Webspace of Eric Brodeur

Perspectives on storytelling and digital cinema technology

Category: Apple

Anti-FlashI don't know what it is with Adobe Flash on the Macintosh platform but it's a CPU hog. Safari is my main browser and any page utilizing Flash causes the spinning beach ball for a number of seconds, rendering the computer almost useless until Flash is good and ready to relinquish the CPU.

Waiting for pages to load was more than I could bear. Some searching unearthed the Click2Flash plug-in for Safari which inserts placeholders for every Flash element on a page.

No more waiting to load and if you want to use a Flash object (such as the YouTube video player) just click the word "Flash" in the placeholder to enable it.

Click2Flash has options to load a single Flash object on a webpage, all of them, or whitelist the entire site so Flash objects are always visible.

Replacing drives inside a Lacie BigDisk

I've got an old Lacie BigDisk lying around which was rendered useless when the internal Fujitsu drives failed to spin up. This morning I decided to re-populate the Lacie with two Maxtor PATA drives.

The drives must be jumpered as Master and Slave. They mounted immediately but only as two distinct volumes, not spanned as originally shipped. This will work fine for my needs but if you want to span them as originally configured by Lacie, you'll need a utility from Oxford Semiconductor.

Take a look at these posts from wwward and Prune's Blog for photos and more details. If you have trouble finding the software mentioned (i.e.: uploadergui.jar) visit my Downloads page.

iTunes doesn’t backup iPhone applications

Apple iPhone 3GDuring my iPhone firmware update fiasco I had nothing but trouble getting a proper restore of my data. Some – but not all – of the applications would be restored using iTunes 9.

According to a post at Apple Support:

Although iTunes backs up most of your iPhone and iPod touch settings, downloaded applications, your audio, video, and photo content are not included in the backup.

Another post describes what is backed up with each version of the iPhone OS. The following is excerpted specifically regarding applications:

iPhone 1.1
  • Application settings, preferences, and data
iPhone 2.0 and later
  • App Store Application data (except the Application itself, its tmp and Caches folder)
iPhone 3.0
  • Per app preferences allowing use of location services
  • In-app purchases

What I’m reading here is that iPhone applications are not backed up in iTunes. This doesn’t explain why some apps get backed/restored while others do not. Nor have I found any backup/restore correspondence if the application was downloaded OTA versus purchased within iTunes.

Fortunately Apple allows you to re-download iPhone applications at no charge but this shouldn’t be necessary if iTunes actually backed them up.

Apple iPhone 3GLast week's release of iPhone software 3.1.2 was intended to fix various bugs notably "sleep coma." Also available is the latest AT&T Carrier Update 5.6 which provides functionality on AT&T's mobile network (such as MMS). After a modest sync (for backup) I told iTunes to update my iPhone 3G.

What a mistake that was.

Doing the DFU Disco

My iPhone had been running firmware 3.1.0 without a hitch and MMS worked great.

With the installation of 3.1.2 and the carrier update my phone was rendered useless. The reception meter cycled through "full bars 3G" to "one bar no data" to "no service" then back to "full bars 3G." As part of the update iTunes restored my latest backup, which as before, was incomplete necessitating re-installation of some apps via the iTunes App Store.

After some research I chose to perform a clean install of 3.1.2 using the DFU Recovery mode. After another incomplete iTunes restore it wasn't long before the "full/low/no bars" problem presented itself again.

I had to get the iPhone working properly and took another go at DFU with the intent to downgrade from 3.1.2 to 3.1.0. Apple doesn't allow you to select older iPhone firmware within iTunes so I had to download and install it manually. The restore finished (incompletely again) and I expected to have a phone that could make calls.

Wrong. The "full/low/no bars" problem was still there.

AT&T Carrier Settings

What's consistent here? Installing AT&T Carrier Update 5.6.

I decided to have one more go at it and performed a clean install of 3.1.2 and told iTunes not to install the latest carrier update. After another eternity waiting for the (incomplete) restore to finish I watched the reception meter: full bars and 3G.

Expecting this to be short-lived I hopped in the car for my commute and make some calls. Four calls and one hour later: the reception was solid.

Right now, in a signal-devoid building, the iPhone is clutching desperately to "two bars and EDGE."

iTunes Restore Bug?

During my update from 3.0 to 3.1 there was an issue with iTunes not restoring all of my iPhone apps. This continues to be a problem for me but – interestingly – the Restore performed during the DFU Recovery was more complete than the typical Restore feature in iTunes.

Conclusion

Don't install Carrier Update 5.6 at this time or do so with caution.

Unfortunately there appears no way to remove a carrier update via iTunes; you must use DFU Recovery or be jailbroken. This reminds of the precarious – and unhealthy – co-dependency between a device manufacturer and the mobile carrier.

Apple prides themselves on delivering the best user experience possible and it must infuriate Mr. Jobs that AT&T is the continued point of failure in that goal.

At this moment my iPhone 3G is successfully running firmware version 3.1.2 (7D11) and carrier settings "AT&T 5.5" which is included in the 3.1.2 package.

Apple logoI'm in the midst of creating different volumes (or partitions if you will) to maintain specific versions of Mac OS X, Final Cut Pro, and Avid Media Composer. Part of the process is following the compatibility version matrix for Media Composer.

In my situation, the matrix suggests 10.5.5 and QuickTime 7.5.5 for my copy of Media Composer 3.13. Starting with a clean installation of 10.5.0, I remembered there are Delta and Combo updates for each revision. Curious to know more I found this page at The X Lab.

The author provides some background on the update process and a list to Apple Support for notes and downloads of each Mac OS X revision. Although Snow Leopard is missing you can find every "point" update from 10.2 through 10.5.

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