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Technology Stocks : Apple Inc. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito who wrote (70443)10/27/2007 5:34:18 PM
From: aaplfan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 213184
 
All was looking well for the first 8 hours or so for me as well. My PowerBook G4 which survived the betas, isn't faring so well with the final release: I currently have an unbootable brick (can't even boot from an alternate device right now) and an open case with Apple.



To: Cogito who wrote (70443)10/28/2007 12:21:03 AM
From: HerbVic  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 213184
 
Excelente mi capitán!

Detalles. Lo requerido.

Si quieres, por supuesto.

Tengo una lista de las cosas deseo por reparación en OS X.

En Inglés:

1> That the desktop icons would remember their arrangement after a restart.
2> The ability to check and uncheck as active or inactive, for the "Use random screen saver" function, the various screen savers.
3> The ability to click a button at the top of a window to alternate between full screen and a smaller window.

All that other stuff is really great, but if Leopard fixes these three things I'll buy the Family Pack and upgrade the iMacs G4 and G5. I might even buy a new iMac Core 2 Duo.

Creo que sí. Creo que hace.



To: Cogito who wrote (70443)10/28/2007 11:53:35 PM
From: Cogito  Respond to of 213184
 
>>You can indeed resize partitions without erasing data using Disk Utility. Since I haven't yet Leoparized my MBP, I don't know whether that applies to Boot Camp partitions.<<

All -

I can now verify that Disk Utility does not allow you to resize your Boot Camp partition. Furthermore, it warns that if you have a Boot Camp partition, making any changes to your partitioning scheme (such as adding additional partitions) could cause the Windows installation in Boot Camp to fail to boot.

This is similar to behavior that you would see on any Windows machine, btw. It has to do with the way Windows looks at disk partitions and the way it numbers them.

- Allen