This probably has nothing to do with anything you've mentioned, but during a recent "Let's figure out what Apple changed and turn it off" session I recently went though, we found that file locking is enabled via Time Machine settings, and disabling the setting there supposedly prevents files from being auto-locked in the Finder (and thus unable to be overwritten).
Just throwing it out there... Regards, Scott Rossi Creative Director Tactile Media, UX Design Recently, Jacque Landman Gay wrote: > On 5/11/12 2:00 PM, stephen barncard wrote: >> >> My lovely Mac pro is in hell. Yes I have a lot of apps, and yes I am >> running Lion. >> And that doesn't help either as it insists on loading every app and >> document I had running the last time*. > > System prefs -> General -> Restore windows when quitting and re-opening > apps [turn this off] > > I never turn off my Mac so I'm not sure if that also works on a restart > but if you haven't unchecked it, it's worth trying. Or just leave your > Mac on all the time, it's meant to be used that way. I only restart > after a system update. > > What I hate even more than that, and for which there is NO solution, is > the auto-save that wrecks whatever I'm working on as soon as I make any > temporary change. Whoever made *that* decision is the one I'd like to > track down and torture. There isn't even a Terminal command to get rid > of it. I don't want every single tentative edit to be saved, I want to > decide what's temporary and what should be overwritten. I lost work > yesterday because of this stupid, idiotic behavior and had to go digging > through the Star Wars interface to get back the original, which was > difficult because they ALL LOOK ALIKE if the document is more than one > page long. Don't get me started. _______________________________________________ use-livecode mailing list use-livecode@lists.runrev.com Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode