- It’s a somber reminder of this past year. Of all that we’ve been through. Of all that we’ve lost. It’s hard to wrap your mind around more than half a million lives. We, as a nation, have not had to wrestle with that scale of suffering and loss in more than a generation.
- 1 day ago Hi all Setup: 1) MacBook Pro 2020, 16 Gb memory with Mac OS 11.4 2) Razer core x 3) AMD Radeon rx6900xt Mac OS does not recognizes the eGPU, neither in the top bar nor in GPU History. Do you have to download extra drivers of you do have any suggestions what may be the issue here?
- I put in the Mac OS X Install disk before I powered on; the disk ejected as it powered on. I put it back in, it stayed; got the whole 'welcome' routine again, clicked 'English' and - NO CHANGE, still no response to 'New Zealand' and no right arrow.
- Here the -Xss12G tells the java runtime to allocate 12Gb per thread and then run name. Similarly -Xss4G uses 4Gb per thread. The $ is the Terminal console prompt and will probably have the folder and your name. Note: If you're not using threads then your allocating the memory to use for your current program or the main thread you're running in.
Hi I know this is a bit off topic but this looks like the most active thread hare and I suspect the most knowledgeable Logic users will be lurking here.
This is probably the weird question of the night.
I am a long time DP user that would love at some point to try Logic.
I know the current version requires at least Mojave,I’m using a 2012 cheese-grater and I’m using Sierra as my OS,moving up to Mojave would require multiple OS updates,a firmware update and a metal graphics card,which frankly I’d like to avoid.
finally my question:
If you purchase Logic in the AppStore does it read what OS is installed and install the latest version of Logic that’s compatible with the Mac or will the current version of Logic 10.5.1 be the only version a person can presently purchase?
Thanks,
KG
This is probably the weird question of the night.
I am a long time DP user that would love at some point to try Logic.
I know the current version requires at least Mojave,I’m using a 2012 cheese-grater and I’m using Sierra as my OS,moving up to Mojave would require multiple OS updates,a firmware update and a metal graphics card,which frankly I’d like to avoid.
finally my question:
If you purchase Logic in the AppStore does it read what OS is installed and install the latest version of Logic that’s compatible with the Mac or will the current version of Logic 10.5.1 be the only version a person can presently purchase?
Thanks,
KG
Mac allows adding and removing the network locations so that you can access it anytime. Some of you call it as shortcuts, some call it as aliases and some of you refer this as mapping a network drive. It seems pretty confusing since we’ve been using windows but Mac’s approach of adding a network location is a series of tad straightforward steps.
Here’s how you’ll add a network location on Mac.
'Adding/Mapping' a Network Drive
Step 1
Open ‘Finder’
Click ‘Finder’ from the dock of your Mac. The finder window will appear on your desktop.
Step 2
Connect to 'Server'
Select the Go menu and then select ‘Connect to Server’, optionally press ‘CMD + K’ on your keyboard. The ‘Connect to Server’ window will appear.
Step 3
Enter the 'Server Address' and Connect
On the ‘Connect to Server’ window, enter the server address you want to connect with 'smb://' as a prefix and then click ‘Connect’. You may also choose to browse the available servers by simply clicking on the browse button. The login popup will appear, enter the valid credentials and then click ‘Login’. The network location will open in a new window and you’re good to go.
Adding a Shortcut on the Desktop
Step 1
Show Connected Servers on Desktop
From the finder, select the ‘Finder’ menu and then select ‘Preferences’. Click and enable the ‘Connected Servers’ checkbox. The network drive is displayed on the desktop.
Step 2
Make Alias
Click and select the ‘Network Drive’ from the folder, right click and then select ‘Make Alias’ from the context menu. The alias to the network drive is displayed on the desktop. The alias will remain persistent on the desktop even if you restart your Mac OS.
Step 3
Hide Connected Servers on Desktop
From the ‘Preferences’ window, click and disable the ‘Connected Servers’ checkbox. The server will disappear from the desktop.
Removing a Network Drive
From the ‘Finder’ window, simply click the ‘Eject’ icon next to the drive you want to remove.
'You can manage the network locations on your Mac with these simple steps'.
Threads Of The Past Mac Os X
Mid 2007 model black 2.16 dual Processor 4gb ram Mac OS X I bought it used from my cousin about 2 months ago, he did a reset so it was basically new and it was in very good condition when I got it. Untill this problem it took only about 15 seconds for a complete start up.