At O'Hare a warning message like this pops up the moment you try to connect to wireless. It tells you the name of the legitimate (alas, for pay) wireless network and claims that all of the others are operating out of someone else's laptop, fishing for passwords.
Giles ,'Selfless'
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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Yeah, there are no legit free networks at O'Hare, are there?
Firefox 2.0.0.1 tip.
If you upgrade to Firefox 2.0.0.1 and your menus start acting funny, not working all the time when you use your mouse to select a menu, then revert back to the default Firefox theme.
I have a weird problem...my Mac keeps crashing! I don't mean beachballing, I mean crashing. Every so often, it will freeze up and cease responding to keystrokes or mouse clicks. (Right now, I can't even *move* the mouse.)
Any ideas, other than restarting it with the power button? The usual force-quit keystrokes aren't doing me any good.
(Obviously, the solution to the crashing problem in general is to not run all of my video editing/encoding applications at once, but right now I just need to get it responsive again.)
You could try logging in remotely from a command-line, but if you don't already have remote access enabled, it's too late.
If you upgrade to Firefox 2.0.0.1 and your menus start acting funny, not working all the time when you use your mouse to select a menu, then revert back to the default Firefox theme.
This happened to me. The person who developed the theme I've been using updated it today, so now the menus work, but the fix doesn't appear to be a particularly elegant one (i.e., the menus are now kinda funny looking).
Jessica - what kind of Mac?
Does this only happen when you're maxing out the CPU? The only thing I can think of is if you have a Mac that changes CPU speed depending on load (isn't that all of them now?) and if the cooling fan isn't working, it might be overheating during times of heavy use.
It's an almost-new Intel MacPro, and yes, it seems to only happen when I'm running a million different programs at once. I wonder if it could be the fan...
I think the MacPros have about six cooling fans.
Can you monitor CPU temp? iPulse [link] can do that (at least on my MacBook). Then if we can figure out what the max temp should be, we can see if you go over that.
eta: Also, when you're running the gazillion programs at once, are they using the CPU a lot? If not, then maybe you have bad memory and it's only a problem when the memory is maxed out, or nearly so.
Most likely a fan, but it could also be memory.
You can run this and see what's going on in your system.
There's also this utility which can adjust how hot a system gets before the fans come on, but I don't know if it works on the MacPro or not.