Quicken Essentials on a Macbook Nano
Applications, Mac March 9th, 2010 by Shai Perednik
UPDATE: See below for the fix.
I just purchased the new Quicken Essentials for mac to run on my MSI Wind Macbook Nano only to find out that the icon is marked with an strikeout.

When you double click the icon your told
“You cannot use this version of the application Quicken Essentials.app with this version of Mac OS X.

The Quicken Essentials requirements say Leopard or Snow Leopard. So is it possible Intuit has actually hard coded “Atom=False” to prevent Atom users from running the app?
FIX
I’ve found the issue and the fix.The minimum requirements are 10.5.8 and I’m running to 10.5.7. So here’s the fix:
- Right click Quicken Essentials.app
- Click “Show Package Contents”
- Open the “Contents” folder
- Open the info.plist
- Look for “Minimum system version”
- It will have a value of “10.5.8″. Change that to “10.5.7″.
That’s it. The icon still has the slash across it, but it opens and works fine on my 10.5.7 Macbook Wind. You could probably change it to 1o.5.6 or whatever, but I havn’t tested that.
Related posts:Tags: application, atom, Essentials, Hackintosh, intuit, Leopard, Mac OS, macbook, MSI, nano, netbook, quicken
Mockflow: web-based, real-time, collaborative wireframing
My Clippings October 21st, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from Google Starred
Filed under: Design, Developer, Web services, Web

A key part of interface design is an exercise known as “wireframing.” In this design phase, elements of an interface are blocked out roughly to show relative placement, interaction, and functionality. It is a rapid way to talk through functional requirements of a project and get buy-in from stakeholders without having to waste a lot of time on visual design that won’t remain in a finished product.
Mockflow is a flash-based, online, collaborative wireframing tool for Web and Software designers. It contains a fairly complete set of wireframe elements and icons for use in your wireframe with flexible customizability of all the elements. The killer app of the tool is it’s ability to collaborate in real-time with other team members online. Very, very useful for distributed teams.
I tend to use Adobe Fireworks for all my wireframing (and everything else) but a coworker pointed me toward this tool and it captured my attention. I find flash-based tools distasteful, they always feel slow to me, but this one was simple enough, with enough features to make it compelling to use. Definitely the right tool for the right situation.
The basic version is free, but ad supported and you are limited to two collaborators. Upgrading (introductory price of $49 / year) grants you unlimited collaborators and projects, is ad-free, and gives you 500 MB of storage. Definitely worth a look for distributed Web teams.
Mockflow: web-based, real-time, collaborative wireframing originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 21 Oct 2009 17:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tags: cli, email, flash, Google, Inc., IO, ma, man, MSI, php, way, XP
Found Footage: The do-it-yourself wedding photo booth
My Clippings August 18th, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online
Filed under: Odds and ends, MacBook, Found Footage
What do you get when you mix a MacBook, a US$99 printer, some Ikea shower curtains, and lot of wedding guests?
In the case of Mac user David Cline, you end up with a very happy sister! During planning for his sister Helen’s recent wedding, Cline looked into renting a wedding photo booth that would take pictures of guests, save a digital copy, and then print out a strip of photos for the guests to take home as a keepsake. The cost for the rental was prohibitively expensive — about US$2,000 a day.
David quickly decided that by combining his Mac, a special Automator workflow that he created, an Epson PictureMate Dash printer, an old wardrobe frame, and colorful shower curtains from Ikea, he could inexpensively re-create the functionality of the expensive rental.
His Automator script prompted wedding guests for their names, took 3 photos, arranged the photos in a vertical strip, displayed the photos on the screen for the guests to view, printed out the photo strip, and then saved the individual photos and photo strips in digital form onto the Mac. After the wedding, the photos were uploaded to an online photo album.
From the looks of the happy wedding guests, the Do-It-Yourself Photo Booth was a success. I’d venture to say that David Cline is ranking high in the standings for the “Brother of the Year Award.”
TUAWFound Footage: The do-it-yourself wedding photo booth originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Mon, 17 Aug 2009 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Tags: Apple, email, Google, Inc., IO, KFC, Mac, MSI, Photo, php, script, WordPress, XP
WhatsOpen tells you why volumes won’t eject from your Mac
My Clippings July 23rd, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online
Filed under: Utilities, Macintosh, Apple, Freeware
Anyone who regularly plugs and unplugs external drives from their computer has at some point been frustrated by the operating system’s refusal to eject a volume. Lately I’ve begun using more external drives, and this phenomenon is occurring more and more frequently. Apple has acknowledged this issue, and will be addressing it in the forthcoming Snow Leopard release of OS X, but that doesn’t help us right now.
Fortunately, WhatsOpen does help us right now. The next time you run into the “disk is in use and could not be ejected” error message, fire up WhatsOpen to see what file is open from the volume you are trying to eject. It should be immediately obvious in most cases.
If you’re not interested in hunting down the offending application, and you’re not worried about potentially losing data if you haven’t saved your work, there’s a Force Eject button that will simply stop any process that has a file open on the drive, and eject the drive.
Hopefully in future all operating systems will build in a graceful way to handle ejecting external drives, but until then utilities like WhatsOpen are necessary in your tool belt.
[via Macworld]
WhatsOpen tells you why volumes won’t eject from your Mac originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 23 Jul 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Related posts:Tags: Apple, Build, email, Leopard, Mac, MSI, Snow Leopard, XP
It Must Be Nice to Be Verizon
My Clippings July 20th, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online

It must be nice to be Verizon right now. Free from the intense scrutiny AT&T receives by having the hottest and “smartest” smartphone, it can appear to rise above it all. It can have TV ads to claim the best network on the planet, and it’s done. It can have legions of people claiming they’d drop AT&T in a heartbeat, or snap up an iPhone tomorrow, if only it could be on its network.
Even setting aside that the iPhone on Verizon would not likely be the iPhone we recognize, this is ridiculous.
Before we get into it, let me first say that if you live where there’s little or no AT&T coverage, then obviously Verizon or another carrier is what you need. But every carrier has holes in its coverage. Every. One. This article isn’t about that.
No, what this article is about are those places (and there are many) where either carrier is an option. In that case, there are general perceptions where Verizon seems to either have people fooled, or it’s no different than AT&T but it isn’t noticed.
- It must be nice to sell phones with less usability than the iPhone so your customers don’t hammer your network, and then sit back and let people assume you could handle the load under which AT&T is straining.
- It must be nice to utilize the same pricing and subsidy strategies as AT&T, but get to remain above the fray while AT&T takes the heat for what the whole industry is doing.
- It must be nice to charge for carrier cash cows like SMS and tethering, but have everybody only complain about AT&T doing it.
- It must be nice to brag about having visual voice mail on some phones, while quietly hiding that it’s an extra $3 a month.
- It must be nice to not allow convenient syncing of data, media, bookmarks, etc., via the excellent iTunes environment, instead using clumsier tools if anything is allowed at all, and have your customers just take it in stride.
- It must be nice to disable hardware features on many phones, such as Bluetooth, GPS, and Wi-Fi, with little complaint from the masses.
- It must be nice to avoid GSM, still using CDMA-based technology that the rest of the world (and AT&T) has abandoned. Its rollout to a 4G network could come with headaches as a result.
Installing Microsoft Silverlight v3 on OSX
Uncategorized July 14th, 2009 by Shai Perednik
For some reason the Microsoft Silverlight installer thinks hackintoshes are powerPCs. There’s a simple workaround for this:
Download the Silverlight plugin for Mac OSX.
Mount the .dmg file
Drag the Silverlight.3.0.pkg file to your desktop
Unmount the .dmg – not required now
Right click on “Silverlight3.0.pkg” and choose the “Show Package Contents” menu item.
Double click on the “Contents” folder.
Double click on the “Resources” folder.
Drag and drop the file “InstallationCheck” to the trash.
Close out the folder you’re working in.
Finally double click on the “Silverlight3.0.pkg” package, and it should install fine now.
VIA Msi Wind Forums • View topic – Installing Microsoft Silverlight v2 on OSX (Advent 4211).
Related posts:Tags: Advent, Hackintosh, Leopard, Mac, Microsoft, MSI, MSI WIND, OSX, Silverlight, Trash, wind
Chinese company introduces Atom-powered Macbook Air clone
My Clippings July 6th, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online
When MSI introduced its MSI X-slim line of Intel Atom and CULV powered computers, a lot of people commented on how these relatively inexpensive 13.3 inch laptops looked an awful lot like the much pricier Macbook Air. Now a Chinese company is showing a mini-laptop that bears an even more striking resemblance to the Macbook Air.
The GB X1200 has a 12.1 inch, 1280 x 800 pixel display, and yes, I know that makes it a bit smaller than the Macbook Air. But it’s also super thin, and has a hidden door for the USB ports and other connectors that won’t easily fit on the side of the computer. It also has a nice wide touchpad with a single large button below it.
On the inside, there’s no confusing the GB X1200 with the Macbook Air. This compuuter has a 1.6GHz intel Atom Nz70 CPU, 1GB of RAM, and a 160GB hard drive. It sports 2 USB ports, a 1.3MP webcam, and Windows XP. It looks like this is an OEM product, which means that we could see it rebranded and sold under a different name at some point.
via NetbookNews.de and shanzheiben
Post from: Liliputing
PC Pitstop users rate netbook satisfaction: MSI Wind U100 on top
My Clippings July 3rd, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online
PC Pitstop offers online diagnostic tools for finding problems with your PC and tuning it up. In other words, they come in contact with a lot of PC users. This week the company published the results of a survey asking netbook user about their satisfaction with their little laptops. The results? Overall, it looks like a lot people are pretty happy with their netbooks. The top 9 machines had user ratings of 3 or more stars out of 4.
The MSI Wind U100, Asus Eee PC 1000HE, Samsung NC10, Asus Eee PC 1000H, and Acer Aspire One snagged the top 5 spots. And fewer than 17% of the people owning each of those netbooks complain that their systems are slow. Less than 6% complained about their computers freezing.
Of course, an Intel Atom based computer is going to be slower than a lot of laptops out there. But the point is that these netbooks are fast enough for most of the tasks users expect them to run, and customer satisfaction seems to be pretty high.
via Technologizer
Post from: Liliputing
Mozilla-based email client Postbox finally gets add-ons
My Clippings July 1st, 2009 by System
Automatically pulled from My Clippings on NewsGator Online
Filed under: E-mail, Productivity, Beta
Postbox is a powerful email client based on Mozilla’s Thunderbird, and, like Thunderbird, it now supports extensions. The selection of add-ons is limited right now, but it includes some useful ones: ReminderFox handles reminders and to-do items. Minimize to Tray is just what it sounds like, allowing Windows users to put Postbox in the system tray. Nostalgy adds keyboard shortcuts, and MozBackup backs up your messages and settings. This is a good start, but it’ll interesting to see what other useful extensions pop up now that the door is open.
The latest build of Postbox also adds a long list of other useful features. If you’re switching from Mail.app, you can now easily migrate your settings to Postbox. Postbox will now also pull photos for your contacts from OS X’s address book or from Twitter. Several performance upgrades and fixes of annoying issues from earlier versions are also in place now, so it looks like a good time to consider giving Postbox a try.
Mozilla-based email client Postbox finally gets add-ons originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 01 Jul 2009 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Related posts:Upgraded Wind MacBookNano to 10.5.7 100%
Uncategorized May 15th, 2009 by Shai Perednik
Today I took the plunge and updated my MSI Wind runnnig 10.5.6 to 10.5.7. Normally I would have waited longer before applying a major update. However with recent reports of 5hr battery life on the 6cell u100 I decided to update.
Following this post everything went through fine. I had to remove ffScroll and SmartScroll, reaply the Trackpad driver included in the driverpack and not I’m back @ 100%. No hickups.
Interesting thing is after the update my TimeMachine update was 3.2GB and is still backing up.
Below is the post i followed via the MSI Wind Forums
Download Link: (Current version 1.5)
MSi WindOSX86 Upgrade Pack v1.5
The above driver pack only has the 10.5.7 Update pack to allow you to install the 10.5.7 Combo update and the 10.5.7 Update pack and after your restart you will still have full access to your Trackpad and Keyboard. It doesn’t matter if you are running 10.5.4 or 10.5.6, just follow the instructions and you can easily upgrade to 10.5.7.
New notice in this installer

Here’s what’s included in the PDF guide:
Guide to install 10.5.7 Combo update on MSiWindOSX86 build
Prerequisite:
<follow the Guide included in the download>
Downloads:
The Driver pack with instructions
The Apple 10.5.7 Combo update (Apple web site)
Ready to install:
Download and then install the Apple 10.5.7 Combo update.
DO NOT RESTART!!
Now run the appropriate installer. This will install the missing PS2 kext’s so that when you restart you will have your keyboard and trackpad.
It is now okay to reboot; click whichever “Restart” button you like, it doesn’t matter.
Just to clear up any misconceptions, here’s a screen shot of my system while I was performing the update:

Almost done:
As you may or may not know, with almost any combo or “point” update, your system will restart, begin to boot up but then restart a second time. This is completely normal and to be expected.
Tags: 10.5.7, Apple, Build, Leopard, Mac, MSI, MSI WIND, OSX, wind, XP

















