Going on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
Same, but that would be rewarding Apple for doing a shit job.
Going on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
No way man. You've waited this long, just hold out.Going on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
I think this is the best OSX update Apple has done in a long, long time. Agree/disagree?
Just download a torrent, it's the exact same file and Apple couldn't care less.Going on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
If you only installed it this morning I'm not sure if YOU'RE serious!
My gf and I both got about 1.5gb back.
Going on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
lolGoing on 25 hours waiting for my code. Really tempted to just pay the $20, but it's the principle of the thing, damnit!
How long did it take for you to get it?
why are you guys in such a rush to be disappointed?
Nice try, but I've already read Siracusa's generally positive annual opus. Your words cannot harm me.why are you guys in such a rush to be disappointed?
36 hours, WOOOO!
why are you guys in such a rush to be disappointed?
Where did you read that?My audio increase/decrease doesn't have the new smaller increments. Isn't that a new feature? Don't see it anywhere.
My audio increase/decrease doesn't have the new smaller increments. Isn't that a new feature? Don't see it anywhere.
Where did you read that?
Oh for real? Not going to be using that then.Hold opt+shift when changing volume.
Go to "Mail, Contacts & Calendars" in System Preferences (Apple for some reason chose this dumb name instead of Accounts) and add your Twitter account.2. How do I add twitter to notification center?
Hmm, so has anyone with a 2009 iMac installed Mountain Lion yet? If you aren't sure when yours was built, I found this tool earlier...
Go to "Mail, Contacts & Calendars" in System Preferences (Apple for some reason chose this dumb name instead of Accounts) and add your Twitter account.
So if you save a document straight to iCloud via the iCloud browser... where is that document located?
I understand a version is located on the iCloud server of course, but how does that work?
Is the only version online, where the system downloads and uploads it each time you open and close the file?
Does one copy of the file stay on the server which is constantly amended whenever you make document changes? Or is this server file itself constantly overwritten?
Is there simply a copy of any iCloud files both on the server and on the system at the same time?
iCloud is cool but I have no idea how it works. I know the beauty is that I don't need to know, but I'm curious.....
I think basically what I'm asking is if I solely save any new work to iCloud through here:
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how are these files accessible when I don't have an internet connection?
Hmm, so has anyone with a 2009 iMac installed Mountain Lion yet? If you aren't sure when yours was built, I found this tool earlier...
http://www.coconut-flavour.com/coconutid/index.html
A handful of reviews in the Mac App store bitch about how slow it runs, but I wonder just how old their systems are. I mean I know a three year old computer is pretty much an antique, but in all fairness, Mac hardware does age more gracefully when it comes to OS upgrades. My system's a 2.66GHz Core 2 Duo with 8GB of RAM in it.
Go to "Mail, Contacts & Calendars" in System Preferences (Apple for some reason chose this dumb name instead of Accounts) and add your Twitter account.
Unfortunately no, they don't seem to store them locally on your computer. I did a test and saved a document to iCloud. Then turned off my WiFi to simulate lack of internet. I couldn't access the file.If you want a brief understanding of iCloud without reading the developer documentation, Saricusa's review of ML should answer all your questions. Basically Documents in the Cloud are stored everywhere all at once - iCloud, your computer, your phone, your iPad, etc, and it is versioned, so that it can negotiate changes that happen on multiple devices falling back on 'Truth' which is Apple's iCloud servers if needed (like the first time a file gets pushed to the all the other devices). In OS X Documents in the Cloud files are stored in ~/Library/Mobile Documents/$APP/ .
why are you guys in such a rush to be disappointed?
Unfortunately no, they don't seem to store them locally on your computer. I did a test and saved a document to iCloud. Then turned off my WiFi to simulate lack of internet. I couldn't access the file.
This is why DropBox and Google Drive have it right. Your files are stored locally to your computer. Any application can access them like they would a file in a folder, because they are. And they get synced when changes are made.
With iCloud it currently seems to be "either it's here, or it's there. Or you manually save it in two places, but then it won't sync changes." which is really silly. I really hope Apple adopts the DB style of syncing. It'd literally be iDisk done right. iDisk's failing was that it also stored files online instead of locally keeping them and uploading as needed. This could be the iDisk replacement people need. I know I'd get some use out of having my iCloud disk locally cached with either a drive mounted on the desktop or a folder in my Home. Whichever they choose, it would work. Especially if there's also a way to use it on Windows. I would consider purchasing space if they did it this way.
I think that $20 was very steep for this. The speed boost is nice, but I have literally used none of the new features. Should have been $10 at the most.The OS is fine, none of the new features are grabbing me nor are that useful so far. 20 bucks is cheap but still. its an ok upgrade.
Ugh, so lucky. If my wait is anything like yours, I still have three hours to go.FINALLY GOT MY CODE!!!!!!!!!
Oh I wish that were true. Even if I swipe SUPER fast, it still takes FOREVER for it to slow to zero. It's a really terrible bezier curve that drops quickly, but then slows down its drop when it gets near the end. It's usually about 100 pixels from finishing where the pan speed starts to slow much slower. I don't know why it needs really slow "parking". It's not a space ship being brought safely into port. iOS home screen switching doesn't take that long to "settle".