Posted 11/18/2008 at 12:34:49pm | by John Pitko

Leopard build 9G38 for the upcoming OS X 10.5.6 update is chugging along problem free according to those in the know.
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Posted 10/09/2008 at 9:09:14pm | by
David W. Martin
Apple tightens Mac OS X security with seventh security update of 2008.
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Posted 10/09/2008 at 3:50:00am | by Scott Rose

I just upgraded to Leopard, and there seems to be something missing from Spotlight.
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Posted 10/02/2008 at 12:42:41pm | by
Adam Berenstain
The only sure thing about hard drives is that they fail. Backing up the data on your Mac turns a hard drive failure into a non-event, instead of a Mac disaster. If you run Leopard, Time Machine makes backups easy.
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Posted 10/01/2008 at 3:52:00am | by
David W. Martin
Amaze your friends! Annoy your family! Add or create your own System Alerts on your Mac using Leopard OS X with iTunes 8 and GarageBand.
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Posted 09/15/2008 at 7:00:48pm | by
Florence Ion
In case you haven’t heard (to which we’d reply: where have you been?!), Mac OS X 10.5.5 update is out today! That’s right, folks. Another update for your Apple certified operating system.
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Posted 09/08/2008 at 3:10:00am | by Scott Rose
I’m trying to wrap my head around the new To Do feature in Leopard’s Mail. In iCal, I can hide any To Dos that have already been completed or haven’t arrived yet. But in Mail, it lists all of my To Dos, even if they’re completed or they’re from the future. Plus, it doesn’t show me the notes I’ve typed in for each To Do. Annoying!
Check out the tip after the jump.
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Posted 07/30/2008 at 3:35:00am | by Scott Rose

Checking this box in EasyFind enables you to search your trash, plus it simultaneously shows results from the rest of your hard drive in the same window.
I just upgraded to Leopard, and now whenever I perform a Spotlight search, it no longer searches my trash like it used to in Tiger. How can I search the contents of my trash?
Until Apple brings this feature back to Mac OS X, one solution is to use the search utility EasyFind (free, www.devon-technologies.com), which can simultaneously search through both visible and invisible folders.
Another solution is built into Mac OS X, but it only searches your trash and nowhere else on your hard drive. Go to the Finder, select Go > Go To Folder and type in ~/.Trash to bring up a Finder window showing the contents of your Trash, but this time around, Mac OS X recognizes it as a searchable window. Type your search criteria, and then be sure to select .Trash as the location you’re searching (if you choose This Mac, the results you’re looking for won’t be found).
You can even save the results of this search as a custom search in your sidebar, and then modify it later by clicking the Action menu in your Finder’s toolbar and selecting Show Search Criteria.
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