Hello all-
In case this helps any related issues:

>> I posted re: my computer not holding my modem's password after I uploaded the iTunes update, and having to manually go deep into system preferences to add it in each time my laptop slept or shut down.

• The fix, given to me by my ISP:
1. Open network preferences from your WiFi icon in the menu bar.
Then click advanced. Delete the network that is giving you problems.
2. Open Keychain in the utilities folder of your hard drive. Find the passwords that are stored for your particular network and delete them. There may be multiple passwords for your network, so search carefully.
3. Repair permissions using the disk utility.
4. Reboot the computer.
5. Reenter your network data to log into the network.

Best,
Tory



 On Oct 13, 2011, at 2:02 PM, Douglas Roberts wrote:

Reports are that the IOS 5 upgrade is going anything but smoothly as well:

http://apple.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2472920&cid=37693996


That didn't take too long to fail. Click on "Update," and it tells me I have to update iTunes. OK, fine, go do that. Computer reboots.

Take 2. Click on update, it downloads the nearly 700MB iTunes update, and makes a backup.

And then crashes, opening an Apple KB article that tells me I have to update iTunes in order to install the update. Er... I already did that?

I'll just uninstall iTunes and ... oh, wait, you can't do that on Mac OS X. You have to follow some magic instructions that involve deleting kernel extensions and rebooting three times. I'll have to look that up and ... oh, hey, Apple's support site now 503s.

Awesome.

Oh, hey, it hard-crashed my phone. I'll just pop out the battery to reboot it, and ... oh, crap. That's right, the Apple official way to restart a crashed iDevice is to let the battery drain. I'd link to the article, but their support site is down.

This comment was cute as well:

Thank you for updating your Apple products. Please rate your upgrade experience:
1. Insanely Great!
2. Magical
3. Innovative
4. Religious Ecstasy


--Doug

On Thu, Oct 13, 2011 at 1:31 PM, Pamela McCorduck <pam...@well.com> wrote:


Begin forwarded message:

From: dfarber <dfar...@me.com>
Date: October 13, 2011 1:18:42 PM MDT
To: "ip" <i...@listbox.com>
Subject: [IP] The email Flu bug
Reply-To: d...@farber.net

Interesting, the past few days Blackberrys have had a bad time with many of their services out. Still after several days they don't have it all working. Today Apple launched its ICloud service ( I say today because it took hours to get the stuff downloaded). It failed in a very nasty way in that mail sometime vanished, sometimes appeared then vanished and often there was a user and/or password incorrect message plus dome rather obcyre additional error messages.

It was frustrating to me in that I kept looking for what I had dome wrong. Finally in confusion I pinged IP and found out I was not alone.

What of the non technical user -- the house=person, the grandmother who believed Apple would get ut right.

Wjem wo;; they learn to stress test their products. Why don't they admit what happened?

Dave
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============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

============================================================
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Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

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