in cursor speed akin to a Dodge Charger 440 launching on a 1/4-mile run.

No amount of fiddling with tracking speed in the OS X Preference Pane helps.

And — just as annoyingly — it works the same way when slowing. The MS mouse driver has a much more linear speedup, and it makes for faster mousing.

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