Hi Scott, As many people have said, there's nothing wrong with skipping the maintenance scripts, but if you really want to run them by hand, start up a terminal session (from Finder, Command-Shift-U to the utilities folder, type "T" to go to terminal, VO-keys-space to select), then type "sudo periodic daily" without the quotation marks, and enter. You'll be prompted for a password -- you need to do this from an account with Administrator's privilege.
There are 3 commands in all: sudo periodic daily sudo periodic weekly sudo periodic monthly and you can issue any of these you like. (You only need to enter a password after your first sudo command. For linux users, "sudo" is Mac's counterpart to the "su" command for switching to superusers.) These run very fast; usually it's only the monthly task that takes a little while. You could pull up the Activity Monitor, which is another item in the Utility folder, and bring up its main window (Command-1) to view what is happening after you issue one of the commands from the terminal. The daily, weekly, and monthly maintenance tasks are scheduled by the launch daemon. The times are set in files called: com.apple.daily.plist com.apple.weekly.plist com.apple.monthly.plist so it should be possible to modify the default run times, but you'd need someone who is running Leopard to take a look at the files. HTH Cheers, Esther >nothing bad will happen to your Mac if the scripts don't run. I too have >the issue of not hearing the welcome message. > >----- Original Message ----- >From: "Scott Rutkowski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Friday, June 20, 2008 8:15 AM >Subject: something odd when starting up the mac. > > >HI again all. > >Just wondering if anyone else has come across this issue? > >Sometimes when I turn on my mac and let it start up, I don't hear the >welcome to mackintosh message sometimes when I boot up the mac. >Normally my mac boots to the desktop and most times it says welcome to >mackintosh voice over is running finder macintosh hd. >Is there a reason why sometimes the mac boots and nothing is spoken? Then >when I use the arrow keys everything speaks fine? >I've run repair disk permissions in disk utilities. >One other question, is there a way of changing the maintenance scripts that >run at 3 am to another time? >I don't like leaving my mac on all night and i'm wondering if there's a way >of telling the scripts to either run manually or run at a time when i'm >awake? >I'm concerned if these scripts don't run, something bad may happen to my >mac. > > > > > >
