[Elecraft] K3 Utility and OS X Lion
Charles Johnson
cbjk4zrj at gmail.com
Sat Jul 23 10:29:17 EDT 2011
Here's a problem I've found with Time Machine and Lion:
If you use a Time Machine server, such as Seagate's BlackArmor NAS drive, or any of a number of NAS drives that support Time Machine, Apple has changed the protocol it uses for connection to such devices in Lion. Most, if not all of these devices will require updates from the manufacturer in order to function with Lion. I have a Seagate NAS drive, and until Seagate updates the firmware, I cannot access any of my Time Machine backups created prior to Lion, nor can I back up the Lion upgrade to my NAS drive. The workaround is to use a USB connected drive on the Mac or a network drive that can be formatted as a Time Machine share, but that only allows backing up the current OS, not access to previous backups. Had I known of this issue, I would not have upgraded to Lion until the third party NAS servers were upgraded.
This is the only third party issue I have found so far.
Also, Xcode 4.0.2 under Snow Leopard will not run under Lion - but an upgrade to Xcode 4.1 is available (another 4 GB download).
73, Charlie, K4ZRJ
Sent from my MacBook Pro.
On Jul 23, 2011, at 7:15 AM, AB8XA wrote:
> Here's another happy Lion user who took maybe two days to get used all the new things. Although you can set many things, such as reverse scroll and Mail.app's appearance back to the way they used to be, I left them as is and got used to them. Now I'm glad I did. I even bought a Magic Trackpad for my Mac Pro.
>
> The purpose of this post is to let you know you can create a bootable Lion install disk after the download, but before clicking "Continue" to start the installation, which deletes the installer from the Applications folder. Before clicking "Continue," go into the Applications folder, right-click on the Installer and select Show Package Contents. In the app package, go into the SharedSupport folder, and option-drag a copy of InstallESD.dmg to the Desktop. You can then burn that to a single-layer DVD with Disk Utility. I did this at work when I upgraded my Pro. It booted fine (although took a long time) on my MacBook Pro at home, where we're limited to 768k DSL. The Lion license permits installation on any Mac you own or control. I paid for the download. Google "InstallESD.dmg" for this tip on many websites.
>
> The install from download on the Pro was on a blank 1 TB disk and from the DVD on the MacBook Pro was an upgrade over Snow Leopard. Both worked with no problems.
>
> 73
> --
> Moe - AB8XA
> Elecraft KX1 #2484, Fists #13020, SKCC #7460,
> FPQRP #2617, NAQCC #5352, QRP-ARCI #14326
>
>
> On Jul 23, 2011, at 5:30 AM, David Ferrington, M0XDF wrote:
>
>> TidBITS tells use you can download Lion at an AppleStore too.
>
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