Apple Releases OS X 10.4.2 Update 182
kenthorvath was one of many readers to note that "Apple has quietly released an update for OS X Tiger. New features include a widget manager for dashboard and some 200 bug fixes and enhancements."
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell
no zlib patch (Score:5, Informative)
need to fix spolight too (Score:5, Informative)
The problems with spolight are well known now but I'll recite them:
1) doesn't let you finish typing before it searches. Yeah that was supposed to be a feature, but apparently it wont halt and discard the first search as you try to type. If you are a slow typist and qimply type the letter followed by a pause before typing "uicktime", for example, you have to wait while it finds every document witha Q in it. You cant stop it. No hacker has yet reporeted finding where they store the default time delay so you can adjust it.
2) When you sort by date you can only sort by last access date not creation date. Worse yet, if you click on one of the items on the spotlight list (to get info on it) spotlight "touches" the document and poof it has todays date as its last viewed date. So that's totally useless and even dangerous if you are relying on it to figure out the most recent version of something you were using.
3) in the same vein, over time spotlight seems to touch all the resource or meta data forks creation dates. Or maybe not, I'm not sure. but the net effect is if you try to rsync it to another drive on a unix computer (using apple_double ) to preseve the meta data it ends up detecting that EVERY file has changed and recopies it, totally defeating the point of rsync.
4) you are supposed to be able to disable it from indexing a disk by using the "mdutil -i off "command. This only works some of the time. For example I had a two partition disk and while spotlight indexing is turned off on both, it still indexes one of them but not the other. (yes I deleted the old index). If you declare something Private it does not actually delete the index but simply does not report results for that folder. This is useless for stopping indexing on removable disks.
5) if you plug in a USB thumb driver it may decide to index it even if your just copying files off of it.
6) it's buggy. Often in Mail it fails to find content you know is present. Dont know if thats Mail, Spotlight or the API thats gummed.
7) It's insanely slow on a 1.2 GHZ powerboog or 800 Mhz G4 imac. Oddly it seems somewhat closer to reasonable on a G5
8) there's no simple way to have it default to find by name. in the finder to find by name you have to do the following steps. press command-F, pull down the find-by-kind and change it to find by name, then enter the name in the test field. Dont type slowly or it finds everthing with the first letter you type while you wait for five minutes. You can try to change the default from find-by-kind to find-by-name but most (but not all!) users find this change is not sticky and it reverts to find_by-kind. (and who would want find-by-kind to be the default!)
9) find by name is insanley slow compared to say "locate" in unix. it's not a lot faster than "find" in unix. Apparently they must not have indexed their DB on the name. what were they thinking?
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:4, Informative)
doesn't let you finish typing before it searches.
That is annoying. And let me also add that, conversely, Dashboard would be far more efficient and useful if it updated itself before I press the damn Dashboard hotkey. As it is, the way Dashboard works now:
1) Hit the Dashboard hotkey.
2) Wait for all the various pieces of info to come in via the network. Keep waiting. Isn't this convenient?
3) See the info you want(ed), in roughly the same time it would have taken you to open up Safari and click a bookmark.
But the way Dashboard should work, in my opinion:
1) Dashboard gets that info for you in the background. (Dashboard occasionally updates that info, too).
2) Hitting the Dashboard hotkey shows the info you want, so you can read it in a split-second, and get on with your life.
~jeff
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Oddly enough, this doesn't bother me at all. It might be that I'm using a faster Mac (or have a smaller hard disk to search.) You are, however, absolutely right about Dashboard widgets. Even if you don't want this to be default behavior (to reload a bunch of stuff), refreshing in the background should definitely be an option.
Some widgets I use a ton (e.g., Wikipedia) don't really have a problem like this, but most of the re
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Informative)
When you activate it, all the processes page into memory (if they're not already there) and run their little JavaScripts. That means that there's a lot of memory/disk swapping going on, plus the network activity inherent in grabbing this sort of data.
If you're doing some intensive processing, that may cause disk thrashing as you're paging Dashboard widgets in whil
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
To me, it seems that Apple has developed a fetish for having things happen EXACTLY when I don't want them to. I still have no honkin' clue why I have to wait for the 3 external FireWire hard drives I have attatched to my computer to spin up (one by one, not all at once!) before the computer will eject my USB key, display an open or save panel, etc.
Granted, I haven't bought Tiger yet, maybe that particular asininity has been fixed.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:4, Interesting)
See the Dashboard Programming Guide [apple.com].
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, that wait for all the other widgets is really annoying. Can't they set it to a high nice and then have them update?
Re:fix spotlight? (Score:2)
Actually, I enjoy this feature because I will often see what I am looking for before i finish typing and hence discontinue typing.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:5, Informative)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
That 1 is empty, unless:
a) I have just launched mail or
b) I click "edit smart folder" then press ok.
Crazy.
I haven't encou
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Interesting)
I've got an iBook 1.2GHz, standard 60GB drive and 784MB RAM, and it's always been fast and responsive for me. My system has about 300,000 files on it, which seems like a reasonable number.
I keep hearing isolated stories like this and wondering if it's more universal or just scattered anecdotes.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, good luck with it. There's not much else I can do but hope Apple improve performance on it.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:4, Insightful)
Search results are also more or less useless, the fuzzy content search rarely returns what I expect, and often it misses content that I know is there. Something predictable like "name contains" is much more useful, but as others have noted it's impossible to change the default.
But what really blows is that they removed the file search functionality from Sherlock. It did exactly what I needed, and it did it fast.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
I go to Spotlight, type in 'quicktime' slowly and it searches for me instantly. It takes a few seconds to completely refine the list after I type the 'e' but it's not bad.
How many files do you have on your hard drive? Disk utilities shows I have 284,830 files spread over 52,415 folders, in 52.7GB of 55.8GB (about 94% full).
Spotlight is fast for me. I can't believe that my iBook is somehow magical (after 16 months it no longer sleeps when the lid is closed...) but I also can't b
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
I also have an MDD G4 2x1.0GHz which is currently running headless due to a combination of a borked nVidia card and idiotic cow-orkers who sent back the replacement card I'd ordered whilst on holiday because... I was on holiday. Anyway, mdfind from the command line takes exactly 1 minute to list every file containing 'e' form the 0.5TB of data on that
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
I typed in "p." I let it go for about 5 seconds, at which point it had found about 25000 documents, displaying about 15 of the top hits. I then typed in "enny" to make "penny" and after about half a second it continued on to search for the more specific term.
It may be the processors, but I think something else is up. I'm in your boat -- never had a problem with it, and I think it performs great,
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Informative)
This is mainly a problem with the new resource-fork friendly rsync (I assume you're using -E). It can't/doesn't compare the resource forks, and so simply just recopies all files that include them. It's sort of the safer action (makes certain what you're syncing to matches) but, as you've found, gets quite irritating in certain instances (for example, it continually recopies my 2GB VPC image). Here's hoping they fix this in a new version.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Sherlock used to find my files in a fraction of a second. Spotlight often takes almost 30 seconds before it's done, defaults to a fuzzy search method that doesn't return useful hits, doesn't
No problems here (Score:3, Interesting)
Little tip: Don't wait for it to finish building that list, move down to what you want immediately. Searching before you finish is a feature, not a bug, and it is brilliant. If they change it because of your post I'm going to have to find you and dunk you in onion juice or something.
Spotlight works so beautifully here that I have been telling people it is the single must-have featur
Re:No problems here (Score:2)
I do that in linux too.. except instead of using spotlight, I just use a terminal.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:3, Informative)
> doesn't let you finish typing before it searches. Yeah that was
> supposed to be a feature, but apparently it wont halt and discard
> the first search as you try to type. If you are a slow typist and
> qimply type the letter followed by a pause before typing
> "uicktime", for example, you have to wait while it finds every
> document witha Q in it.
My computer is fine here. Right now, I'm trying this out:
1. command+space. Boom! Spotlight opens
2. Press q.
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
I am running Tiger on an 867Mhz Powerbook with 640MB RAM. And I have none of the problems that some people here are seemingly very upset and vocal about.
Spotlight instantly begins refining the search every time I press a new key, and new results start coming back instantly. The entire search is completed in less than three seconds.
I suggest that those experiencing the issues with Spotlight that have been described here run all the basic housekeeping (repair permissions blah
Re:need to fix spolight too (rsync) (Score:2)
then again, every time I've used rsync on files that I've known are the same but with different timestamps, rsync happily checks the hashes on segments of the file and doesn't actually transfer all the data.
this is one of the big features of rsync, that it can do partial resumes. maybe you also aren't using the -P or --partial flags.
as for 7, 8, and 9: you're surprised that a G5 runs Spotlight faster than a G4? I'd assume that Spotlight takes advantage of altivec. the
Re:need to fix spolight too (Score:2)
Laserlight [versiontracker.com] solves that issue.
Re:Mod Up PARENT (Score:2)
Don't bring up the expanded Spotlight window because it doesn't seem to work there. Use the Spotlight icon on the upper right and don't press return or it will shift the results to the expanded view.
When you mouse-over results from the simple search, it will give you the path. Just chalk it up as one of the many Spotlight issues.
Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger" is a great operating system with two major fla
Just got it (Score:1)
Re:Just got it (Score:1)
Re:Just got it (Score:2)
OK, I wans't expecting that. It looks quite nice though.
No problems here, but it didn't fix that iPhoto bug.
Re:Just got it (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just got it (Score:4, Insightful)
Dashboard itself takes about 20MB of memory. Each widget takes at least 20MB of memory. Most people I've seen have at least a half dozen widgets going (if nothing else, the default calendar widget, a notes widget, a weather widget, calculator, countdown...)
Six widgets and dashboard will take up a good 150mb of RAM right there. I'll save my 150mb of ram and use stickies, weather.com, regular calendar and the OSX calculator instead, thanks.
Dashboard could be potentially useful, but not if it keeps sucking up the resources it currently needs. And not if all people keep making for dashboard are widgets to replicate what OSX already has readily available (why would I use a stickies/notes feature in dashboard for 20MB ram when I could use the builtin OSX stickies at 9MB?).
Re:Just got it (Score:2)
On the whole, 10.4.2 seems much better with memory. Since the update I have several hundred more meg of free memory.
On a side note, I don't know why anyone would use Dash
Server Update Notes (Score:3, Informative)
According to new benchmarks (Score:5, Funny)
Re:According to new benchmarks (Score:4, Informative)
Widgets seem to be using up considerably less memory and running more smoothly than previously, which in turn frees up more memory for other tasks and has reduced general swapping.
Re:According to new benchmarks (Score:2)
Re:According to new benchmarks (Score:2)
I can also report that Quartz 2D Extreme seems to be a lot closer to being production-ready. I was finding that it resulted in some image corruption (lost or incorrectly placed characters, and incorrect Z-ordering) when displaying complex PDFs, but this appears to have been fixed in the latest release.
Ah but the question remains (Score:2)
Quietly? (Score:5, Funny)
Tune in tonight (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Quietly? (Score:1)
Re:Quietly? (Score:1)
http://www.joseandkris.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
What I do when I'm not on slashdot
Re:Quietly? (Score:1)
Oh, wait...
Crash crash crash (Score:2, Interesting)
Under what conditions? (Score:3, Insightful)
Saying "I've had two hard crashes since I installed this" is neither informative nor useful in debugging the issue. I'd also recom
Re:Crash crash crash (Score:2)
However, I'll give details about my experience: iBook G4 first gen. No hack or special software installed, exception made of the great screen panning doctor. It was a hard crash on the first reboot. The second reboot went smoothly and everything looks fine and no harm done (?).
No need to send a bug report, on reboot, my happy mac now-10.4.2 asked me if
Also... (Score:1)
Re:Also... (Score:1)
The aforementioned menu extra will, indeed, sync your cell phone via iSync (which now slaves to
G5 chirping gone (Score:2)
Quartz 2D Extreme? (Score:1)
Re:Quartz 2D Extreme? (Score:1)
Re:Quartz 2D Extreme? (Score:1)
Re:Quartz 2D Extreme? (Score:2)
Fuck. YES. (Score:4, Funny)
'"Do you hear me Jobs?!?!?" he cried, sloshing chardonnay(sp?) all about the joint.'
Working around the hotfiles_evict problem (Score:4, Interesting)
The easiest way to work around hotfiles_evict is to free up some space on the drive. The big catch is that the freespace must have a contiguous block large enough to store the file which is being evicted from the hotfiles area.
I had the hotfiles_evict problem on a G4 tower at work. The boot drive was about 98% full. After moving some files onto an external FireWire drive I got down to about 90% full. The problem remained. I then moved more stuff until I got down to about 80% full.
Between the 90 and 80 mark I also disabled journalling on the volume. This, I think, is the easiest way to fix it. Disabling journalling also disables hotfiles and therefore the update daemon will no longer try to manage the hotfiles store.
I haven't seen the problem resurface yet. Note that this was a DP G4 and so update only ate 100% of one CPU (barely noticeable). What I did notice was the fact that my boot drive suddenly had ZERO freespace because the system.log grew to about 6 GB. Yes, I know, this actually exacerbates the problem.
I can only hope that 10.4.2 fixes the issue. I'll probably re-enable journaling and see what happens.
Also, speaking of drive freespace: There is apparently a known flaw in HFS+ with respect to contiguous freespace. When allocating new space for the catalog a 4 MB block of contiguous freespace is required. If you don't have a 4 MB block of contiguous freespace then apparently there is a bug whereby 4 MB will be allocated potentially overtop another portion of the catalog or overtop some file's data. Not good. Best advice from what I've gathered is to never let a volume be more than 80% full. Ever.
Re:Working around the hotfiles_evict problem (Score:2)
I was having hotfiles_erupt on a twelve hour cycle, so it wasn't until getting home from work today that I could be sure it was really fixed. Now I can return to the quiet life of an uptime whore; rebooting nightly sucks out loud.
Re:Working around the hotfiles_evict problem (Score:2)
I assume you mean 10.4.2 fixed it? Good news!
Hopefully this means I can safely enable journaling on the G4's boot drive again. Well, I probably can anyway since I freed up so much space and have already double checked with hfsdebug that I have at least a few several hundred MB chunks of freespace.
For curiousities sake though, is your boot volume also near full?
Re:Fuck. YES. (Score:2)
If you were using OS X 10.3 and older you would not need to misspell due to the inline spell-check and the dictionary app in 10.4. Not to be a dick, I just use it all the time.
Chardonnay
|? sh ärdn??|
noun
a variety of white wine grape used for making champagne and other wines.
a wine made from this grape.
ORIGIN French
Re:Fuck. YES. (Score:3, Funny)
And all that aside, I was clearly being facetious... I only drink red wines.
Please report bugs, folks! (Score:5, Insightful)
Step 1: Go to developer.apple.com and sign up for a free (as in beer) membership (or sign up for one of the expensive memberships if you want free software, hardware discounts, etc).
Step 2: Go to bugreporter.apple.com and fill out a report. You'll have to give up some info about your system and *detailed* info about the behavior, why its wrong, and what needs to be different. And if you can isolate the problem to a particular configuration, it'll help them fix the bug faster.
These enter Apple's internal bugtracking system. Some of your complaints are duplicates of existing ones, but if enough people bitch about a particular issue then there will be more pressure to fix it.
There is no step 3! (er, profit!)
The downside is that you'll likely never hear back from them. Even if the bug is solved, you'll never know until they release a new version. They may decide that the behavior is "works as intended" and ignore you. There is no way to follow the progress of your bug.
the simplest bugs aren't getting fixed... (Score:2)
Fair enough- but there are some serious bugs that still haven't been fixed, and are blatantly obvious. For example- add someone to your address book from Mail. It will flip their name around, putting "Last" in the "First" spot (YES, I'm aware of the 'sort/displa
Re:the simplest bugs aren't getting fixed... (Score:2)
Re:Please report bugs, folks! (Score:3, Insightful)
And until they start communicating with people who file bug reports, people are going to keep complaining in public forums. Quietly waiting for months for Apple to (maybe) release a fix in the next update is rarely an option. Bitching in forums
Re:Please report bugs, folks! (Score:4, Interesting)
They do communicate. I've filed bugs with Apple, had them contact me for additional information and to test fixes.
Re:Please report bugs, folks! (Score:2)
The people who complain probably just wrote: "your crappy software doesn't work! you sukc(/"(/!#"
200 bugs fixed? (Score:2, Informative)
swapping less? (Score:2)
Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:3, Informative)
To delete a widget in the widget manager, click the red button to the right of the widget icon.
Yeah! It's complicated I know.
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Ooh...that works great. Now why is that icon a weird "don't go here" red button rather than a trash can? But thanks for helping me blow away Hula Girl in like 2 seconds. :-)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Why, why would you want to do that?
Hula Girl rocks!
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
By default, all of the Apple-provided widgets are in
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
This means that normal users can't put anything in there, nor can they delete anything from it. Thus, they don't have permission to delete the widgets, thus the option doesn't show up.
Any widget that automatically installs itself can only go into ~/Library/Widgets/ so this widget manager can delete any automatically installed widget. If you know enough to put a
Re:Widget "Manager" (Score:2)
Right, because Mac OS X applications never prompt for authorization when they need a higher level of privileges. </sarcasm>
Broken: Internet Sharing over AirPort (Score:3, Informative)
At my home office and I use internet sharing to share my 17" powerbook's ethernet wire connection to a couple PCs in the office via airport/wifi. After installing 10.4.2, it's now broken--my vaio and my dell laptops can no longer connect to my powerbook's airport when encryption is on. Since security is an issue (and I can't have an unsecured network), I'm pretty much hosed (unless I want to go out and buy a wireless router). Sigh.
Andy
WPA-PSK with AES finally supported (Score:4, Informative)
Three cheers for Apple!
Re:WPA-PSK with AES finally supported (Score:2)
er... FTFF? (Score:3, Interesting)
this is a long-standing "os X finder doesn't work like classic finder" issue, and while it's not a great hardship, it would be nice to see it fixed.
Summary:
files dragged from the finder into another application, or copied from place to place, or even file listings copied and pasted from the finder never retain the order in which they were diplayed in the finder.
Steps to Reproduce:
1 - select several files or folders in a finder window, in list mode, ordered by name. select edit->copy to copy the filenames to the clipboard.
2 - open a textedit document. paste the filenames into the document. the names will be in a different order from their positions in the finder, in a seemingly random new order.
Expected Results:
one would expect that the listing in the clipboard, and thus in the document, would reflect either a: the order in which they were selected (not the case) or b: the order in which they appear in the finder (also, not the case)
Actual Results:
for example, i've created several folders via duplication in the finder, named "copy 1"
in the finder, they appear in alphabetical order, 1-9. selecting these and copy/pasting the listing into an empty textedit document, results as such:
"copy 7
copy 4
copy 3
copy 8
copy 6
copy 5
copy 1
copy 2
copy 9"
clearly not alphabetical.
Regression:
none that i know of. selecting multiple files and opening them in their associated application opens them out of order. dragging multiple files from the finder into applications that accept dragged items imports/places them out of order, etc.
Re:Wait... (Score:2)
I just hope the nice Apple dancer ads won't have to stop cold in the tracks for the stupid "Intel Inside" jingle box. Might as well put NASCAR-style feature stickers all over the Powerbooks.
Re:Wait... (Score:3, Interesting)
The other issue is that while they give lip-service to supporting old versions, they tend not to come out with security patches for anything but the latest version -- or 1 or 2 releases back at best. Sun, Redhat and SGI would never get away with that.
Re:Wait... (Score:2)
Well, the security patches go back to 10.2, which is the first modern Mac OS X. 10.0/10.1 machines should definitely be upgraded that far at least. I understand that may not be an option for you, but it is a fair time back.
Apple's feature additions are usually pretty modest. In fact, this widget manager is the first I can really think of for an 0.0.1 release, and it's arguably a security fix...
But yes, it would be nice if you could get the security fixes without the bug fixes.
Re:Tab Key Adopts New Function (Score:2)
Re:Tab Key Adopts New Function (Score:2, Informative)
If that's not it, however, I'm out of ideas. Having never tried that key combination before the update (or at least I don't remember trying it), I dunno if it's new.
you don't own a Mac, do you? (Score:2)
Been around since NeXT (Score:2, Informative)
Re:A pretty useless update. (Score:2, Informative)
I realize that this is still Apple's fault, but there may be a solution; I had the same problem, until I ran across this:
http://discussions.info.apple.com/webx?13@778.k1IL aLeWY5K.0@.68b170ea/0 [apple.com]
Not sure if that link will continue to work, but the solution was:
"Go to the Library (on the hard drive, not the user), then Preferences and take the SystemConfiguration folder out and place it on the desktop. Then restart and set up your network pr
Re:Slowed my computer down. (Score:2)