Validate? Too Hard…

April 30, 2006

I started the Mac Tips site about 11 months ago, by hand. By that I mean I entered everything in TextEdit and tabbed over to Safari to see how it looked. Over the months it would get fancier and fancier, and then I’d edit the look and refine it again.

This wasn’t too hard to do because most of the style elements are called out to a single CSS file. Usually I could change quite a lot just by modifying the CSS file, or changing a few common images, or at worst—using MassReplaceIt to do a blanket tweak to every published page.

Anyways.

All this tweaking had left the code a little messy looking. I really wanted to compact it and cut out a lot of the repetition, especially in the style classes. So today I copied out some sample files and hacked away—removing unused styles, combining others, and generally tidying things up. I uplinked the files and ran a validator.

Imagine my horror to find that there were dozens of errors! I was really pissed. I double checked to see how the pages looked in all the browsers (perfect in every case).

Every time I fixed a so-called error the validator would find two more! In the end I thought I’d try a little experiment—I tried the validator on several other sites that I like. Same result—dozens of errors. This thing is just too pedantic to be true.

Does anyone pass with anything more than “Hello world.” Next time I’m doing things by the book, but for now—I’m easy.

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Picture Switcher

April 27, 2006

Picture Switcher is a menu bar item that give you immediate access to your desktop pictures. With just two clicks you can change the picture displayed on the desktop by stepping through menus that show everything in your Pictures folder, as well as your iPhoto images and the built in Apple selection…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — Picture Switcher

Mytempdir.com - Dedicated Hosting service

April 26, 2006

Here’s an interesting concept: Go to the link below and upload a file to mytempdir.com where they’ll host that file free for 21 days. It can be up to 40 megs in size.

When the file’s uploaded you are given a URL so you can link to the file from your website; you’re also given the option to enter some friend’s email addresses. They’ll receive an email saying you’ve posted a file for them so they can choose whether to download it.

You are also given a link for deleting the file from the server.

Mytempdir.com - Dedicated Hosting service

That Cute Beep Beep Sound is Back

April 21, 2006

So there I was, using Minuteur, as I often do — only this time when the countdown reached zero there was silence. I panicked a little and tried trashing the preferences file; trashing the application and re-installing it; moving the included sound files to various other locations…

I was literally pulling my hair out in desperation so I decided to put that problem on hold for a while. Then tonight I visited Future Tense to listen to some streaming audio via Real Player. Again — silence.

So, this might be a system problem rather than a Minuteur problem. I browsed Apple’s support forums and found that someone else had reported loss of sound from Real Player. The suggested solution was to open Audio MIDI Setup and reset the sample rate to 44100.0hz.

Bingo. Audio restored to Real Player, and Minuteur. A few days ago I installed mPlayer — a multi format audio and video playback application, and took it off shortly thereafter. I suspect that’s the event that changed the MIDI configuration.

Andrew’s Mac Tips — SpiritedAway

April 18, 2006

SpiritedAway is a menubar gadget that keeps an eye on the windows that are open on your desktop. After a predetermined time, SpiritedAway will hide any windows that are not currently front and center…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — SpiritedAway

Boot Camp Implications

April 16, 2006

Yeah, what he says…

You won’t see Apple selling OS X for PCs on the shelves, you won’t see Apple licensing the OS to other manufacturers, and you definitely won’t see Apple switching to Windows. What you will see is an influx of customers willing to try out Mac hardware, knowing that they can run Windows on it if the switch to Mac OS proves too much to handle, and knowing that - one way or another - they can run the apps they need at full speed.

Nothing more. Nothing less.

Mac Geekery - Beige Hardware and Boot Camp Implications

Andrew’s Mac Tips — TinkerTool

April 12, 2006

TinkerTool is a great way to play around with some of the adjustable settings of OSX, without having to delve into the Terminal or tweak system files yourself…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — TinkerTool

Andrew’s Mac Tips — SunriseBrowser

SunriseBrowser isn’t really meant for every day use. Think of it more as a development tool. It uses Safari’s engine to render the pages (you can even access Safari’s bookmarks from within SunriseBrowser), but unlike Safari, it can tell you a whole lot more about the mechanics of the page you’re viewing…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — SunriseBrowser

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Service Scrubber

April 10, 2006

How is your Services Menu coming along? Getting a little big and unwieldy? For those who haven’t discovered it yet, the Services Menu is one of those OSX “Aha!” features…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — Service Scrubber

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — LiveQuartz

LiveQuartz is a CoreImage editor; that is, it’s an interface by which you can access the CoreImage components that reside within the OSX operating system — specifically OS 10.4…

Andrew’s Mac Tips — Quick Look — LiveQuartz