andrewgrohs
AndrewGrohs
andrewgrohs

A good resource is Kexts.com. Get the exact model of your card (Windows, manufacturer site, shipping label, etc.) and give it a whirl. If it doesn't work in /E/E/ try /S/L/E/, but it's best to avoid messing around in there. After each attempt run myFix, a command line utility that'll rebuild kext caches and repair

I wish you had to hold down Option or something to resize from any edge. I don't like those resize arrows popping all the time.

100MB, because I'm a cheap, bitter, lonely asshole living in an AT&T 3G deadzone (read: deadcounty).

I wouldn't call it a track of my movements. I had several "locations" saved in Wisconson, Alabama, and Washington, when in reality I haven't been within 300 miles of those places ever, let alone with my iPhone.

It was a clean install.

Dock Indicator Lights are in fact enabled by default in the release version of Lion, in contrast to the DPs.

If I may recommend an alternative to Kakewalk and xMove, called myHack. I've relied on myHack for years to get OS X running on my Dell and have found it invaluable.

Not currently. Apple will sell a USB drive containing Lion in August for $70, but until then, there's OS X Lion Recovery [www.apple.com]

Never really advertised as an innovation, but nevertheless it was the first general use consumer OS distributed only as a digital download. I highly doubt any Linux distro was downloaded over a million times in its first day. Apple moved 3.4 petabytes of data in 24 hours. [www.tuaw.com]

Apologies if I came across as rude, but it was rather intended. The phrasing of your original comment made it sound as if you'd only every heard people talking about hackintoshing Tiger onto an AMD system in 2006.

The point is arguable, but I find myself longing to upgrade to Lion right now, which would be possible on a Mac. I love computer tinkering, as do most of us, but there comes a point where I'd like my computer to be more or less self-sufficient. My hackintosh is indeed remarkable stable and works flawlessly 95% of the

I've always said: you should never, never, depend on a hackintosh for anything other than fun and pleasure. If you need OS X for school, work, or somehow maintain your livelihood with it, buy a real Macintosh, because you really will get everything Apple brags about: speed, reliability, "it just works", all of the

Laptops are hard. Respect.

No it wasn't, incidentally.

Spoken from experience, right?

Must have misunderstood you at first, apologies.

Details and Restrictions, for gits and shiggles:

Found out I can get Comcast today, which is strange, considering I live deep in the boonies. We've only been able to AT&T DSL Direct for a while now, which is $45 for 6/1.5Mbps

Gawker sites are terrible on Safari, although they've gotten better. If you use Adblock it's even worse though.

The idea being you sell your old iMac