Inara: We thought we lost you. Mal: Well, I've been right here.

'Out Of Gas'


Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?  

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


§ ita § - Nov 24, 2004 7:30:54 am PST #136 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I see what Jessica meant about the extension downloading. Nice in principle, but exhausting.

And now it's refusing to go to some sites, period. Connections are being refused.

I'll try it again at home.


Polter-Cow - Nov 24, 2004 7:52:45 am PST #137 of 10003
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Right-left-right with the right button depressed (like a Z, but all at one height) closes the active window, for instance.

Wow, that's pretty cool! Although I swear I'd be accidentally closing windows left and right. Well, I suppose I don't keep the right button depressed as I swish around.


tommyrot - Nov 24, 2004 8:20:02 am PST #138 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

See, I've been memorizing the Mozilla/Firefox keyboard shortcuts, not the mouse shortcuts. So I'm going the wrong way....


§ ita § - Nov 24, 2004 8:34:27 am PST #139 of 10003
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I've been memorizing the Mozilla/Firefox keyboard shortcuts

Normally I'm all about the keyboard shortcuts, but in an app where you have links in unpredictable places, I try and avoid the keyboard as much as possible. Or at least separate the mousing chunks from the keying chunks.


Wolfram - Nov 24, 2004 12:00:34 pm PST #140 of 10003
Visilurking

Wolfram, I don't remember where you live, but I always go to Craigslist for used computers. There are some really good deals if you're careful not to get scammed.

Apparently I've been living in a box. Craigslist is awesome! The sad thing is, everyone else I know has heard of it and just assumed I knew about it already. Thanks Jessica!


Consuela - Nov 24, 2004 12:14:46 pm PST #141 of 10003
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I went through that with my brother last week, Wolfram, although it was Angie's List he was assuming I'd heard of, not Craigslist. Sadly, Angie's List is subscription only, and isn't in California yet anyway.


Wolfram - Nov 24, 2004 12:23:19 pm PST #142 of 10003
Visilurking

Sigh. Once they believe you know everything, they stop telling you anything.


esse - Nov 24, 2004 12:44:19 pm PST #143 of 10003
S to the A -- using they/them pronouns!

I adore Craigslist. It got me my apt. this summer.


DCJensen - Nov 24, 2004 3:10:18 pm PST #144 of 10003
All is well that ends in pizza.

Mac OSX question I'm having touble defining correctly for a google or apple search.

In OSX, you can turn on "internet connection sharing." Then you hook up other Macs and PC's to the Mac or to a hub connected to the Mac.

Fine and dandy if you want to use DHCP internally. I want to use static IP addresses on the internal network.

Most articles I find tall jme how to connect the *External* network with a static IP, and again assume I will be using DHCP interneally.

I want to do this on 10.3, but I can't find any settings for such an action without going for a third-party solution.

Basically, it's a matter of me already having a stable network with static ips, and I want to be able to boot into OSX and have the same stable shared network on the master machine.

Any help would be appreciated.


Gris - Nov 24, 2004 4:42:06 pm PST #145 of 10003
Hey. New board.

I'm assuming you're only getting one real IP from your ISP, so by "static IP" you just mean static internal IPs? Like, your laptop will always be 192.168.1.11 on the internal network, even though your external, "real" IP for your network is 10.1.11.178 or whatever?

What if you turn on internet connection sharing on your main Mac, then use the "DHCP with manual address" option on your secondary computers, making sure to specify a valid IP in the subnet that internet connection sharing uses? That is, if using DHCP on your secondary computer gives you the IP 192.168.1.12 or whatever, you could probably put on DHCP with manual address using the IP 192.168.1.100 if you want, and it would probably work. From then on, that computer would be 192.168.1.100. I'm not sure if a similar option is available on PCs, unfortunately - I haven't used one in years.

If you were using a router instead of a master Mac, you could just tell it to run a DHCP server but always assign certain IPs to certain MAC addresses. I'm not sure if such a thing is possible using the Mac instead, but the above solution might work.