larry Posted August 29, 2009 Share #21 Posted August 29, 2009 Advertisement (gone after registration) When I installed Snow Leopard yesterday, it detected that I had some non-universal apps and offered to install Rosetta. So I wouldn't panic if you forgot to specify it. Thanks, Nicole. I didn't realize the installation was that smart, so I selected Rosetta preemptively. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted August 29, 2009 Posted August 29, 2009 Hi larry, Take a look here Snow Leopard and Capture One 4.... I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
miami91 Posted August 29, 2009 Share #22 Posted August 29, 2009 I don't know why everyone wants to upgrade to the latest and greatest so quickly. I'm an IT director for my university and we're all waiting a few weeks for the bug reports to roll in before we upgrade. FOMB syndrome ---- First On My Block. And I don't blame an IT dept for waiting. For a home user though, new is often interesting, and the bugs, where they exist, can usually be tolerated. Not to mention that updates are usually fixing known bugs/shortcomings, so who's to say even with new bugs you aren't better off in the grand calculus? Actually, I'm surprised an IT director even has to deal with MacOS. Macs in the enterprise? Who knew? Another example of life at university being nirvana compared to the "real world"? Jeff. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
sdai Posted August 29, 2009 Share #23 Posted August 29, 2009 Macs in the enterprise? It happens here in our organization, Jeff. It's odd but true, all Macs are fully loaded, these are super computers when clustered together. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
miami91 Posted August 29, 2009 Share #24 Posted August 29, 2009 It happens here in our organization, Jeff. It's odd but true, all Macs are fully loaded, these are super computers when clustered together. I wish it happened in my organization Simon. Since heading to college with a Mac Color Classic (if I recall correctly) in 1989, I've never spent my money on any other type of computer, unless you count the couple of NeXTs I owned, which are part of the Mac bloodline (NeXTStep gave us OSX). The MacPro I now use is probably my 7th or 8th in the past 20 years. But to this day, I've never had the pleasure of using a Mac in the workplace, and since I don't work in a creative field or higher ed, I sort of doubt I ever will. Jeff. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
larry Posted August 29, 2009 Share #25 Posted August 29, 2009 I But to this day, I've never had the pleasure of using a Mac in the workplace, and since I don't work in a creative field or higher ed, I sort of doubt I ever will. Jeff. Our art department folks are lucky Mac users, but those of us in editorial use decrepit PCs and are networked to them through a server. So close, yet so far... Larry Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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