Linucks
Concerns with Squeeze (and a fix)

EDIT: I found that Squeeze wasn’t the root cause of my problems.  If you want to try Squeeze, I think you can do it safely.  However, I’ll leave the instructions below for how to “uninstall” Squeeze.

So after Saturday’s install of Squeeze, I’ve had some issues with my Mac.  Here are the issues I’ve observed so far:

  • Random hard OS X crashes
  • CrashPlan engine crashing
  • Spotlight indexing never completes

Of course, I can’t say that Squeeze caused all of these issues, but I think that it’s not worth the risk to save 600MB on a 500GB hard drive.  If anything, I’m going to say that Spotlight issues were the root cause of the CrashPlan issues, and I have no idea about the OS X crashes.  However, I was able to fix it pretty quickly.  After removing the directories from the Squeeze interface, just run this command from terminal for each directory you “squeezed”:

mac:~ myhome$ afscexpand Dropbox/

The command will complete after a minute or so (depending on size), and you’ll be left with your files in the original uncompressed state.

I saved over 600MB in a matter of minutes with Squeeze.  Make sure to grab your copy soon before they’re all gone!

I saved over 600MB in a matter of minutes with Squeeze.  Make sure to grab your copy soon before they’re all gone!

Hackintosh is going Bye-Bye

I’ve recently had some flakey behavior with my Hackintosh, and some of that has been traced back to incompatibilities between my Drobo using USB (FW800 is REALLY slow on it for some reason) and the version of OS X I’m running (10.5.7).  The best fix would be to do a reinstall and get it back on 10.5.6.  Even then, I know that it’ll just be a matter of time before something else pops up.

Luckily I was able to grab a refurbished 1GB 2.0GHz Mac Mini off of the Apple Store for cheap.  Even better is the RAM I just took out of my MBP will bring it up to 4GB.

Mac Mini angled shot

I’m looking forward to having a Mac server that will do everything (Bonjour, Back to my Mac, working video, fast FW800, security updates) and won’t require constant babysitting.  Also, this now frees up the Atom hardware from the hackintosh to do my firewall project.  It’s a win-win!

I’ll probably do another Hackintosh at some point in the future, but I won’t have it be something that I rely on daily, as it just requires too much care and feeding.

Look for some future posts on using the Mac Mini as a server and setting up pfSense on the Atom hardware.

This weeks pick of the week is iEyeNet.  iEyeNet is a widget that allows you to see the network interface utilization on any SNMP-capable device.  Why would you want this?  Simply put, it allows you to see what your Internet bandwidth utilization is at a glance.

iEyeNet Screenshot

If you have DD-WRT, this will work with with very little effort.  All you need to do, is go into the “Services” and enable SNMP.  The default settings will work just fine, but you may want to change the community strings to something only you know for a little bit extra security.

SNMP enabled in DD-WRT

Once you have SNMP enabled on your router, install iEyeNet and configure it as seen below.  If your router is also your gateway IP address, it should enter that for you.  If not, set the Router/Gateway address to the IP of your router.  Set the SNMP community string to the string you set (or public by default), and then set the interface to monitor to vlan1, which corresponds to the WAN interface of most DD-WRT installs.  It may be slightly different depending on the model you’re using (I’m using a WRT54g).  If you can’t figure it out from looking at your router configuration, go ahead and try the each of the interfaces until you find the one that appears to match your Internet traffic usage.

Lastly, if your upload and download lines are reversed, you can just check “Flip Up/Down” to correct it.

iEyeNet Settings

That’s it for this week’s Mac App of the Week.  Be sure to check back next Saturday for the next pick!

While I don’t know if I’d give up Paragon NTFS for this for as it’s so solid, this is a good alternative if you haven’t purchased that and don’t want to mess with NTFS-3G.

natedillon:

First, uninstall NTFS-3G/Paragon if installed.
Open Terminal.app (/Applications/Utilities/Terminal)
Type “diskutil info /Volumes/volume_name” and copy the Volume UUID (bunch of numbers).
Backup /etc/fstab if you have it, shouldn’t be there in a default install.
Type “sudo nano /etc/fstab”.
Type in “UUID=paste_the_uuid_here none ntfs rw” or “LABEL=volume_name none ntfs rw” (if you don’t have UUID for the disk).
Repeat for other NTFS partitions.
Save the file (ctrl-x then y) and restart your system.

TinyGrab - False Advertising

I finally got around to playing with TinyGrab from the MacHeist nanobundle today.  After playing with it for a little bit, I have a bone to pick with them.  See this blatantly false description posted on their website:

TinyGrab Description

What’s wrong with it? Well I’ll tell you! It takes no where near 30 seconds.  More like 5 seconds! IF THAT!  TinyGrab is seriously cool, and it’s cross platform (OS X and Windows).  Of course, the image you see above was generated and hosted by TinyGrab.  And it can do more than just screenshots - you can upload any image you have and have it generate a random URL for you.

Even if you didn’t get it in the MacHeist bundle, it’s only a one-time £10 payment for the premium service, which gives you unlimited screenshot-posting bliss.  And if you don’t want to pay, there’s a limited free account you can get that just limits you a bit, but it should give you an idea of how cool it is.  Check it out at http://tinygrab.com/.

BONUS CONTENT! Since TinyGrab works with the built-in screenshot tool in OS X (it really just grabs the file off the desktop when it’s generated), you can of course use all of the features of OS X.  And since it’s working with the files off of your desktop, you may want it to automatically move the files to the trash (or a folder elsewhere) to keep your desktop clean.

TinyGrab Settings

And if you forgot the screenshot hotkeys, here’s what will work with TinyGrab:

  • Command+Shift+3 = Capture entire screen and save as a file
  • Command+Shift+4 = Capture dragged area and save as a file
  • Command+Shift+4 then Space bar = Capture a window, menu, desktop icon, or the menu bar and save as a file
6 Top Mac apps worth over $150, now available for a limited time, totally FREE! Grab ‘em now at http://macheist.com
MacHeist
Must Have OSX Software

This is a repost from my old blog, but I think it was useful enough to post it again.

Here’s a little list that Doki and I came up with a while back. It’s only a little out of date in that we’ve also found some great new things that I will be sharing later.  Check out the full list after the break…

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VMware Confirms Academic Store Issue

After waiting about 45 minutes on hold, VMware confirmed that they’re having issues with the Academic store and it should be fixed in about 24 hours.  At this point, I have no choice but to uninstall Fusion 3 and reinstall Fusion 2. *sigh*

Good thing the guy answered right when he did, because I had literally entered my credit card number in the regular store and was about to hit check out.