Archive for the ‘Mac’ Category.

EyeTV Netstream DTT Network Dual Tuner

I bought an Elgato EyeTV Netstream DTT Network Dual Tuner on the recommendation of my brother. Being a dual tuner, you can either watch/record two TV channels simultaneously or have two users on your network watch one TV channel each.

The biggest issue with EyeTV is the lack of electronic programme guide. OK, you can get a trial subscription to IceTV, but that’s not good enough when compared to Windows Media Centre (WMC). Did you know that MWC has a free EPG? That’s right, free. Why can’t Elgato arrange for a free EPG for EyeTV.

Luckily for us here in Australia, Paul Shipley has written a tool to generate an XMLTV formatted EPG which can be impored by EyeTV. Thanks to Paul, I now have an EPG for EyeTV.

Magic Mouse Regained its Magic?

You’re not going to believe this. My Apple Magic Mouse may have regained its magic.

How? I took the batteries out. I left the batteries out for a few minutes. I put the batteries back in and now it’s recognising right clicks again. Weird.

Now I’m wondering how long the magic is going to last. My Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse 2.0 is on standby just in case.

Magic Mouse not so Magic?

My Apple Magic Mouse has lost its magic. :-(

Last week, my Magic Mouse started playing up. It decided that it was not going to reliably recognise a right-button click. Most of the time it thought I was left-button clicking, even though I was pressing on the far right of the top surface. And no, I had all of my other fingers well away from the mouse. I checked the batteries and they were at 47%, so flat batteries should not have been the cause. I changed the batteries, just in case, but that didn’t resolve the problem.

So, I’m no longer convinced that Apple has built a better mouse.

I’ve reverted to using my old Microsoft Wireless Optical Mouse 2.0 (no longer available?). At least it works. :-)

I should start looking for another mouse now. The Logitech V470 Bluetooth Mouse is OK, but has too much lag after it has gone into power saving mode. It’s annoying to have the mouse cursor jumping around the screen. I might be better off forgetting about buying a Bluetooth mouse and just get a “normal” wireless mouse with a nano transceiver.

My Mac Mini is running out of USB ports, even though I have two four port USB hubs attached. Might be time for another USB hub too.

Upgrade to OS X 10.6.3

Tonight, System Update notified me that OS X 10.6.3 was available for installation.

I took the hint and updated OS X, iTunes and iPhoto. So far, there’s been no downside to the update. In fact, I think there was an upside to the update — after the forced reboot, my little Mac Mini feels a bit quicker than it was before the reboot. Maybe I should reboot more often? :-)

Time Machine is now having the time of its life backing up the 2.5GB of changes to my Mac Mini.

Connecting Mac and Linux to Windows 7 Shares

Tonight, I tried to connect my Mac Mini to a Windows 7 share. As you can probably guess, what should have been stupidly simple was frustratingly complex. Thanks Microsoft, for nothing.

As it turns out, Microsoft have tweaked the SMB protocol to make it incompatible with Mac OS X (10.6.2) and samba (3.4.7 on my Debian machine) on Linux. Microsoft have changed a few settings so that Windows 7 network shares no longer behave like the LAN Manager shares of Windows XP.

What you have to do is this … (apologies to person who I copied this from because I did not record their URL)

On your Windows 7 machine, navigate to Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Local Security Policy. In the left hand pane, expand Local Polices -> Security Options. In the right hand pane, scroll down to …

  • Network Security: LAN Manager authentication level and change the value from Not defined to Send LM & NTLM responses; and
  • Minimum session security for NTLM SSP (there’s two entries — one for client and one for server so I changed both) and uncheck the Require 128-bit encryption.

After you make those three changes, reboot.

You should now be able to connect your Mac and Linux machines to your Windows 7 shares.