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Originally Yours
 
MAC OS X 10.5 Leopard 
 
MAC OS X 10.5 Leopard support di install di Processor INTEL
tinggal beli software saja ... nikmati fasilitas MAC di komputer/Notebook anda 
sekarang juga ... 
 
Software original MAC OS X 10.5 Leopard hanya ada di SETIA COMPUTER
 
 
sedia juga software Apple : iWork, iLife, Aperture, Final Cut Express
 
 

DIRECT CONTACT :



ID YM           : setiacomp
HOTLINE     : 031-70588221
SMS              : 081.332.85.5000
Email            : [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 
SETIA COMPUTER












JL. DINOYO TANGSI I NO.22
SURABAYA
Email. [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
TELP. 031-5660750 ; 031-70588221
 
 
 
 
==============================================================================
MAC OS X 10.5 Leopard 
 
 

Time Machine is the breakthrough automatic backup that’s built right into Mac 
OS X. It keeps an up-to-date copy of everything on your Mac — digital photos, 
music, movies, TV shows, and documents. Now, if you ever have the need, you can 
easily go back in time to recover anything.


Set it, then forget it.
To start using Time Machine, all you have to do is connect an external drive 
(sold separately) to your Mac. You’re asked if you want it to be your backup 
drive, and if you say yes, Time Machine takes care of everything else. 
Automatically. In the background. You’ll never have to worry about backing up 
again.
Back up everything.
Time Machine backs up your system files, applications, accounts, preferences, 
music, photos, movies, and documents. But what makes Time Machine different 
from other backup applications is that it not only keeps a spare copy of every 
file, it remembers how your system looked on a given day — so you can revisit 
your Mac as it appeared in the past.
Go back in time.
Enter the Time Machine browser in search of your long-lost files and you see 
exactly how your computer looked on the dates you’re browsing. Select a 
specific date, let Time Machine find your most recent changes, or do a 
Spotlight search to find exactly what you’re looking for. Use Quick Look to 
verify the file’s contents if you wish. Then click Restore and Time Machine 
brings it back to the present. Time Machine restores individual files, complete 
folders, iPhoto libraries, and Address Book contacts. You can even use Time 
Machine to restore your entire computer if need be.
How Time Machine works.
Beneath the hood, Time Machine is every bit as remarkable as it is on the 
outside. It’s based on stable and secure Mac OS X core technologies (like the 
HFS+ file system), automatically tracks file changes, and is aware of file 
system permissions and user access privileges. Bottom line: It’s working with 
more information than other backup utilities and doesn’t need to bother you for 
input.
Pick a disk. Any disk.
You can designate just about any HFS+ formatted FireWire or USB drive connected 
to a Mac as a Time Machine backup drive. Time Machine can also back up to 
another Mac running Leopard with Personal File Sharing, Leopard Server, or Xsan 
storage devices.
Back up the whole family.
The moment you choose a Time Machine drive, a single folder is created on the 
drive. Inside this folder is a subfolder for each Mac being backed up. (Yes, 
multiple Mac systems can share the same backup drive.) And within each 
subfolder is another list of folders — one for every backup performed on that 
Mac. Time Machine uses a standard file system to store all of its information. 
Nothing hidden anywhere.


Anatomy of a backup.
For the initial backup, Time Machine copies the entire contents of the computer 
to your backup drive. It copies every file exactly (without compression), 
skipping caches and other files that aren’t required to restore your Mac to its 
original state. Following the initial backup, Time Machine makes only 
incremental backups — copying just the files that have changed since the 
previous backup. Time Machine creates links to any unchanged files, so when you 
travel back in time you see the entire contents of your Mac on a given day.
Timing is everything.
Every hour, every day, an incremental backup of your Mac is made automatically 
as long as your backup drive is attached to your Mac. Time Machine saves the 
hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and 
weekly backups for everything older than a month. Only files created and then 
deleted before the next hourly backup will not be included in the long term. 
Put another way: You’re well covered.
Working on your schedule.
Say Time Machine is in the middle of a backup and you want to shut down your 
Mac or put it to sleep. Who wins? Like you have to ask. Time Machine simply 
stops the backup process and remembers where it is. It automatically resumes 
when your Mac is active again.
Back up only what you need.
By default, Time Machine backs up everything on your Mac. If you want to 
exclude certain files, just go to Time Machine preferences, click Options, then 
select the folders you wish to skip.  Want to delete all instances of a file or 
folder previously backed up? Easy enough. Launch Time Machine, select the item 
to be deleted, then choose "Delete from all backups" from the action menu in 
the Finder toolbar.
Backing up to a full disk.
One day, no matter how large your backup drive is, it will run out of space. 
And Time Machine has an action plan. It alerts you that it will start deleting 
previous backups, oldest first. Before it deletes any backup, Time Machine 
copies files that might be needed to fully restore your disk for every 
remaining backup. (Moral of the story: The larger the drive, the farther back 
in time you can back up.)
Migration with style.
To make setting up a new Mac even simpler, Time Machine shares its data with 
other Mac utilities. Use Migration Assistant to copy portions of any Time 
Machine backup to a new Mac, or select “Restore System from Time Machine” in 
the Leopard DVD Utilities menu. Choose any date recorded in Time Machine to set 
up your new Mac exactly as your previous Mac was on that date.
Ready when you are.
When your mobile Mac is connected to your backup drive, Time Machine works as 
you’d expect. When it isn’t connected, Time Machine also works as you’d expect. 
It keeps track of which files have changed since the last backup and backs them 
up to your backup drive the next time you connect. On any Mac, if Time Machine 
is unable to perform a backup, that’s duly noted in its preferences pane.



Leopard is the world’s most advanced operating system. So advanced, it even 
lets you run Windows if there’s a PC application you need to use. Just get a 
copy of Windows and start up Boot Camp, now included with Leopard. Setup is 
simple and straightforward — just as you’d expect with a Mac.


Run Windows at native speed.
Boot Camp supports the most popular 32-bit releases of Windows XP and Windows 
Vista. When you use either operating system on your Mac, your Windows 
applications will run at native speed. Windows applications have full access to 
multiple processors and multiple cores, accelerated 3D graphics, and high-speed 
connections like USB, FireWire, Wi-Fi, and Gigabit Ethernet.
Ready, setup, go.
When you're ready for Windows, the Boot Camp Assistant sets up your hard drive 
for you. It leaves all your Mac data in place while it creates a separate 
partition on your drive for Windows, and then begins the installation process. 
Boot Camp includes a PDF setup guide, so you can refer to it as you go.

Drivers galore.
When you install Windows using Boot Camp, you won’t need to search the Internet 
for drivers or burn a disc. After you run Boot Camp, simply insert the Leopard 
DVD to install the necessary drivers. Everything you need to make your Mac work 
with Windows is right there. When you use a Windows application, you’ll have 
full access to unique Mac features (iSight, Apple Remote, trackpad, specific 
keyboard keys, keyboard backlighting) and connectivity (wired and wireless).
Choose your OS.
After you’ve installed Windows using Boot Camp, you can start up your Mac using 
either operating system. Simply hold down the Option key when you power up and 
choose one or the other.
Already running Boot Camp? Even easier.
If you’re already working with Boot Camp Beta, you’re practically finished 
before you start. All you need is some new drivers. To install them, simply 
start up your Mac in Windows and update the drivers from the Leopard DVD.

As a parent, you want your kids to have a safe and happy experience on the 
computer. Leopard keeps an eye out even when you can’t. With a simple setup, 
you can manage, monitor, and control the time your kids spend on the Mac, the 
sites they visit, and the people they chat with.


A safer Internet.
Using the same technology that keeps your inbox free of junk mail, a new 
content filter in Leopard takes a quick peek at websites before they load and 
tries to determine if they’re suitable for kids. If not, Leopard blocks them 
from view. Of course, you can override this filter by creating lists of 
specific websites you want — or don’t want — your children to see.
Bedtime and time limits.
Many kids would sit at the computer for days if you let them. Fortunately, 
Leopard makes it easier to set the rules. Just enter bedtime and time limits 
for using the Mac, specifying different times for weekdays and weekends if you 
wish. Parents happy, kids happy (relatively).

Under log and key.
With Leopard, your Mac logs your kids’ activities to help you keep them from 
communicating with people they shouldn’t be. The log keeps track of websites 
your kids have visited, applications they’ve used, and people they’ve chatted 
with. It’s the perfect way to make sure your children stay safe online. You can 
access the parental controls and monitor logs remotely from any Mac on the 
network.

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