A while back (June 16th, to be precise), I complained here that Opera 12 was swapping my shit around: ita ! "Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."" Jun 16, 2012 3:54:19 pm PDT . As a result, at some unpredictable time in a session, my shortcut keys
and
my menus would stop working as advertised and work in another completely consistent but undocumented way.
I can't lie, I was a bit excited for the new computer with the new OS, because it's a new environment, and I hadn't seen anyone else complain about this issues, so something special to my old box must be cocked up. It's not like anyone replied to my post on the Opera forum or people reply to bug submissions. That's not how it works.
MotherFUCKER. Shit just happened to my Opera 12 on the new box with OS X Lion. Command T doesn't open a new tab anymore, it does what Command O used to do. Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
Why motherfucking me, bitches? What did I do?
serial: Thanks for that heads up, ND. I'll be sure to do that. All my mid-90s mail was Eudora. I have it burnt to CD--it's reasonably easy to read with a text editor.
If power blips are causing my computer to turn off, my UPS probably needs a new battery, right? The battery is pretty old.
I do backup Gmail.
I'm trying to back up all of my Gmail onto Thunderbird, and it's taking forever. I have to go click "download now" because even if I have the check box checked, it doesn't auto download Gmail.
It does fine on all other accounts. The other thing I run into is that it downloads 48 at a time form Gmail.
If power blips are causing my computer to turn off, my UPS probably needs a new battery, right? The battery is pretty old.
Yes, that would be a strong possibility. Also, there are different grades of UPS's. If purchasing a new one, check one that has "brown out" protection (is usually how they label it on the boxes). The better ones tend to run off the battery with the power constantly charging it. That way, there is no switch over gap in time. Some will have a fraction of a second reaction to the loss of power, which is enough to power off your devices. The brown out protection, I believe, sense dips in power, and switches it sooner. The high end ones, just run off battery, like I mentioned above.
I'm really struggling with two things on the new OS X. The touchpad, which I might flip, since there's work, and it gets crazy. That motion on a screen is fine for me--the screen reminds me of the metaphor, but at this distance, it's not the same.
And then there's mail. Actually, I think taking Classic view off is more helpful, because the conversation grouping (despite me being fine with it in Gmail and and Outlook) was somehow not being predictable enough for me. I mean--I'm looking at the most recent message in the conversation in the pane, but when I hit reply, it's quoting three down. So I've turned much of that off. Hopefully that will make things more reasonable. I was told it's for iPad convergence but it's no coincidence homey here don't play iPad, yp.
The Launchpad and Mission Control are fine, although I was all ack! ack! APPLICATIONS??? for couple seconds there. But metaphors are my friend....very crafty, Apple...I'm on to you. And I'm not sure precisely how the spaces work, but since I can create new ones and put apps in 'em, I'm not sure I need anything more advanced right now, you know?
I'm halfway through looking at all the system preferences and seeing what their impact is--so that scroll bar one. Why would I only want scroll bars when I'm scrolling if there's more information than fits in the control? Am I missing some other indicator that there's more data? Because I got confused by that a couple times until I remembered having seen that setting and played confusedly with it.
For some reason, although I can pair Mary with my phone, and send files from Mary to Mace? I can't, via Bluetooth, send files from Mace to Mary. I ended up Dropboxing, because I didn't have Android File Transfer installed yet. Way frustrating.
I should also be presenting SMB shares on all machines that my Androids can access. It's the friendly thing to do.
This is weird. I don't think it's because it's on my lap--I did that from time to time with the old one. And no settings leap out at me. But it seems much more sensitive about what it deems a slant, and I'm ending ouf
Is there something I can tweak, or is it up to me relearning?
I wonder why neither major desktop OS is doing anything fancy with the clipboard. Office used to, but that seems to have stopped--at least automatically, or as something they signal. To be frank, I did find the corner of my screen yelling at me a bit distracting, but it could be useful from time to time.
is there really no payoff for either company to dress it up a little? Provide a history, or a viewer, or something perfectly obvious I'm not thinking about?
I think the problem was that that advanced clipboards seemed to cause major stability problems. Maybe someone has tackled that. Desktop publishing programs seem to manage them though - call them work areas or whatever.
What's intrinsic in a clipboard that brings instability along with? Memory issues?