On 8-Apr-2010, at 18:56, Jean-Christophe Helary wrote:
On 9 avr. 10, at 09:39, LuKreme wrote:
On 7-Apr-2010, at 03:49, Jean-Christophe Helary wrote:
Somebody on a different list wrote that Services would be deprecated after
Snow Leopard and that was seen on some Apple documentation
I've got an old working iLamp iMac that I want to donate. Whats the potential
of somebody retrieving deleted information off the hard drive? It used to have
a lot of Quicken data on it. Is there a secure way to wipe the disk? I know in
Disk Utility theres an erase feature but don't know if
Just insert the install DVD, use secure erase on the drive with write
zeroes, then install a clean system.
On Apr 12, 2010, at 11:41 AM, Jonathon Kuo wrote:
I've got an old working iLamp iMac that I want to donate. Whats the
potential of somebody retrieving deleted information off the hard
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} Not on my install. Perhaps you have something that does that for you?
} Right Click a file in the finder. Do you have New Mail with attachment
} in that menu? I don't.
You need to active it via the keyboard shortcuts system pref. You should
see a Services
On Apr 12, 2010, at 11:13 AM, LuKreme wrote:
Not on my install. Perhaps you have something that does that for you? Right
Click a file in the finder. Do you have New Mail with attachment in that
menu? I don't.
Have you enabled Services in your System Preferences - Keyboard - Keyboard
Okay, sounds like a GO. Thanks. I just wanted to make sure... after all, theres
a fine line between being paranoid and being a sucker!
On Apr 12, 2010, at 11:49 AM, Macs R We wrote:
Just insert the install DVD, use secure erase on the drive with write zeroes,
then install a clean system.
On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 7:52 PM, Kevin Callahan kc...@mac.com wrote:
On Apr 12, 2010, at 11:13 AM, LuKreme wrote:
Not on my install. Perhaps you have something that does that for you? Right
Click a file in the finder. Do you have New Mail with attachment in that
menu? I don't.
Have you
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, Jared Earle wrote:
} Doesn't appear to make a difference in Finder.
It does. I use it every day. See my previous e.mail for a screenshot in
Safari. Here's one in finder:
http://skitch.com/vjl323/n6xmh/screen-shot-2010-04-12-at-3.16.02-pm
/vjl/
--
Vince J. LaMonica
On 12-Apr-2010, at 12:50, Vince LaMonica wrote:
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} Not on my install. Perhaps you have something that does that for you?
} Right Click a file in the finder. Do you have New Mail with attachment
} in that menu? I don't.
You need to active it via the
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} I didn't say Firefox, I said Finder. And I don't see any mention of
contextual menus in the Keyboard SHortcuts preference pane.
}
} http://skitch.com/vjl323/n6xge/screen-shot-2010-04-12-at-2.49.10-pm
}
} I do see a few options in the rclick menu of
On 12-Apr-2010, at 13:39, Vince LaMonica wrote:
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} I didn't say Firefox, I said Finder. And I don't see any mention of
contextual menus in the Keyboard SHortcuts preference pane.
}
} http://skitch.com/vjl323/n6xge/screen-shot-2010-04-12-at-2.49.10-pm
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} I am running 10.6.3 and I have many of the services enabled, just as in
} your screenshot. They show up in the Application's menu under Services
}
} They do not show up in the contextual menu.
Well, many of the services enabled doesn't really say much. If
On Mon, Apr 12, 2010 at 9:16 PM, Vince LaMonica v...@cullasaja.com wrote:
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010, LuKreme wrote:
} I am running 10.6.3 and I have many of the services enabled, just as in
} your screenshot. They show up in the Application's menu under Services
}
} They do not show up in the
Sigh...see the following article from Macworld. Services *should* be in the
Finder contextual menu, but there is a bug in SL that sometimes keeps them from
displaying:
In addition to appearing on the Services menu itself, Snow Leopard's services
are also supposed to appear on the contextual
On 12-Apr-2010, at 16:05, Darby C Lines wrote:
Sigh...see the following article from Macworld. Services *should* be in the
Finder contextual menu, but there is a bug in SL that sometimes keeps them
from displaying:
OK, But I don't get a Services menu in the contextual menus in Mail.app or
On 12-Apr-2010, at 14:16, Vince LaMonica wrote:
Well, many of the services enabled doesn't really say much. If you're
right clicking a file on your desktop but you don't have any of the
services enabled that deal with files and folders, then the Services
context menu will be blank. Make
On Apr 12, 2010, at 3:18 PM, LuKreme wrote:
On 12-Apr-2010, at 14:16, Vince LaMonica wrote:
Well, many of the services enabled doesn't really say much. If you're
right clicking a file on your desktop but you don't have any of the
services enabled that deal with files and folders, then
On 13/04/2010, at 8:40 AM, LuKreme wrote:
On Apr 12, 2010, at 18:15, John Musbach johnmusba...@gmail.com wrote:
On 4/12/10, LuKreme krem...@kreme.com wrote:
Does anyone know hot to get OS X Server (10.6.3) to show the login screen as
a list of users?
The option in the account pane is
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