very cool. get the diff tween Ram and disc space. I had extra ram installed 
when i bought it. I need to have a spring disc cleaning. 

cant do Hazel as I am still on 10.3 OS X-- though sounds like a great app.

will just have a jolly trash fest.

by the way: you all know about Magic Sponges? cleans the grunge off the white 
cases and most everything else. worth their weight in gold. get them at the 
supermarket and i suspect the One Pound shops have a cheap version.

--- On Fri, 24/4/09, Frank Kennedy <[email protected]> wrote:
From: Frank Kennedy <[email protected]>
Subject: [sussex_mug] Re: Mac attack
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, 24 April, 2009, 7:46 PM

There you go, Anna, this man knows what he's talking about, question is, do you?
To try to clear things up a bit, RAM or memory, is a chip that the processor 
uses to store and access frequently used data that is useful in running 
software. It usually comes in multiples of 128 Megabytes (MBs) i.e. 128, 256, 
512, 768, etc. RAM loses everything it has on it when the power is switched 
off. The hard drive is used to semi-permanently store data, and is usually 
measured in Gigabytes (1024 Megabytes).  I say semi-permanently because you can 
delete the data at will or replace it with other data, but it doesn't lose 
anything when the MAC is switched off. Itsagroup is quite right, you can view 
your disk size and usage that way, but if you want to tidy the disk up it's a 
good idea to repair permissions and repair the disk using Disk Utility. This 
won't free up mush space, you need to plod through the different directories 
and remove files you don't use (but be very careful you don't remove something 
vital just because you don't
 recognise the file name) to do that.

There are two easy(ish) "safe" ways to clean your hard drive, there may be 
more, but these are the most straight forward, I think. One is to re-install 
your operating system and applications from scratch, but you must be very sure 
you back-up any files you don't want to lose onto a CD or DVD or USB stick. You 
then choose the "clean install" option from the installation menu that appears 
when you click on "options" in the window that appears when you insert your MAC 
OS disk and follow instructions from there. The second is to download and 
install an application called "Hazel" which will sense when you delete an 
application and prompt you to also remove any separate files that are 
associated with that app and no others. Then you just go through your 
applications folder and move any apps you don't need or use/want to the trash, 
and Hazel will open a window asking if you want to delete any associated file 
also. Hazel also costs $21.95 from Noodlesoft
 here:  http://www.noodlesoft.com/hazel.php but the good news is, you can 
download and use it for free for 14 days if you like. Please note it has 
several other functions, but "App Sweep" is the one that does what I'm 
describing. Also, please note that it's only compatible with Tiger (10.4), or 
Leopard (10.5)

Well, I think that's probably more than enough for you to digest for now, good 
luck again,Frank.

2009/4/24  <[email protected]>

Apple > 'About This Mac' tells you total installed physical memory

Click on your hard disk in the Finder and select File > Get Info from the 
Finder menu to see Total Capacity, Available & Used.
Applications > Utilities > Activity Monitor will show you how much of your 
hardware's RAM (memory) is available, how much in use and so on. It also shows 
how much memory is being used by each individual application.

As I mentioned in another post, a handy little application like iPulse will 
tell you all of this just by moving your mouse over various areas of its window 
- neat. Find it here:  http://iconfactory.com/software/ipulse

I hope this helps.
Stephen
On 24 Apr 2009, at 16:16, anna churchill wrote:

Lord. this all just reminded me i need to check how much memory i have left..

i forgot where i click to get current available memory status!

i see the about this Mac; it says Processor 1.2 Ghz, Memory 768 MB DDR SDRAM, 
L2 Cache 512.


But i cant find my way to where it gives you current available memory. last 
time i checked a couple years ago i had used about half.



--- On Fri, 24/4/09, tcrooks <[email protected]> wrote:

From: tcrooks <[email protected]>
Subject: [sussex_mug] Re: Mac attack

To: "Sussex Mac User Group" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 24 April, 2009, 8:59 AM



On 23 Apr, 19:44, anna churchill <[email protected]> wrote:


> My iBook G4
 is nowt 4 years old and I havent upgraded a thing and still
runs like a top!
>
> Of course we know I do nothing extravagant

Anna, As it should be!

We have 2 iBook G4s and they continue to give faultless service to the

family for email, web browsing, IM'ing, and other basic usage. Falling
behind on things like TV programme streaming as streaming bandwidth
deployed increases. I'm intending to use one of the iBooks as a server

when my twins push off to uni for as long as it, as you say, runs like
a top!


     




 When the oil runs out, they're all bike lanes. - Anonymous
  














      
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