I tried to upgrade to OSX Snow Leopard today. 'Tried' is the keyword here. It seems though that the current installment of OSX (Leopard) is installed on a file system supposedly UNSUPPORTED by Apple OSX Snow Leopard.
NOTE: I have no way of knowing if the release I have is the final 'Gold Master'. So it could be that my findings are irrelevant for the actual (official) Snow Leopard OS.
I will however verify my findings when I have the actual 'Gold Master' in my possession.
When you run the installer from the OS (or by booting from the DVD) I get a error message saying that I need a GUID Partitione Table disk to install the new OS on. Somehow I use a different (and unsupported) partition scheme. And I thought that I selected all the best options during the clean install a while back......
There's no way of converting (using Disk Utility and/or Terminal commands) this to the appropriate settings without formatting your hard drive. So a normal upgrade is out of the question for me (or so it seems). And for many others I guess, since I won't be the only one with the 'wrong' partition table setup.
While the content on my website increases, it's getting (a bit) harder to find certain content. Sure, there's this search form in the top right of the website, but this means that you have to open the website first, enter the keyword and hit 'Enter'.
To speed things up I created a custom FireFox search engine. Using this I can search for content on my website directly from the browser. No matter what site I'm currently on.
The custom search engines are located in the profiles directory.
OSX: ~/Library/Application Data/Firefox/profiles/<random>/searchplugins/<searchengine>.xml
Windows: c:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Application Data\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\<random>\searchplugins\<searchengine>.xml
By adding the following XML file (right-click - Save As) to the directory listed above, you add the Redelijkheid.com search engine to your Firefox search engines.
Today was one of those days. First the two NSMXpress appliances failed yesterday (version 2008.2r2). No way of connecting the client gui. The webinterface and SSH connections worked fine though. Picked one up for examination, and since I had some *cough*good*cough* experiences a while back I assumed the latest software had some undocumented bug.
A back to factory defaults (version 2007.3r1) worked fine, but due to certain hardware the 2008 version was needed. So I upgraded the appliance (again) and found (while waiting) that the security certificate, used between the NSM server and the client gui, had expired on Juli 20th, 2009....... So someone forgot to update the certificates in the 2008.2r2 software.
After fixing that, the client gui worked like a charm.
Oké. At the moment I run a server at home. This server runs several services which I need (at the moment). These services include:
- File sharing
- Web server (mostly for testing and development, since this website is hosted @ Dreamhost.com SquareSpace.com)
- *cough*Download station*cough*
- Mail Server (serving several personal domains)
- SSH Server
- Local onsite backups
All this runs on an old (especially in IT terms) PC with Windows. The CPU and other peripherals sucks in electricity like you've never seen before (it's an old AMD Thunderbird CPU from the early overclocking days -> 2000/2001). Apart from being old, it's also responsible for about 70% of my energy bill (a 'rough' estimation). Besides that, it's also responsible for permanent subtropic temperatures in my study.