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Re: Start-Up "Bong" (Chime) + "POP"

 

Interesting article.
My observation: 22 seconds after the Bong, my inherited 21.5" iMac 10.1 gives a loud "Pop".
My previous 24" iMac and 2014 miniMac have only Bonged.
All other audio is just fine with it.
Suggestions?

21.5 iMac, Late 2009, s/n: W8950YY95PC
3.08GHz, Core2 Duo
16GB 1067MHz DDR3,
NVidia GeForce 9400 w/256MB
MacOS 10.13.6


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

Gartner numbers for 4Q19: Apple US share 13.6%, Global share 7.5%



This is all PCs including laptops, not including other smart devices. Effectively this is Windows versus Mac OS, though a small portion of the non-Macs are linux.

In my Washington DC world you can generally sort government workers from private sector by their laptops. If it’s a Mac, it's private sector. Yes, some government employees buy their own Macs, if they can afford one. Most of the time they cannot use these for work though, so they stay home.

tod

On Feb 24, 2020, at 4:50 PM, Randy B. Singer <randy@...> wrote:


On Feb 24, 2020, at 8:08 AM, jsm5320432 via Groups.Io wrote:

The one place I don't see Apple computers is in the hands of State of California employees
Many businesses, including the government, buy their computers in bulk. They purchase huge number of Windows "white boxes" (specially made cheap computers) for all of their lesser staff and other grunts. Apple doesn't sell based on price. There is no Apple low-end, an area where Apple doesn't even try to compete. Apple only sells premium computers, and thus anywhere that a business can save money by forcing their workforce to all use POS computers, that's what you will find.

Conversely, anywhere that folks can use their own money to purchase a computer, or can negotiate with their business to get the computer that they want, you will find lots of Apple computers. Apple overwhelmingly dominates the market for over $1,000 computers.

NPD: Apple has 91% share of PCs priced over $1,000


___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________








Re: Start-Up "Bong" (Chime)

 

Great news! I’m so glad it worked for you, as I had no way to test it. I hope it works for all who want to restore the “throaty” chime.

Bill

On Feb 24, 2020, at 11:04 PM, Daniel Settles <denver1.dan1@...> wrote:

Bill. Bill. Bill.

Howdy. Howdy. Howdy.

You get three Gold Stars.

My new MacPro is now doing a fine throaty 3-part chord startup chime.

Yeaaaaa! Yeaaaaa!! Yeaaaaaaaaa !!!







Denver Dan
Denver Dan
Denver Dan



On Mon, 24 Feb 2020 18:58:05 -0800, Bill Castine wrote:
Today's issue of Tidbits explains a method of turning on the startup
chime. I have not tried it, as my iMac is old enough never to have
lost the chime. Note that the command may not work on all Macs.



Bill
_._,_._,_
[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro



<Gold Star-star burst.jpg><Gold Star-Embroidered.jpg><Gold Star-Gold Star.JPG>


Re: Start-Up "Bong" (Chime)

 

Bill. Bill. Bill.

Howdy. Howdy. Howdy.

You get three Gold Stars.

My new MacPro is now doing a fine throaty 3-part chord startup chime.

Yeaaaaa! Yeaaaaa!! Yeaaaaaaaaa !!!







Denver Dan
Denver Dan
Denver Dan



On Mon, 24 Feb 2020 18:58:05 -0800, Bill Castine wrote:
Today's issue of Tidbits explains a method of turning on the startup
chime. I have not tried it, as my iMac is old enough never to have
lost the chime. Note that the command may not work on all Macs.



Bill
_._,_._,_
[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro


Re: Start-Up "Bong" (Chime)

 

Today's issue of Tidbits explains a method of turning on the startup chime. I have not tried it, as my iMac is old enough never to have lost the chime. Note that the command may not work on all Macs.



Bill


Pages and Mail Merge

 

Howdy.

There is a way, in current Pages program, to do a mail merge.

Here's an article on the process

<>

It is done with an AppleScript app. You can download the app via link
in the article.

Denver Dan


[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

On Feb 24, 2020, at 8:08 AM, jsm5320432 via Groups.Io wrote:

The one place I don't see Apple computers is in the hands of State of California employees
Many businesses, including the government, buy their computers in bulk. They purchase huge number of Windows "white boxes" (specially made cheap computers) for all of their lesser staff and other grunts. Apple doesn't sell based on price. There is no Apple low-end, an area where Apple doesn't even try to compete. Apple only sells premium computers, and thus anywhere that a business can save money by forcing their workforce to all use POS computers, that's what you will find.

Conversely, anywhere that folks can use their own money to purchase a computer, or can negotiate with their business to get the computer that they want, you will find lots of Apple computers. Apple overwhelmingly dominates the market for over $1,000 computers.

NPD: Apple has 91% share of PCs priced over $1,000


___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Steve Jobs

 

Jobs would have been 65 years old today, February 24.

[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

Howdy.

<>

Article on Macs at IBM. From 2016

Denver Dan



On Mon, 24 Feb 2020 17:36:33 +0000, Otto Nikolaus via Groups.Io wrote:
A few years ago there was a prominent story about IBM giving their
employees the choice of Windows or Mac. They had trialled a few Macs
and found that, despite higher initial cost, the TCO was lower
because of greater reliability and reduced need for support staff. In
2018 Macs made up 25% of IBM's 537,000 laptops. Does anyone know
where that stands now?
<>

Otto
[|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|][|]

iSent from iDan's GyazMail on my MacPro


Re: Security update does not install #AppleSoftware

 

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I had not tried this, but I have now. And it makes no difference.
Apple recommends disconnecting all externals, which I have done and makes no difference.
Apple recommends resetting the SMC, after which my MacBook starts up normally, but trying to install the update still gives the same problem.
The internet gives many different solutions to this kind of problem, all without any indication of their effectiveness, which is not encouraging.
I will ask my supplier if they can be of any help.

--
Hans Rijnbout
Utrecht, Netherlands

Op 24 feb. 2020, om 05:40 heeft Paul <paul@...> het volgende geschreven:

Occasionally when I have troublesome computers startups after an update, I restart in Safe Mode, and retry the update from with Safe Mode.

Have you tried that?

On Feb 22, 2020, at 1:13 PM, Hans Rijnbout <jrijnb@...> wrote:

I got from the App Store a security update (061-64349) for my MacBook Air 7.2 under MacOS 10.13.6. When the download had finished, my Mac tried to start up but got stuck on a black screen. There was a cursor and it moved in response to my trackpad, but nothing else. A forced shutdown was the only way out. I suspected that the download had been corrupted in some way, so I trashed the update files and got a new download. Same problem. I work around it by forcing a shutdown and canceling the "open applications" dialog on startup. Then when the usual "install update" message appears, I postpone it to the next day.? Has anybody seen this before?



Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

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On Feb 24, 2020, at 9:08 AM, jsm5320432 via Groups.Io <jsm5320432@...> wrote:

This was not the case 30+ years ago, when I would generally be the ONLY person in a meeting, or conference with a Mac and certainly not in D.C. where I worked many years as a lobbyist for California clients. D.C. was a windows only world back then and when I stopped doing federal lobbying about 12 years ago, it was still insofar as I could tell. Given what else goes on in D.C. the predominance of windows computers seemed somehow, apropos.

I would say that as long as 30 years ago, in academic medical society meetings, about the same time as PowerPoint presentations replaced those melting diazo-blue slides that “couldn’t take the heat” generated by the enormous incandescent bulbs in projectors in giant hotel ballrooms, it was not uncommon, when a new presenter would step to the podium and be unable to sync his Windows laptop to the projector or get beyond the “Start” menu, people in the audience would chuckle and a chorus of “get a Mac” would swell from the audience.

--?
Jim Robertson


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

A few years ago there was a prominent?story about IBM giving their employees the choice of Windows or Mac. They had trialled a few Macs and found that, despite higher initial cost, the TCO was lower because of greater reliability and reduced need for support staff. In 2018 Macs made up 25% of IBM's 537,000 laptops. Does anyone know where that stands?now?
<>

Otto


On Mon, 24 Feb 2020 at 16:08, jsm5320432 via Groups.Io <jsm5320432=[email protected]> wrote:
Tod:

I cannot offer an intelligent opinion on global computer use by consumer, business, or government category, but I can tell you what I see in many meetings, offices and events that I participate in as part of my professional services. There are lots of macs virtually everywhere and in most non "in the office" meeting the dominant laptop or pad in use is Apple. These include meetings throughout California from border to border, rural, agricultural and urban.

The one place I don't see Apple computers is in the hands of State of California employees, with the exception of the Executive Branch of service, where Apple is more common. Even in federal offices I see many individuals with Mac laptops in meetings, but I never have asked is it a federally owned unit or a personal one.

This was not the case 30+ years ago, when I would generally be the ONLY person in a meeting, or conference with a Mac and certainly not in D.C. where I worked many years as a lobbyist for California clients. D.C. was a windows only world back then and when I stopped doing federal lobbying about 12 years ago, it was still insofar as I could tell. Given what else goes on in D.C. the predominance of windows computers seemed somehow, apropos.

Just 15 years ago the State of California began issuing grants of a few hundred million dollars to local governments, water agencies, etc. The State set the invoicing system and forms all for a windows platform. They had a summer intern set the entire series of linked excel spreadsheets (yes, big mistake) which ended up never working for Windows units or Macs. Eventually, I was able to get my Mac version of Excel version of the system to work and had to assume "bookkeeping" services out of my office (which has nothing to do with keeping books and accounting) for client local governments that could not get their windows system to work. That went on for almost three years before the State was able to finally get their system working. Nonetheless, my clients obtained and used their state grant funds.

These days I don't give much thought to what OS the person next to me is operating. My office has been on Apple computers since I began (40-years ago this Spring!) and except with one experiment with a doomed Windows ME/Dell fiasco for one client, we use only Apple products. Less problems, never one virus, and very little down time on machines.


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

Tod:

I cannot offer an intelligent opinion on global computer use by consumer, business, or government category, but I can tell you what I see in many meetings, offices and events that I participate in as part of my professional services. There are lots of macs virtually everywhere and in most non "in the office" meeting the dominant laptop or pad in use is Apple. These include meetings throughout California from border to border, rural, agricultural and urban.

The one place I don't see Apple computers is in the hands of State of California employees, with the exception of the Executive Branch of service, where Apple is more common. Even in federal offices I see many individuals with Mac laptops in meetings, but I never have asked is it a federally owned unit or a personal one.

This was not the case 30+ years ago, when I would generally be the ONLY person in a meeting, or conference with a Mac and certainly not in D.C. where I worked many years as a lobbyist for California clients. D.C. was a windows only world back then and when I stopped doing federal lobbying about 12 years ago, it was still insofar as I could tell. Given what else goes on in D.C. the predominance of windows computers seemed somehow, apropos.

Just 15 years ago the State of California began issuing grants of a few hundred million dollars to local governments, water agencies, etc. The State set the invoicing system and forms all for a windows platform. They had a summer intern set the entire series of linked excel spreadsheets (yes, big mistake) which ended up never working for Windows units or Macs. Eventually, I was able to get my Mac version of Excel version of the system to work and had to assume "bookkeeping" services out of my office (which has nothing to do with keeping books and accounting) for client local governments that could not get their windows system to work. That went on for almost three years before the State was able to finally get their system working. Nonetheless, my clients obtained and used their state grant funds.

These days I don't give much thought to what OS the person next to me is operating. My office has been on Apple computers since I began (40-years ago this Spring!) and except with one experiment with a doomed Windows ME/Dell fiasco for one client, we use only Apple products. Less problems, never one virus, and very little down time on machines.

John Mills


Re: Security update does not install #AppleSoftware

 

开云体育

Hi

Occasionally when I have troublesome computers startups after an update, I restart in Safe Mode, and retry the update from with Safe Mode.

Have you tried that?

Paul
MacTech Services --
?Supporting the Greater Los Angeles?
Macintosh?Community since 1988. ? ? ? ? ? ?626-449-5529

On Feb 22, 2020, at 1:13 PM, Hans Rijnbout <jrijnb@...> wrote:

I got from the App Store a security update (061-64349) for my MacBook Air 7.2 under MacOS 10.13.6. When the download had finished, my Mac tried to start up but got stuck on a black screen. There was a cursor and it moved in response to my trackpad, but nothing else. A forced shutdown was the only way out. I suspected that the download had been corrupted in some way, so I trashed the update files and got a new download. Same problem. I work around it by forcing a shutdown and canceling the "open applications" dialog on startup. Then when the usual "install update" message appears, I postpone it to the next day.? Has anybody seen this before?


Re: photos from iPhone appear on iPad but not MacBook

 

开云体育

There are a number of suggestions you might want to try on this Google search page:


Pat

Pro

On Feb 23, 2020, at 8:40 PM, Julian Thomas <jt@...> wrote:

?didn’t work:-(

On Feb 21, 2020, at 16:14, Pat Taylor via Groups.Io <pat412@...> wrote:

I would try logging out of iCloud on all devices, wait a few minutes and log in again.

----
Julian Thomas ??- http://jt-mj.net


?The time is always right to do what is right. - Martin Luther King, Jr.? ??



???





Re: photos from iPhone appear on iPad but not MacBook

 

didn’t work:-(

On Feb 21, 2020, at 16:14, Pat Taylor via Groups.Io <pat412@...> wrote:

I would try logging out of iCloud on all devices, wait a few minutes and log in again.
----
Julian Thomas -


?The time is always right to do what is right. - Martin Luther King, Jr.? ??



???


Re: Free Time Tracker

 

Randy,

The free version is for iPhone - I used it mainly as a consultant and I’m always on the go so I never considered a desktop version.

Link is here: OfficeTime Work & Time Tracker by Productive Monkey Ltd

On Feb 21, 2020, at 2:22 AM, Randy B. Singer <randy@...> wrote:


On Feb 20, 2020, at 7:35 PM, Jay Abraham wrote:

I have used OfficeTime - it has a free version and a Pro version - main difference is that Pro allows more categories and exporting of data.
I don't see a free version of Office Time on their Web site or on the Mac App Store.



If there is a free version I would really appreciate you pointing me to it. A free version would be awesome.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________






Re: Free Time Tracker

 

开云体育

No, Bev is right that the free tracker I was mentioning was for iPhone and iPad. ?I didn’t realize OP wanted a MacOS tracker. ?I use it mainly on the go for consulting so I never thought of having one on my laptop/desktop.

Jay


On Feb 21, 2020, at 5:47 PM, Christopher Collins via Groups.Io <maclist@...> wrote:

I noticed a “FREE” 21 day trial.

Christopher

On 22 Feb 2020, at 5:24 am, Bev in TX <countryone77@...> wrote:

?
On Feb 21, 2020, at 2:22 AM, Randy B. Singer <randy@...> wrote:

On Feb 20, 2020, at 7:35 PM, Jay Abraham wrote:

I have used OfficeTime - it has a free version and a Pro version - main difference is that Pro allows more categories and exporting of data.

I don't see a free version of Office Time on their Web site or on the Mac App Store.



If there is a free version I would really appreciate you pointing me to it. ?A free version would be awesome.

I think that the free version is for iPads and iPhones:

--
Bev in TX


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

On Feb 23, 2020, at 12:37 PM, hoplist wrote:


On Feb 19, 2020, at 1:31 PM, Randy B. Singer <randy@...> wrote:

Windows bigots
I’m pretty sure there are no Windows bigots on this list.
No, but many folks who use Macs listen to Windows bigots and parrot what they have to say and apparently believe it.

I've said this many times....Macintosh users should only get Macintosh advice from (hopefully) knowledgeable Macintosh experts. The mainstream media, Windows users, and sometimes companies that want to sell you software are not reliable/trustable sources for Macintosh advice.

___________________________________________
Randy B. Singer
Co-author of The Macintosh Bible (4th, 5th, and 6th editions)

Macintosh OS X Routine Maintenance

___________________________________________


Re: Apple's OSX computers now being hit with twice as much malware as PCs

 

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On Feb 19, 2020, at 10:28 AM, Daniel Settles <denver1.dan1@...> wrote:

There are hundreds of millions of Macs and over a billion iOS?
devices. ??There are more devices running macOS X and iOS than there?
are Windows devices. ?

iOS is a distinct operating system.

Wikipedia offers: In the area of desktop and computers, Microsoft Windows is generally above 70% in most markets and at 77% globally, Apple's at around 13%, Google's ChromeOS at about 6% (in the US) and Linux at around 2%.

More importantly, the vast majority of Macs are consumer machines. The share of Macs in the professional market is very low, especially globally. Malware development is driven by business and government targets, not consumers. Ransomware technologies, for instance, were developed to attack big organizations, not individual consumers. Consumers are really an ancillary target.?

In addition, Windows systems tend to be much older and more poorly maintained compared Mac systems. This means that within the Windows slice of the pie, a far larger percentage are vulnerable.

The net result is that Windows systems globally present a far more lucrative target for malicious actors.

Malware is driven by market forces, not technical simplicity.

Cheers,
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? tod