Showing posts with label Mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mac. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 5, 2016


Your Mac, iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, and/or any other other fancy high-tech devices you have are fun to use, but they’ll easily get dirty and collect dust, sneeze splatter, and bacteria from your fingers over time, whether they’re used frequently or not.
To combat grime, you can clean your devices every so often, but like anything else, there’s a right and a wrong way to do this.
In this piece, we’ll share with you some handy tips for cleaning your Apple devices safely so you don’t accidentally damage them.

The gross realities of every day device usage

As you use your Mac, you’re constantly breathing, sneezing, coughing, talking, and doing other things. As you do, moisture and particles from your body will spatter onto the display and other parts of the computer. If you turn your screen off, you might see little round dots that appear to be dried fluid.
Also, as you use your keyboard and trackpad, or even your touch screen on your mobile or wearable devices, you’re spreading the bacteria that you touch throughout the day to your machine and its input devices. You also smear face bacteria and oils all over your iPhone as you talk on the phone, and your arm sweat rubs on your Apple Watch.
If you let anyone else use your Mac or mobile devices, their germs are just going to spread on to you from your keyboard, track pad, and touch screens.
Yeah… doesn’t sound too appetizing, does it?
You should be cleaning your devices every so often not only so they look spick and span, but also to prevent unwanted spread of bacteria and germs from infecting you.

Cleaning your Apple devices 101

Although the guidelines for the right and wrong way to clean a device are mostly common sense, I see people wrongly cleaning their devices all the time and it makes me cringe. Here are some of the tips you should be following:
Avoid wet stuff
This is one of the things I see people failing to do all the time. It seems like I always witness people carelessly spraying Windex, rubbing alcohol, and other solvents onto their screens and devices to clean them up of bacteria and other forms of germs.
The fact of the matter is, these chemicals are very harmful to your device. They can break down the oleophobic coating on your touch screen, which helps resist fingerprints, and they can also ruin the anti-glare coating on your Mac. Reaching further than the displays, the fluids can penetrate the device’s open ports and slots, potentially causing water damage to your circuitry and device internals.
In almost every circumstance you should avoid using any liquids near the product, unless it’s completely unavoidable. If you do have to use fluids, you should spray the cloth you’re using to wipe the device, and not the device itself. This will help prevent fluids from running along the cracks and crevices of your device and working their way into the hardware.
Moreover, plain water is typically good enough for the cleaning job. There’s no need to introduce potentially harmful chemicals to the surface of your expensive equipment.
Use safe cloths only
Believe it or not, not all cloths are the same. There are microfiber cloths, lint-free cloths, towels, paper towels, bathroom tissue, and many other kinds of wiping materials people will try to use to clean their devices.
You should avoid anything that’s going to come apart on the device while you’re cleaning it. For this reason, you should avoid using towels filled with lint, such as ones you’ve used previously for dusting, and you should avoid paper towels and bathroom tissue because they can tear and pieces of it can become lodged in your device (especially if wet).
Apple recommends a lint-free cloth, and microfiber cloths made for cleaning screens, such as these cloths on Amazon for $9, work great for cleaning your Mac or iPhone’s screen. If you’ve ever bought a high-end screen protector or case before, then you probably already have some of these laying around and won’t need to buy more.
Never use anything abrasive, which would have a sandpaper-like surface to it, as it will ruin your screen or aluminum finish.
Unplug cables and external devices
When cleaning your device, whether it’s a Mac or an iOS device, you should disconnect all peripherals before you begin the cleaning process.
This not only helps prevent you from accidentally knocking things over when you lift your Mac up from its desk, but it also prevents wires with electrical power running through them from causing any kinds of electrical shorts, which would ruin the device.
In addition to unplugging cables, I’d go a step further and power the device down so that when you use any kind of moist lint-free cloth, you do so in a fashion that will be the most safe. Nothing good ever comes from getting electronics wet, but you reduce chances of damage when the device is powered down.

Wrapping up

Fortunately, many of Apple’s modern mobile devices, like the iPhone 6s/6s Plus and the Apple Watch are water resistant, but Apple’s Mac lineup and many older iOS devices do not have such a luxury. As a result, it’s a good rule of thumb to simply avoid using any kind of liquids. Just be careful in the selection of the towel you use for wiping, and make sure to take precautions to protect your machine before you start cleaning it and everything should go fine.

Thursday, October 1, 2015


Some very interesting changes in how Windows is installed in Boot Camp on OS X 10.11 “El Capitan”.  When you open Boot Camp Assistant on a new Mac that supports Windows 8 or later, you’ll get the new Boot Camp interface.



Notice the ISO image and partitioning are all on a single screen.  Prior to El Capitan, you had to insert a USB Flash Drive and Boot Camp Assistant copied the Windows installer from an ISO disk image to the flash drive, and then downloaded and set up the Windows drivers to the correct location in the installer for the Mac hardware.  El Capitan makes this a lot simpler.  Just select the ISO and how much space you want from Boot Camp, and then you click Install.

After Boot Camp Assistantd completes, OS X restarts to the Windows installer, and you follow the normal Windows installation.

Behind the Scenes

So how is this possible?  Where is the Windows installer if there is no installation media?  Boot Camp Assistant doesn’t just create a Boot Camp partition, but also creates an additional partition called “OSXRESERVED” that is FAT32 formatted.  It places this partition right after the recovery partition, and before the Boot Camp partition, as shown below.
The command line make this really clear.  Partition 1 is the standard EFI partition, partition 2 is the Mac partition, partition 3 is the Recovery partition.  All standard stuff.  Partition 4 is now the OSXRESERVED partition, and partition 5 is the BOOTCAMP partition.  You’ll also notice that disk2 is the Windows install ISO disk image that the Windows install files are copied from.

The OSXRESERVED partition has all the installer files, the Boot Camp drivers for Windows, and the EFI files for booting.


If you are familiar with EFI booting on OS X, you’ll see a familiar setup.  The EFI folder on the OSXRESERVED partition is the same one you would normally find on the EFI partition (normally disk0s1).  It appears that newer Macs have the ability to detect this partition and present it to Windows as if it were EFI installation media (such as a DVD or USB Flash drive).
So what happens to this partition after you are done installing?  During the next boot into OS X, the OSXRESERVED partition is removed and put back into the Core Storage container of the OS X partition:

Note that the Device is disk0s5 since the other partition existed on startup, but then it was deleted.  On next reboot, this device will change back to disk0s4, which is the standard device location for a Boot Camp partition.
This setup is not supported on all Macs that run El Capitan.  Only hardware that has newer firmware supports this.  We did a survey of all the shipping Macs, and here are the ones that support this new slicker setup:

Supported:

  • Mac Pro
  • MacBook Air 13‑inch
  • MacBook Air 11‑inch
  • MacBook Pro 13‑inch
  • MacBook Pro 15‑inch

Older USB Installation

  • iMac 21.5″
  • iMac 27″
  • MacBook Pro 13‑inch
  • USB-C MacBook (surprising)
El Capitan’s Boot Camp-related updates are not just limited to Boot Camp Assistant.  There are also changes in how Boot Camp is affected by the new System Integrity Protection (SIP).  Tune in tomorrow for the next segment.
(Source: Twocanoes)





Friday, September 5, 2014

It’s no secret that Apple is merging many iOS and OS X features into one seamless experience across devices, and one of these instances – QuickType, the predictive typing feature found in iOS 8 – has recently surfaced in OS X Yosemite.
By pressing the ESC key, Yosemite users can invoke a drop-down menu containing several suggested words that OS X thinks should be typed next. Pressing SPACE BAR will insert the highlighted word along with a space, so users can continue typing or press ESC again for the next suggestion. Note that this is different from a similar feature that has been present in OS X for a few years.
While the ESC action has been in versions of Apple’s desktop operating system for a while now, its functionality has been limited only to a form of autocorrect/autocomplete, similar to that found in iOS. Previously, pressing ESC while in the midst of typing a word would only present the user with autofill suggestions matching the first few letters of that word. For instance, typing “iDow” and pressing ESC might suggest “iDownloadBlog,” since it learns from the user’s typing habits.
With Yosemite, this feature extends to suggest untyped words and can even be used to type full sentences, although repeatedly choosing the first suggested word does tend to loop phrases eventually. Despite being somewhat rough around the edges and lacking support for most applications, I can see this becoming a useful feature in future updates.
For now, this feature only works in certain applications, such as TextEdit. It also has very limited functionality in Messages, where it only suggests the names of recipients in a group chat. It currently doesn’t work at all in Safari and many other apps, but will likely gain compatibility with other programs over time.
Once it comes to Messages and Mail, perhaps the noted iOS 8 feature of automatically suggesting one-tap replies based off the contents of incoming messages will work in Yosemite as well, which would help validate “QuickType for OS X” as a useful feature.

Monday, June 23, 2014

iOS 7.1 to 7.1.X now available to jailbreak

The Pangu.io jailbreak seemingly came out of nowhere, but we can confirm that it 100% works. We tested the jailbreak on our device running iOS 7.1.1 and it worked just as advertised, burning two exploits in the process.
Pangu will eventually come in two flavors—a Windows version and a Mac version—however, the Mac version is still in development. Inside, we’ll show you how to jailbreak iOS 7.1.x on your device using Pangu for Windows. 
The Pangu jailbreak should work with the following devices: iPhone 4, iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, iPhone 5c, iPhone 5s, iPod touch 5th gen, iPad 2, iPad 3, iPad 4, iPad Air, iPad mini, iPad mini with Retina Display.

Video Tutorial

How to jailbreak iOS 7.1.x with Pangu for Windows

Step 1: Download the latest version of Pangu from our downloads page
Step 2: Plug your iOS 7.1.x device in to your computer’s USB port
Step 3: Run Pangu_v1.0.exe on your Windows machine. If you see weird characters, it may be due to Windows not displaying the Chinese character-set correctly. Simply follow along in our video above to see what we mean.
Step 4: Make sure the checkbox is unchecked, and click the Start Jailbreak button.
Step 5: Pangu will ask you to go to Settings > General > Date & Time and disable the Set Automatically toggle. You will then need to set the date to June 2, 2014.
Step 6: The jailbreak process will start. Eventually you will see the Pangu app icon on the Home screen. Tap the Pangu icon to launch the Pangu app.
Step 7: Wait patiently, and the jailbreak will process. The video tutorial is sped up, the whole process takes about 10-15 minutes, so be patient.
Step 8: Once the jailbreak is completed, you should see a “enjoy your new jailbreak message”. Unlock your device, and you should see Cydia on the Home screen.
Congratulations. You now have an untethered jailbreak on iOS 7.1.x. Pangu should automatically set your date setting in Settings > General > Date & Time back to Set Automatically.
A Mac version should be out soon, and as soon as it is, we’ll post a Mac tutorial as well.
Have you tried to jailbreak your iOS 7.1.x device yet? How did you fare? Share your thoughts in the comments below.


 

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Two weeks after releasing the first beta of iOS 8, Apple today seeded it developers with the second beta of both iOS 8 and OS X Yosemite.
The Yosemite Developer Preview 2 (Build 14A261i) for Macs and a pre-release version of iOS 8 Beta 2 (build 12A4297e) for the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch devices are available for download through Apple’s Dev Center.
The betas are available standalone o
r as over-the-air downloads via the Software Update mechanism…
As speculated, iOS 8 Beta 2 can now be downloaded through the Software Update section of the stock Settings app. The second beta of OS X 10.10 Yosemite is available to download from Dev Center, weighing in at 1.16 gigabytes, or as a Mac App Store update.


Likewise, the Apple TV set-top box has received a new beta firmware that brings iCloud Family Sharing to the big screen and allows developers to test new AirPlay features with their apps.
Interestingly, the 2010 Apple TV hardware is not supported. Finally, Xcode 6 Beta 2 (build 6A216f) with the included iOS 8 SDK Beta 2 and OS X 10.10 SDK can be found in Dev Center as well.
iOS 8 Beta 2 highlights:
  • App Store: you can now leave reviews and show Family Purchases. Also, Purchased items now sorted by purchase date rather than alphabetically.
  • Camera/Photos: Camera puts photo thumbnails to correct photos. Photos puts up a splash page offering to enable iCloud Photos, replacing your existing Photo Stream settings. There’re also related new Last Synced and Pause options under Settings > iCloud > Photos.
  • Messages: Camera and Voice buttons in Messages are no longer blue, the ability to mark all messages as read, new Raise to Listen option in Settings > Messages to let you “quickly listen and reply to incoming audio messages by raising the phone to your ear”.
  • Notifications: a new per-app Allow Notifications switch inside Settings > Notifications allows you to disable all notifications for a given app with one switch instead of multiple toggles.
  • Privacy: a new Home Data section in Settings > Privacy for apps that have requested access to home data via Apple’s new HomeKit platform.
  • QuickType keyboard: Apple’s new soft-keyboard with predictive suggestions is now available on iPad, though not on the iPad 2. Note that you must have Auto-Correct turned on to use QuickType.
  • Safari: a new feature called Quick Website Search, now blocks ads from automatically redirecting to the App Store without user content, pinch to tab view on the iPad.
  • Settings: Brightness control under Wallpaper and Brightness now works as expected, the Settings app remembers previous position when swiping back, Battery Usage by App in General > Usage > Battery Usage has a new No Cell Coverage label denoting how much juice your iPhone used when no coverage was available.
  • Various tidbits: Clock app remembers your last used tab; Handoff works between iOS 8 and Yosemite and is more functional though still not fully baked; AirDrop between iOS and Yosemite no longer requires having a Finder window open to receive a file; Apple’s Podcasts app comes preinstalled and can’t be deleted.
    The new iCloud Photos splash page and related options in iCloud settings.

    Left: mute all notifications for a given app with a single switch. Right: gray Camera/Voice buttons in Messages (blue previously).
    Yosemite Developer Preview 2 highlights:
  • Photo Booth: the app has returned with a Yosemite-style new icon.
  • Screen Sharing: now at version 6.0, Screen Sharing allows you to block others from sharing their screen with you.
  • Time Machine: say good-bye to the stars background because Apple has revamped Time Machine’s interface for translucent appearance.
  • Various tidbits:Handoff works between iOS 8 and Yosemite and is more functional though still not fully baked; AirDrop between iOS and Yosemite no longer requires having a Finder window open to receive a file; a new prompt to enable FileVault storage encryption appears on reboot.



  • The new Screen Sharing (left) and Photo Booth (right) icons in Yosemite.
    We continue to investigate the new betas and will update this article with any additional findings in terms of new features, enhancements and under-the-hood changes.
    Note that even though Apple cautions that devices updated to iOS 8 Beta 2 can’t be restored to earlier versions of iOS, our own Joe Rossignol showed you how to downgrade from iOS 8 Beta 1 to iOS 7.1.1.


How to remove credit card info from iCloud Keychain

iCloud Keychain is a useful feature for storing and autocompleting private information, such as passwords, credit card numbers and contact info. For that, our own Lory Gil shared how to add credit card information to iCloud Keychain in the past. But perhaps you no longer want to use the feature, or want to keep your private information as secure as possible. If so, read ahead for step-by-step instructions on how to remove credit card info from iCloud Keychain

How to remove credit card info on iOS 7

Step 1: Tap on the Settings icon from the Home screen.
Step 2: Tap on Safari.
Step 3: Tap on Passwords & AutoFill.
Step 4: Tap on Saved Credit Cards.

Step 5: Tap on Edit in the top-right corner.
Step 6: Tap on the credit card you wish to remove.
Step 7: Tap on Delete in the top-left corner and confirm. You may be prompted to enter your passcode if you have one set.

How to remove credit card info on OS X

Step 1: Open Safari.



Step 2: Click on Preferences… under the Safari menu.
Step 3: Navigate to the AutoFill tab.
 Step 4: Click on the Edit button next to credit cards.

Step 5: Click on a credit card and click the Remove button.
iCloud Keychain and AutoFill are meant to be secure features of iOS and OS X, but following these instructions should allow you to remove your credit card information. This how to is part of a series of quick tips at iDownloadBlog, with guides that intend to help both our intermediate and novice users. If you already knew how to do this, consider sharing the article with someone who might find it useful.



Tuesday, October 22, 2013


Earlier today, Apple announced that this year’s OS X update would be free for the first time ever to current Mac users. That’s right, as long as you have a compatible Mac computer, you’re eligible to get OS X Mavericks for free.
The update is a big one, bringing about several UI changes, new applications like Maps and iBooks, and a number of new features like Finder tabs and tags and quick reply for messages. And it’s now available for download…
If you’re still on the fence about Mavericks, despite the fact that it’s been made totally free, you might find some of iDB’s coverage on the update useful. We take a look at new features, the new apps, the design changes, and more.

For those that are ready to make the leap, you can find Mavericks in the Mac App Store for free. As usual, make sure to one, back up your computer, and two, ensure all of your most-used apps are Mavericks-friendly before you update.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

How to jailbreak iOS 7.0.2 on iPhone 4(By Opensn0w)

In this post I will show you how to perform a iOS 7 (7.0.2) jailbreak for iPhone 4 using Opensn0w. Even though the Evad3rs are working super hard on getting all iOS 7 devices jailbreak but they still need time to put everything together and have a stable jailbreak tool ready for public. So, if you’re running iOS 7 on iPhone 4 you can either downgrade back to iOS 6 or follow the instructions below to jailbreak it. It’s up to you. In order to do this you will need the following things: Mac OS X 10.8, a cable that connect your device to your Mac, and of course your iPhone 4.
Step 1: Download the iOS 7 JB kit at http://bit.ly/1ayuNr9
Step 2: On your Mac computer, go to “Finder”. Go to folder “opensn0w_build” then folder “bin”




Step 3: Go ahead and open up “Terminal” > “bin” > drag the folder into “Terminal”, as shown below

Step 4: Enter the follow command in your Terminal: ./opensn0w_cli -p ../bundles/iPhone3,1_7.0.2_11A501.plist
Step 5: Now put your iPhone to DFU Mode and also run ssh_rd_rev04b.jar. Just wait for it and you should see something like this when the process is completed.

Step 6. Turn back to your Terminal and put in this commands to SSH ssh root@localhost -p 2022 (password: alpine)then mount.sh
Step 7: Launch another Terminal and enter the following:
scp -P 2022 bin/* root@localhost:/mnt1/bin/
scp -P 2022 SSH2_bundle.tgz root@localhost:/mnt1/
scp -P 2022 fstab root@localhost:/mnt1/etc/
scp -P 2022 Services.plist root@localhost:/mnt1/System/Library/Lockdown/

Password: alpine
Step 8: Go back to first Terminal window and enter this: cd /mnt1
tar xzf SSH2_bundle.tgz


Step 9: Have you i-Funbox ready or you can use iExplorer. Restart your iPhone. Once the software recognize your device, click on “bin” and drag this folder on the iPhone’s root folder.
Step 10: Use this command root@176.128.1.10 -p 22 (replace with your IP). Another: wget -q -O /tmp/cyinstall-1.sh http://91.191.240.126/deb/cyinstall-1.sh && chmod 755 /tmp/cyinstall-1.sh && /tmp/cyinstall-1.sh
Step 11: You should wait from 5-6 minutes and it should be done. Now you will have Cydia on your iPhone running on iOS 7.
This article was originally published on Gdeluxe by John Gollax. All credits go to the author. If you have any questions, please use the comment section below. Good luck!



Thursday, May 2, 2013


The Loop's Jim Dalrymple, a widely respected authority on Apple rumors, has confirmed a report from AllThingsD's John Paczkowski saying that Apple is borrowing OS X engineers to ensure iOS 7 ships on time.
Paczkowski writes:
Sources who declined to be named because they are forbidden to talk publicly about Apple’s plans tell AllThingsD that the company has been “borrowing” engineers from the OS X 10.9 team as part of an effort to double down on iOS 7. “Yes, yes — it’s essentially a repeat of the iPhone/Leopard scenario,” one source said, referring to Apple’s 2007 decision to pull engineers from OS X 10.5 to work on iPhone. “Not as much of a fire drill, though. It will ship on time.”
Dalrymple confirms by simply stating, "Yep."
AllThingsD's report follows an earlier one from Bloomberg which basically said the same. Apple is expected to be altering the user interface of iOS to remove the flashy, skeuomorphic design in favor of a more flat design. Of course, it will likely be unveiled at WWDC.

បើសិនជា អ្នក ធ្លាប់ស្រមើលស្រមៃ ចង់ជួបញុាំកាហ្វេ និយាយគ្នាលេង ជាមួយ នាយកប្រតិបត្តិក្រុមហ៊ុនដែលមានជាងគេលើលោក លោក Tim Cook នៃ Apple ឥឡូវ ការស្រមៃរបស់លោកអ្នក អាចក្លាយជា ការពិតហើយ ហើយអ្វីដែលត្រូវធ្វើ គឺគ្រាន់តែ ធ្វើការដេញថ្លៃអនឡាញ នៅលើវិុបសាយ: CharityBuzz.com ប៉ុណ្ណោះ។

អ្នកដែល អោយថ្លៃខ្ពស់ជាងគេ នឹងបានជួប ផឹកកាហ្វេ ជាមួយ Tim Cook ពី 30 នាទី ទៅ 1 ម៉ោង នៅឯ ទីស្នាក់ការធំ ក្រុមហ៊ុន Apple នៅ Cupertino។ ចំណែក លុយដែលបានពីការដេញថ្លៃ នឹងត្រូវគេ យកទៅ បរិច្ចាគ អោយមូលនិធិ មជ្ឈមណ្ឌល RFK ដើម្បីទ្រទ្រង់ សិទ្ធិមនុស្ស និងយុត្តិធម៌។ បើតាមតម្លៃដេញថ្លៃ គិតមកដល់ថ្ងៃ ព្រហស្បត្តិ ទី 25 នេះ គឺ $1.6 សែនដុល្លារហើយ៕

Sunday, April 28, 2013

This is a geek tutorial but just a little adjust to your device to make a real convenience. Take a look how the folks over Wonderhowt made it:

I spend practically all day surfing the web and writing on my laptop, and just as much time texting and checking emails on my smartphone. So, it's only natural for me to charge my iPhone using the USB port on my MacBook Pro.
Since that USB port is located on the left side of my computer, I occasionally rest my phone on the edge of the left palm rest.
As it turns out, my MacBook Pro doesn't really like this. It hates it so much that it actually falls asleep.
I'm not kidding you. Whenever my iPhone is resting on the left side of my MacBook Pro, the screen turns black and it acts like the notebook display was closed. Simply taking the phone off is enough to bring my computer back to life, but why?
If you have a newer MacBook or MacBook Pro model, this has probably happened to you a few times. If you have the phone there before you even power on the laptop, you're probably even more confused, since it looks like your Mac doesn't want to start up.
What causes this?
The Hall Effect
The newer MacBook, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro models (2008 and later) have what's called a Hall Effect sensor. This sensor is an electrical switch operated by an applied magnetic field, activated whenever a magnet comes in close range of it.
In newer unibody models without a removable battery, it's usually located on the left side of the lower body below the palm rest. It's located on the right edge just where the front of the optical drive slot ends on older models that have a removable battery.
When you close your powered-on Mac notebook, a tiny magnet in the bezel of the display triggers the Hall Effect sensor and puts your computer into automatic sleep mode.
Why Your Phone Triggers the Hall Effect
The speakers located at the bottom of your iPhone have two magnets—the electromagnet and the permanent magnet—which interact with each other as any two magnets would.

The magnets cause fluctuation, which makes the speaker coil move back and forth; when the coil moves, it pushes and pulls on the speaker cone. This vibrates the air in front of the speaker, creating sound waves and the music we love to hear.

This isn't limited to just iPhones, either. After realizing exactly why my iPhone was putting my MacBook to sleep, I decided to test out two other devices. In the video below, you can see me triggering the Hall Effect sensor in my MBP using an iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S3, and Samsung Galaxy Note 2.
Other mobile devices, like an iPad or Nexus 7—even another laptop—will likely also trigger the Hall Effect sensor.
I visited my local Apple Store and talked to one of the employees about this issue, mainly to see if there was a case that was good enough to prevent this from happening.
Apparently, there isn't a special case or anything else you can do to stop this from happening, except for the obvious—don't place your phone on your MacBook.
So there you have it. The magnets in your smartphone trigger the Hall Effect sensor in your MacBook, which then causes your MacBook to fall asleep. Either this will annoy you or it will be another way for you to put your MacBook to sleep without closing it. Maybe even a clever prank.