Mar 24, 2021 The fact that OS X launched at all on March 24, 2001, was a relief and felt like an achievement if you were a long-time Mac user. Even though that very first 'Cheetah' version, 10.0, lacked. The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia's Office of the Prime Minister is currently restructuring under the premiership of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. Under the new structure the Office comprises eleven structures. The Simpsons - The D'oh-cial Network. Season 23, episode 11. In this Zuckerberg-inspired episode, Lisa creates a new social network dubbed SpringFace in an effort to make more friends.
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This article appeared in the April 2001issue of the LouisvilleComputer News. It was written by LeeLarson.
In the middle of March, my hacker friend, Greg, invited me over to see a late beta build of Mac OS X he'd acquired from somewhere. 'It's easy to get it off the Web, if you've got the right IRC contacts,' he bragged. 'This is supposedly the very last build before they went golden master. I'm pretty sure this is close to what OS X will really be like when it's released on X-day--March 24.'
After peeking at the screen for a few seconds, I saw the same shimmering, wet, sparkly look as the public beta I'd been using off and on for a few months. 'Well, what's different?'
'To begin with, it's a good bit faster--especially the Mac OS 9 compatibility mode. That public beta must have had a lot of debugging code inside. They've really given it a push! And they stuck the Apple menu back into the corner where God intended it to be.'
'That's good!' I said. 'Things like scrolling and menus drove me crazy in the public beta. A lot of the time, it was kind of like working on an old 68040 machine. I had to keep repeating.. it's only beta.. it's only beta.. '
'On the public beta, I could type a lot faster than Nisus Writer could draw the letters on the screen,' he mused. 'That's doesn't happen any more. Even a big clunker like Word runs pretty fast. Of course, I've pretty much switched over to AppleWorks because it's carbonized for Mac OS X and zips right along.'
'That's a strange way Apple has of putting things--carbonized,' I mused.
Greg stopped and thought for a moment. 'Well, you know the programming library for OS X that Apple's been pushing for years is called Carbon. If a program only uses Carbon routines, it'll run at full speed in both Mac OS 9 and OS X. Apple says just as all life is based on carbon, all programs to be used on Mac OS 9 and X should be Carbon-based.'
'That's the big problem, isn't it? A non-Carbonized program will probably run on Mac OS X using Mac OS 9 compatibility mode, but it can't use a lot of the new features, and it might run a little slower than a Carbonized program.'
'It's even a little more complicated than that. To really take advantage of all the nice new features of OS X, programmers will avoid Carbon and use another library called Cocoa. Cocoa programs won't run at all under OS 9. I'm pretty sure all the heavy hitters like Adobe and Quark won't even stop to look at Carbon; they'll move straight to Cocoa, forcing their users onto OS X.' Greg brought up the Process Manager. 'Look at this!' He double-clicked iTunes and right away we could see the Mac go into compatibility mode. 'According to the Process Viewer, compatibility mode sucks up about half the machine, even when you aren't doing anything in it. You can run pretty much all your old favorite programs, but you really suck a lot of life out of OS X. I think it should be called vampire mode. This is the biggest reason why people are going to want Carbon and Cocoa programs.'
Tennis4two - the roots mac os. Something else bothered me. 'That's iTunes! It was released by Apple in January. Apple's been beating on developers for a couple of years to Carbonize their programs, but they didn't even do it themselves.'
'I know. Apparently there was such a push to get it out by January's Macworld that they didn't have time. The iTunes web page (itunes.apple.com) mumbles softly about a Carbon version coming along soon now. Listen to this!' He double-clicked a song in the iTunes window and then started copying a big file out to his Linux server. 'Notice how the song hesitates? It doesn't do that under Mac OS 9 when I do the same copy.'
'A program in vampire mode has an extra layer between it and the hardware,' I observed. 'It asks the compatibility program to ask Mac OS X to talk to the hardware. This could slow it down. When it's running under the real Mac OS 9, there's one less layer in the way.'
'That pretty much sums it up,' said Greg. 'Graphics especially seem to be hit hard because OS X has a completely new graphics system Apple calls Quartz. Programs written for Mac OS 9 use the older graphics routines called QuickDraw. Every time they draw to the screen, all the QuickDraw calls have to be translated to Quartz. On the other hand, the compatibility mode usually works really well. Some programs actually run faster in compatibility mode than in Mac OS 9. I think it's because memory management is so much better in OS X. All the problems like this should go away as programmers start using Carbon and Cocoa.'
'Remember when the big switch was made from the 68000 to the PowerPC?' I mused. 'This reminds me a lot of that. Apple built the 68K compatibility layer into the machines so the old software could run. Some of the old stuff ran really well because it mostly used the built-in ROM routines that were already PowerPC code. But some of the old stuff was so slow it was painful to use. It turned out that programmers who'd followed Apple's programming guidelines were the ones with software that ran well. Deja vu all over again?'
'I remember that well,' recalled Greg. 'It took about a year for my programs to make the switch, or for me to find new ones that worked. That's probably going to happen again. But, when the switch is made, things will work wonderfully. Under the native Mac OS X, I can run a couple of QuickTime movies in the background and copy files without any of them pausing at all.'
'Actually, my biggest problem with the public beta has been lack of support for peripherals. I can't use my scanner or inkjet printer, and the TV tuner for my XClaim TV video card can't talk to the card, so I can't watch TV in a corner of my screen. That's going to be the big make-or-break issue for me with OS X after baseball season starts. Baseball is life!'
Clearly not understanding, Greg picked up his trackpad. 'I've got this fancy four-button Kensington programmable pad, and there's no word on the manufacturer's site whether OS X drivers are in the works. The ball and the left button work now, but the rest might as well not be there. Apple had better be out there pounding on all the gadget-makers for new drivers, or a lot of us are sticking with OS 9.'
'I'm hoping that everyone's holding off until the day X is actually released in order to ride the wave of announcements from Apple.'
Greg rolled his eyes at the ceiling and said 'The announcements they've made so far are a little off the wall. You know how they've been beating into us that Mac OS X is Mac-oh-ess-ten and not Mac-oh-ess-ex? It took me months to train myself to think of the X as a ten, even though I still think Mac-oh-ess-ex is a better name--advertise it during the X Files and The Lone Gunmen--the geek and hacker shows. Well, the first release is going to be called Mac OS X 10.0 because it's the successor to Mac OS 9.'
'Yeah, I saw that. It's a really stupid numbering scheme. Do you think Apple realized everybody's probably going to call it ten-ten?'
Looking unconvinced, Greg observed 'We really don't know much of anything, yet. Steve Jobs is a natural showman, and always has a rabbit under his hat. There's going to be more than one surprise on X-day!'
Louisville Computer Society
The speaker at the April LCS meeting will be Lee Larson. He will take apart and reassemble a computer, showing all the parts. It might even still work after he's done.
The Louisville Computer Society meets 7:00-9:00 P.M. on the fourth Tuesday of each month at Pitt Academy, 4605 Poplar Level Road, at the intersection of Poplar Level Road and Gilmore Lane. Everyone is welcome to attend. For more information, on the Web go to www.aye.net/~lcs, or e-mail lcs@aye.net.
The LCS also sponsors an e-mail discussion list devoted to Macintosh topics. To join, send e-mail containing only the words 'subscribe macgroup' to majordomo@erdos.math.louisville.edu.
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Let's face it: everyone loves a good scratch. People have even taken to Reddit to ask why it feels so good to have an itch scratched by someone else. One theory is that scratching quiets nerve cells, which brings skin relief. But feeling itchy all the time can cause concern. Even though scratching is often satisfying, it can be bad for you. Scratching an itch often makes you feel itchier all over, and it can make you itch elsewhere on your body. If you can't stop scratching your body, you're probably asking yourself, 'Why am I so itchy all the freaking time?'
'That's the big problem, isn't it? A non-Carbonized program will probably run on Mac OS X using Mac OS 9 compatibility mode, but it can't use a lot of the new features, and it might run a little slower than a Carbonized program.'
'It's even a little more complicated than that. To really take advantage of all the nice new features of OS X, programmers will avoid Carbon and use another library called Cocoa. Cocoa programs won't run at all under OS 9. I'm pretty sure all the heavy hitters like Adobe and Quark won't even stop to look at Carbon; they'll move straight to Cocoa, forcing their users onto OS X.' Greg brought up the Process Manager. 'Look at this!' He double-clicked iTunes and right away we could see the Mac go into compatibility mode. 'According to the Process Viewer, compatibility mode sucks up about half the machine, even when you aren't doing anything in it. You can run pretty much all your old favorite programs, but you really suck a lot of life out of OS X. I think it should be called vampire mode. This is the biggest reason why people are going to want Carbon and Cocoa programs.'
Tennis4two - the roots mac os. Something else bothered me. 'That's iTunes! It was released by Apple in January. Apple's been beating on developers for a couple of years to Carbonize their programs, but they didn't even do it themselves.'
'I know. Apparently there was such a push to get it out by January's Macworld that they didn't have time. The iTunes web page (itunes.apple.com) mumbles softly about a Carbon version coming along soon now. Listen to this!' He double-clicked a song in the iTunes window and then started copying a big file out to his Linux server. 'Notice how the song hesitates? It doesn't do that under Mac OS 9 when I do the same copy.'
'A program in vampire mode has an extra layer between it and the hardware,' I observed. 'It asks the compatibility program to ask Mac OS X to talk to the hardware. This could slow it down. When it's running under the real Mac OS 9, there's one less layer in the way.'
'That pretty much sums it up,' said Greg. 'Graphics especially seem to be hit hard because OS X has a completely new graphics system Apple calls Quartz. Programs written for Mac OS 9 use the older graphics routines called QuickDraw. Every time they draw to the screen, all the QuickDraw calls have to be translated to Quartz. On the other hand, the compatibility mode usually works really well. Some programs actually run faster in compatibility mode than in Mac OS 9. I think it's because memory management is so much better in OS X. All the problems like this should go away as programmers start using Carbon and Cocoa.'
'Remember when the big switch was made from the 68000 to the PowerPC?' I mused. 'This reminds me a lot of that. Apple built the 68K compatibility layer into the machines so the old software could run. Some of the old stuff ran really well because it mostly used the built-in ROM routines that were already PowerPC code. But some of the old stuff was so slow it was painful to use. It turned out that programmers who'd followed Apple's programming guidelines were the ones with software that ran well. Deja vu all over again?'
'I remember that well,' recalled Greg. 'It took about a year for my programs to make the switch, or for me to find new ones that worked. That's probably going to happen again. But, when the switch is made, things will work wonderfully. Under the native Mac OS X, I can run a couple of QuickTime movies in the background and copy files without any of them pausing at all.'
'Actually, my biggest problem with the public beta has been lack of support for peripherals. I can't use my scanner or inkjet printer, and the TV tuner for my XClaim TV video card can't talk to the card, so I can't watch TV in a corner of my screen. That's going to be the big make-or-break issue for me with OS X after baseball season starts. Baseball is life!'
Clearly not understanding, Greg picked up his trackpad. 'I've got this fancy four-button Kensington programmable pad, and there's no word on the manufacturer's site whether OS X drivers are in the works. The ball and the left button work now, but the rest might as well not be there. Apple had better be out there pounding on all the gadget-makers for new drivers, or a lot of us are sticking with OS 9.'
'I'm hoping that everyone's holding off until the day X is actually released in order to ride the wave of announcements from Apple.'
Greg rolled his eyes at the ceiling and said 'The announcements they've made so far are a little off the wall. You know how they've been beating into us that Mac OS X is Mac-oh-ess-ten and not Mac-oh-ess-ex? It took me months to train myself to think of the X as a ten, even though I still think Mac-oh-ess-ex is a better name--advertise it during the X Files and The Lone Gunmen--the geek and hacker shows. Well, the first release is going to be called Mac OS X 10.0 because it's the successor to Mac OS 9.'
'Yeah, I saw that. It's a really stupid numbering scheme. Do you think Apple realized everybody's probably going to call it ten-ten?'
Looking unconvinced, Greg observed 'We really don't know much of anything, yet. Steve Jobs is a natural showman, and always has a rabbit under his hat. There's going to be more than one surprise on X-day!'
Louisville Computer Society
The speaker at the April LCS meeting will be Lee Larson. He will take apart and reassemble a computer, showing all the parts. It might even still work after he's done.
The Louisville Computer Society meets 7:00-9:00 P.M. on the fourth Tuesday of each month at Pitt Academy, 4605 Poplar Level Road, at the intersection of Poplar Level Road and Gilmore Lane. Everyone is welcome to attend. For more information, on the Web go to www.aye.net/~lcs, or e-mail lcs@aye.net.
The LCS also sponsors an e-mail discussion list devoted to Macintosh topics. To join, send e-mail containing only the words 'subscribe macgroup' to majordomo@erdos.math.louisville.edu.
[ Previous Article | Next Article | Index of Articles]
/home2/lee/www/cgi-bin/textcounterdata/ [TextCounter Fatal Error: Could Not Write to File __lee_macwritings_LCN0104_shtml]
Let's face it: everyone loves a good scratch. People have even taken to Reddit to ask why it feels so good to have an itch scratched by someone else. One theory is that scratching quiets nerve cells, which brings skin relief. But feeling itchy all the time can cause concern. Even though scratching is often satisfying, it can be bad for you. Scratching an itch often makes you feel itchier all over, and it can make you itch elsewhere on your body. If you can't stop scratching your body, you're probably asking yourself, 'Why am I so itchy all the freaking time?'
Instead of scratching nonstop, it's important to find the root cause of your itchiness. It could be a number of things — there's even an International Forum for the Study of Itch for doctors and researchers who want to learn more about what makes us itchy. Even reading about itchiness can make you feel the urge to scratch. With the change in season, it's important to consider the effect this has on your skin. Because of the drop in temperature, you may be itching more than usual. Even the air indoors may be drier than it is in summer. If you're only itchy now and then, you likely won't be in any serious trouble if you scratch, but scratching regularly can lead to skin wounds or infection. Here are some things to keep in mind as you get ready for the chilly days ahead.
You should be moisturizing your skin daily after showering or exfoliating to keep it healthy, but moisturizing can also help prevent the dreaded itch. If your skin is dry enough that you're constantly itching, WebMD says to skip the lotion and head straight for Vaseline or a similar product. Exfoliating your skin can help it flake less, which will have you scratching less frequently.
As we mentioned, cold weather can bring that awful winter itch. Even if you live in warm weather, you'll still face some discomfort as you deal with cold fronts. Avoid long, hot showers, as they can make your skin even drier, and apply a moisturizer while your skin is still wet.
Your itchiness could be caused by what you're wearing as you transition to layering and bring out your winter wardrobe. Rayon, blended cotton or corduroy are all common irritants that could be causing an allergic reaction, which could cause you to itch. Silk, linen, flannel and polyester are all considered safer fabrics, and you can also go for natural clothing without any additives or dyes.
Did you know food intolerance can cause itchy skin? It's the season to eat delicious, hot foods, but wheat, milk, eggs, and soy can all make you itch if you have a sensitivity to these foods. If you can't stop scratching, it may be a good idea to examine your diet and see if there's anything you need to eliminate.
Season's Beatings (itch) Mac Os Pro
Bedbugs are already everyone's worst nightmare because of the financial and emotional toll they bring, but they also cause painful, itchy welts. It's a common myth that bedbugs can't survive winter, but the buggers can make it through cold seasons. Ants are also present during winter and could be making you itch due to bites.
Season's Beatings (itch) Mac Os 7
You may take advantage of the cooler temperatures by spending time outside or inside at the gym, but dry weather and low humidity can make your skin itch as you exercise. If you haven't exercised in a while, you may also experience a painful itch as your blood vessels expand.
Season's Beatings (itch) Mac Os Update
If you can't solve your itching with these tips, it might be time to see a doctor. Itching can be a sign of a more serious problem, like internal diseases, nerve disorders, or a serious skin condition. While the weather generally is a prime culprit, your itching could be caused by something else. If the itch doesn't let up when temperatures warm up, call a professional and get medical advice.