Technology The Unofficial Mac thread

S. Fourteen

Well-Known Member
#1
We need to unite together people. We welcome Hackintoshers as well. The purpose of this thread is to contain the fanboism I may or may not display into one thread and help one another in the process. Anything mac related is accepted. Hate for Apple is accepted as long as it's not something like iSlate = Giant iPhone = Epic Fail lololololol


First off-

Trash (or better yet Zap) your Stuffit and get UnrarX. It will likely never fail on you. Highly recommended for torrent junkies.

But salty, I like the icon of Stuffit better - it looks nice in my dock and I hate it when developers spit on the beautiful interface by giving us shitty icons.

I agree. Here is a simple solution;

In this case, I'm trying to replace the shitty UnRarX icon with the more pleasing Stuffit icon.

- Click on UnRarX and Get Info. Do the same for Stuffit.

- Click on the Stuffit icon in the top left corner of the info window and Copy. Then click on the UnRarX icon on the top left corner and Paste. Boom! Isn't that cool?

Now that your application icon is looking nice - lets do the same for rar file icons.
[Warning] Do not fuck around in the Contents folder.

- Right click on UnRarX and Show Package Contents. Goto Contents>Resources.

- Look for a file named unrar.icns. You'll notice the purple ugliness peeking at you. Lets replace this with something more pleasing.

In this case, I'm just going to use the generic Stuffit icon.

- Right click on Stuffit Expander and Show Package Contents. Goto Contents>Resources.

- Look for drag_icon.icns and DUPLICATE it. You can use any icon in the Resources folder. Use QuickLook to browse the content. Make sure they are .icns files. .png files aren't going to work.

Take drag_icon copy.icns and move it to the desktop. Rename this copy to unrar.icns. Drag this renamed file into the UnRarX's Resources folder and replace the original icon. Boom!

Goto Force Quit and Relaunch Finder. You should see all the shitty purple icons changed. If not, you need to right click on a rar file Open With>Other… and select UnRarX to make it the default. Make sure you have the Always Open With box checked. This will make UnRarX as the default app for all future rar files you download.

This is just a simple way to improve the look of your OS X. If you are a creative person and want something more extensive, I'd recommend CandyBar.
 

S. Fourteen

Well-Known Member
#3
Like I said in the PM "I DO NOT KNOW A GOOD DVD RIPPING SOFTWARE" I tried to help you by giving you a few names I came across on various blogs.
 

S. Fourteen

Well-Known Member
#4
Here's a little suggestion and information if you do not want to buy the ahead-of-its-time AppleTV (meaning that there isn't enough infrastructure to maximize the potential). If size is not a concern to you, you can have a good working media center with OS X for relatively cheap, and with lots of room for expansion.

The best part is you can play all the 1080 goodness on your HDTV and not be stuck in last decade with crappy standard definition movies like Sofia up there.

The Holy Bible of Hackintoshing

Main Page - OSx86

The best community for Hackintoshers

InsanelyMac

Plex, the better than FrontRow app

Plex Media Center for OS X

Netkas, the king of Hackintoshing (not to be confused with Rukas)

netkas.org
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#10
one of my cousins just built a Hackintosh netbook using a Dell Mini 10v....took him less than half an hour to get OSX fully installed and working perfectly on it.
 

Rukas

Capo Dei Capi
Staff member
#11
^^ Its a great OS he will love it.

I did it to an old laptop but it didnt work quite right, little buggy, so I gave the laptop to my girlfriend and just bought a MacBook White.

It just fucking works. No questions. Just works right every time.
 

Casey

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#12
^^ Its a great OS he will love it.

I did it to an old laptop but it didnt work quite right, little buggy, so I gave the laptop to my girlfriend and just bought a MacBook White.

It just fucking works. No questions. Just works right every time.
He already has a Macbook Pro and a G5 Power Mac, as well as a Core 2 Duo PC running XP (all soft synths/VSTi's run through the PC and mastering done on it as well).

The netbook is mostly for his wife and kids to use. But yeah, he's not a Mac noob, he's been using them for 20+ years.

I remember him using the very first 4-track version of Pro Tools on a Mac all the way back in 1992.
 

S. Fourteen

Well-Known Member
#14
LONGHUA, China /TAIPEI (Reuters) - The massive manufacturing complex in the South China city of Longhua resembles an industrial fortress. To enter the facility, workers swipe security cards at the gate. Guards check the occupants of each vehicle with fingerprint recognition scanners.
TECHNOLOGY | MEDIA | CHINA

Container trucks and fork lifts rumble nonstop across the sprawling compound, serving a grid of factories that churn out electronics goods for top global brands around the clock.

Inside the walled city -- one of several compounds run by Foxconn International, a major supplier for Apple Inc -- employees are provided with most of their daily needs. There are dormitories, canteens, recreation facilities, even banks, post offices and bakeries.

The rank-and-file within the compound have little reason to venture outside. That reduces the likelihood of leaks, which in turn lessens the risk of incurring the wrath of Apple and its chief executive, Steve Jobs, whose product launches have turned into long-running, tightly controlled media spectacles.

Many of Apple's finished gadgets, from iPods to iPads, are assembled at industrial compounds like the one in Longhua. And when it comes to guarding Apple's secrets, Foxconn, a unit of Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry, and other suppliers throughout the region leave little to chance.

"Security is tight everywhere inside the factories," said a uniformed worker outside the Foxconn factory in Longhua, about an hour from Hong Kong. "They use metal detectors and search us. If you have any metal objects on you when you leave, they just call the police," he said.

Hon Hai spokesman Edmund Ding declined to comment for this article, as did Apple.

But industry sources in China and elsewhere in Southeast Asia say that Apple goes to what one person in the business termed "extreme lengths" to protect even the smallest details of its new products under development.

Many of the Cupertino, California-based company's tactics read like something from a spy novel: information is assiduously guarded and handed out only on a need-to-know basis; employees suspected of leaks may be investigated by the contractor; and the company makes it clear that it will not hesitate to sue if secrets are spilled.

On occasion, Apple will give contract manufacturers different products, just to try them out. That way, the source of any leaks becomes immediately obvious, people familiar with the supply chain said.

And unlike other electronics makers, some of whom prefer the convenience of one-stop shopping, Apple doesn't rely on a single firm to supply everything for a product. The industry sources say the company will often minutely divvy up projects.

"This ensures that the only people who have all the secrets to any Apple product is Apple itself," said a senior official at a subsidiary of Hon Hai Precision Industry. "Other tech companies will also look for their own sources of components to compare, but none of them do as many things in-house as Apple does."

The upshot is that even the people who man the assembly lines have no idea what the finished product will look like.

"The typical production line worker will not see the product until the very last minute when actual production takes place," said an official at one supplier. "It's all concentrated in the hands of a few product development teams." The discretion that Apple demands from its suppliers is merely an extension of the way the company operates at its own corporate headquarters in Cupertino, former employees say.

Apple's obsession with secrecy is the stuff of legend in Silicon Valley. Over the years, it has fired executives over leaks and sued bloggers to stop trade secrets from being exposed.

A tight-lipped ethos permeates working life, particularly in the run-up to the launch of a new device. Projects are siloed in carefully controlled work groups, rooms are guarded by strict key card access, and many have no firm idea about what even their colleagues in the same office are working on.

One former employee, who worked in the marketing department at the time of the iPhone launch, said workers understand that secrecy is part of Apple's mystique, and the silence is self-enforced at the most basic level.

"I didn't even talk about it with my wife," he said. "It's a culture of silence and it's just accepted. You get used to not talking about your work, it becomes normal because everybody is doing the same thing."

THESE GUARDS MEAN BUSINESS

In China, a Reuters reporter found out the hard way how seriously some Apple suppliers take security.

Tipped by a worker outside the Longhua complex that a nearby Foxconn plant was manufacturing parts for Apple too, our correspondent hopped in a taxi for a visit to the facility in Guanlan, which makes products for a range of companies.

As he stood on the public road taking photos of the front gate and security checkpoint, a guard shouted. The reporter continued snapping photos before jumping into a waiting taxi. The guard blocked the vehicle and ordered the driver to stop, threatening to strip him of his taxi license.

The correspondent got out and insisted he was within his rights as he was on the main road. The guard grabbed his arm. A second guard ran over, and with a crowd of Foxconn workers watching, they tried dragging him into the factory.

The reporter asked to be let go. When that didn't happen, he jerked himself free and started walking off. The older guard kicked him in the leg, while the second threatened to hit him again if he moved. A few minutes later, a Foxconn security car came along but the reporter refused to board it. He called the police instead.

After the authorities arrived and mediated, the guards apologized and the matter was settled. The reporter left without filing a complaint, though the police gave him the option of doing so.

"You're free to do what you want," the policeman explained, "But this is Foxconn and they have a special status here. Please understand."


STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL

It is unlikely that Apple tells security guards across the Pacific how to go about their business.

The company, which spends billions of dollars on components and contract manufacturers, has a code of conduct that spells out how those working in its supply chain should be treated -- "Suppliers must be committed to a workplace free of harassment," states one. To ensure compliance, Apple periodically audits its suppliers.

But the scuffle in Guanlan does underscore the intense pressure many contractors feel to clamp down on the information flow.

Another way Apple keeps leaks to a minimum is to bring suppliers in at the absolute last minute.

"What usually happens is that we will receive a call from Apple, and by then they usually already have some idea of what exactly they want," said an official at a component supplier, who, like nearly everyone else interviewed for this story, would speak only on condition of anonymity.

"They usually give us a couple of options, we present some stuff to them, and they look at quite a lot of samples before coming to a final decision, sometimes just weeks before the rumored launch," he said.

Apple also helps keep its components out of the mainstream by insisting on custom designs rather than off-the-shelf parts -- a practice that leaves many suppliers frustrated.

An official at a South Korean supplier who said he has participated in Apple projects complained that the company sometimes makes unreasonable requests.

"Apple also wants unique size and specifications," he said. "That means we won't be able to use a common platform or rework those components to serve other clients. And if there's any inventory left, it cannot be used any other way.

Not surprisingly, landing a contract with Apple will always include a confidentiality clause. And they usually come with stiff penalties in the event that a breach is discovered, said sources at some suppliers. These insiders added that such agreements often come on top of unannounced checks by Apple officials to maintain standards.

Two sources familiar with the matter said they were not aware of any company that has been fined for breaching a confidentiality pact. But they say a number a suppliers have been verbally warned that they were in danger of losing their contract if suspected leaks persisted.

The difficulty lies in proving the source of a leak. In the absence of solid evidence, the most Apple can do is to switch suppliers once the contract runs out, the sources said.

"Unless there's a recording or an email that can be clearly identified to a certain Apple supplier, it's all going to be a blame game with everyone pointing fingers at everyone else," one of the sources said.

Hon Hai, the huge Taiwanese manufacturer with units in China, has gone to great lengths in the past to maintain its own secrecy.

In a high-profile case in China in 2006, Hon Hai sued two Chinese reporters and asked for 30 million yuan ($4.4 million) in damages for exposing alleged subpar employment practices.

The amount was later reduced to a symbolic 1 yuan, after stinging public criticism was directed at Apple. Various groups including Reporters Without Borders wrote to Apple chief Jobs asking him to intercede in the case.

Apple's audit of Hon Hai's facilities after the case found that it was in compliance with a majority of its requirements under its supplier's code of conduct. But the company did find a number of violations that it was working to address, though it declined to disclose the specifics.

In another case that made global headlines last year, an employee in China for Foxconn was believed to have jumped to his death after being interrogated by his employer. According to local press reports, he was under suspicion of taking an iPhone prototype -- to which he had access -- out of the factory.
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE61G3XA20100217

Fake Steve: This is why I love doing business in China.
 

masta247

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#15
^^

Apple has been repeatedly criticised for using factories that abuse workers and where conditions are poor. Last week, it emerged that 62 workers at a factory that manufactures products for Apple and Nokia had been poisoned by n-hexane, a toxic chemical that can cause muscular degeneration and blur eyesight. Apple has not commented on the problems at the plant, which is run by Wintek, in the Chinese city of Suzhou.
At least eleven 15-year-old children were discovered to be working last year in three factories which supply Apple.
Last year, an employee at Foxconn, the Taiwanese company that is one of Apple's biggest suppliers, committed suicide after being accused of stealing a prototype for the iPhone.

Sun Danyong, 25, was a university graduate working in the logistics department when the prototype went missing. An investigation revealed that the factory's security staff had beaten him, and he subsequently jumped to his death from the 12th floor of his apartment building.
Foxconn runs a number of super-factories in the south of China, some of which employ as many as 300,000 workers and form self-contained cities, complete with banks, post offices and basketball courts.

It has been accused, however, of treating its employees extremely harshly. China Labor Watch, a New York-based NGO, accused Foxconn of having an "inhumane and militant" management, which neglects basic human rights. Foxconn's management were not available for comment.
Meanwhile, only 61 per cent of Apple's suppliers were following regulations to prevent injuries in the workplace and a mere 57 per cent had the correct environmental permits to operate.
The high environmental cost of Apple's products was revealed when three factories were discovered to be shipping hazardous waste to unqualified disposal companies.
Apple has not stopped using the factories.
Apple admits using child labour in China - Telegraph
 

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