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Some more OSX tips
August 1, 2008 03:56 PM
Here are some more tips for OSX - mostly for personal consumption but who knows, someone might find a use for them as well. Also some iPhone hacking tips at the end. The discussion of the moral implications related to the subject will be saved for a latter post ;) Data DetectorsKnow how
For external iTunes library usersHere’s one I found out for myself, which may be useful for you people who, like me, have their music files stored in a separate volume. As you know, I have my iTunes library (the music file) in the Time Capsule - so normally I’d just use the “Advanced” menu in iTunes’ preferences to point to the said music folder. The problem with that is that the index file1 is still stored in the I have two machines that access that same library, so I usually have to manually synch those index files (since they’re local) to avoid any conflicts or loss of data. The question that needed answering was this: How do I get these machines to access one single index file? The “Advanced” section can’t do it since it only allows you to point/set where your actual music files are. The solution was simple: I moved all the contents of the The bonus of this approach was that if the Time Capsule was unavailable (hence the iTunes library), it would throw an error and prevent you from launching iTunes. “Why would you want that?” - you may ask, I’ll tell you why. The problem with an external library and a local index file is that iTunes will always be able to run - in the event your external library is not there, it will not warn you unless you try accessing content which was stored on the unavailable volume. If you try putting new content (download a podcast, etc.) without the external drive available, it will still go ahead and do it… downloading it to your local iTunes folder… which means you’ll have your files spread out in different places without you knowing (until you actually check… which I did… and I was not happy). So this approach may have the “drawback” of not being able to access iTunes at all unless the external drive was available, but I personally prefer it that way - because I hate it when I accidentally launch iTunes and it starts doing all this shit when I really didn’t even mean to launch it at all. Installing cracked iPhone .IPA files.iPhone/iPod Touch applications still use the Applications installed via Cydia are a bit different as the environment is self-contained; meaning everything that happens in your phone stays on your phone. If you reformat your phone, you’ll have to add whatever apps you installed through Cydia manually. With the Now the problem here is that the application may be cracked or not, and since we’re talking So first you need a jailbroken unit with openSSH installed. There’s also a file you’ll need, but I will not include it here for legal reasons; I’ll leave it to the readers’ resourcefulness to find out where to get it.
Now all you need to do is find cracked
post updated on August 2, 2008 @ 02:12AM |
