Price Drop on Fantom Firewire 800 drives!
This week Fantom Drives announced a price drop on their Micronet PXL500B and PXL600B models. Featuring 500gb for $289 or 600gb for just $339, these drives are an incredible value.
To order:
This week Fantom Drives announced a price drop on their Micronet PXL500B and PXL600B models. Featuring 500gb for $289 or 600gb for just $339, these drives are an incredible value.
To order:
Sitting down in front of an Apple device, I always feel like the designers behind the hardware and software really thought things through….
A long-time Small Dog customer asked me about an item that fleetingly appeared in his dock. It was a generic-looking green icon with a zipper on it called Archive Utility, and when he used Spotlight to search for it, it was nowhere to be found.
Many of the items you download and receive in your email are compressed files. File compression is nothing new, and is exactly what you think it is: when you compress a file, you make it smaller. This reduces bandwidth loads and expenses on the server side, and can help you save disk space on your computer. However, compressed files cannot be directly accessed; they must first be decompressed.
Back in the days of twenty megabyte hard drives (my LC II had a 20 megabyte drive in the early nineties), file compression seemed more relevant for conservation of hard disk space. These days, it’s more often used to shrink email attachments and other downloads. Mac OS X always included a built-in compressor and decompressor. By right-clicking on any file or folder in the Finder and selecting “Compress” from the contextual (pop-down) menu, your Mac will create an archive in zip format.
When you open a compressed file, Mac OS X launches an application called Archive Utility. Its sole purpose is to compress and decompress files. It’s located in /System/Library/CoreServices, and Spotlight doesn’t search there. If you poke around the /System/Library and /Library areas of your hard drive, there’s plenty to learn if you Google intelligently and use extreme caution when moving or deleting anything. Actually–don’t move or delete anything. Just explore and learn!
The following is an article submitted by our guest blogger, Dan Wells. Here’s some info about Dan, in his own words: I just…
As a Small Dog Consultant, I implement Macintosh and iOS solutions for my clients, but I also do tech stuff for fun in…
iCloud stores your music, photos, documents, and more and wirelessly pushes them to all your devices. Automatic, effortless, and seamless—it just works. Well,…
We don’t sell any of Panic’s software (hence the “Don’t buy them in a store like this – we don’t even sell them…