Random Cards Mac OS
In Mac, your credit card information can be saved on safari web browser or the web browser you’re using on your Mac OS X. Basically, the credit card information saved on autofill credit card mac and you can easily see your card info. Through opening safari autofill settings. However, if safari credit card autofill not working then, in this.
EDIT: This post have been getting very many views lately so ‘fess up in the comments if you want a part 2 with more advanced and new ways to use Mac OS X commands and wildcard characters.
- Way 5: Check Hardware Issue to Resolve Mac Reboots Randomly. Sadly, if the Mac Mini reboots randomly due to hardware problems, then you won’t be able to do anything by yourself. The hardware problems can only be fixed by Apple professionals. So, if the Mac reboots itself randomly, you need to take the device to the nearest Apple Support Center.
- Go to frree4alldevices and download the desired Mac OS version image file. This is new link and it is.
This tip/post is going to be about several common Mac OS X commands and wildcard characters I have discovered, at work, that is useful to understand and know how to use. First off, wildcard characters are special characters such as * and ? that help you to find groups of filenames that have something in common.
For example, say I have a couple of files that I want to find in my home directory. My home directory is cluttered with junk files that I never take the time to organize. But somewhere within that junk pile of files there lay 8 files I would like. Their filenames are ssw_idl.a285, ssw_idl.r391, ssw_idl.z988, ssw_idl.c293, and the other 4 files are named similarly (“ssw_idl.” followed by a letter, then 3 numbers).
Open up terminal (or something similar like X11’s xterm) and type in
then enter. This lists all your files and folders in the current directory. ls
Cramming time:cd
– changes directories (directories = folders). cd ..
to go up a directory and cd FOLDERNAME
to go to a folder in the current directory.rm
– deletes files/folders.mkdir
– makes directories (folders).say 'Hello!'
– computer says ‘Hello!’more textFileName
– opens up a text file for viewing inside the command line/shell.
Now the actual reason I wrote up this post was to show you how to display only certain files with similar names. So we’ll go on to learn about wildcard characters (to be completely honest, I am a noob to this whole wildcard thing; I am stilling learning also), and then about how to use wildcard characters in the Mac OS X command line. Skip ahead if you already know about wildcard characters.
——– The Good Stuff ——-
*
– this star means “everything”.ls *
will display all folders and all files within those folders.?
– means any character. ??
means any two characters. So basically ls ??*
will only display files/folders that have filenames 2 or more characters long.alphabet and numbers
– typing in any letters or numbers means that files/folders must have those exact letters/numbers.ls *.jpg
– lists all files that are jpeg images (.jpg extension)
The “.” (backslash then dot with no space, in case you couldn’t see it well) means a literal dot. No backslash before the dot would mean just any single character except for a new line (n).ls a*
– lists files/folders starting with an “a”.ls *.*
– lists only files because folders don’t have a dot in their name.ls [a-z]
– lists only folders with a one character letter for their name.ls frame[0-9]
– lists any files/folders starting with “frame” and then any 1 number.
A very nicely made reference page for Mac OS X Commands:
http://www.ss64.com/osx/
Any comments welcome! Show me something cool & new!
Updates!
I recently got an Intel-based Mac Pro (MacPro2,1). This is one of the systems that Apple abandoned way too soon. It came with an ATI Radeon X1900 card, and I was able to flash one of my old AMD Radeon HD5870 cards for use in it.
My model of Radeon HD5870 is the 'Built by AMD' reference design.
Stay tuned for firmware updates.
Note that much of this page is for older video cards: AGP-based for PowerPC systems.
There have been several things that have bothered me when trying to upgrade Mac systems:
- Apple seems to hate supporting old hardware.
- Devices made for Apple computers seem to cost up to ten times what they do for PC, even if they use identical hardware or even slower components.
- Third party support usually comes from un-reliable sources. People that can't keep a website up, people that lose interest in helping the community, and those who are greedy that try to keep the money-saving (or potentially money-making) information to themselves.
I will be putting some ROMs/firmware on my site to help others with flashing video cards for Macs.
I have flashed a few PC video cards for use in Apple Macintosh systems.
Success:
XFX 'WANG' GeForce 6200, 256 Megs RAM, $49 from Newegg.
- Requires 10.4.3 or higher. You will get a Kernel Panic if used in an older version.
- Uses a Temp Sensor that can cause long boot times under Mac OS X 10.5.x if you use it on a G4.
- There is a special firmware that disables the temp sensor.
- Supports Quartz Extreme and Core Image
VisionTek 5564 GeForce 2 MX 400 64MB SDRAM AGP DualHead/TwinView, $5-$20 from eBay.
- Works great in Mac OS 9 and all Mac OS X versions.
- Supports Quartz Extreme
This worked in my G4 Mac with the original PC/Windows firmware, however:
- The mouse cursor was a solid 'box' when using Thousands/Millions of colors (it looked fine in 256-color mode).
- The system couldn't detect my monitor or its timings, so resolutions and refresh rates were a bit off.
- Things worked perfectly after flashing with the '1075 TwinView' ROM.
* Update, August 2008: I noticed in World of Warcraft that the sky looked like it was filled with artifacts - like the card has bad memory. After staring at the messed up looking sky, the system had a kernel panic and locked. :(
* Double update. It turns out the wrong timings were in the firmware. Default MX400 timings are 200/183, default MX200 timings are 175/166. The VisionTek card uses 200/166 timings. I modified the firmware and re-flashed, and everything is good now. :)
Elsa GeForce 2 MX 400, 32 Megs, $5-$20 from eBay
- So far has worked great.
- No issues in any games.
- No artifact/memory issues.
- Flashed the NV1100 firmware, 200/183mhz timings.
Random Cards Mac Os 7
ATI Radeon 9700 Pro, OEM, 128 Megs DDR. $30 from eBay.
- Quarts Extreme and Core Image support.
Fail:
Inno3D GeForce 2 MX 200, 32 Megs, 64-bit SDR, AGP - 'Tornado GeForce 2 MX-200', purchased for $45 brand new back in 2001.
* NVFlash said the EEPROM wasn't flashable.
* Some random GeForce 2 MX 400, 64 Megs, PCI - Unknown brand, NVFlash can't identify the EEPROM.
The EEPROM wasn't the 'non flashable' kind on the Inno3D GF2MX200, it just wasn't listed as a supported EEPROM by the version of NVFlash I was using.
Recently, I haven't been able to get the card at work at all (PC or Mac). I think I killed it with static or something. :(
GeForce 2 MX firmware:
nv1027f.rom
nv1028f.rom
nv1055.rom
nv1057.rom
nv1075(twin).rom (what I originally flashed on my VisionTek 5564 TwinView, but has the wrong timings for that card)
nv1100.rom
VisionTek 5564 ROM (200/166 timings, TwinView support, based on NV1100 ROM)
GeForce 6 firmware:
xfx_6200.rom - Original 350/266 MHz. (what I flashed on my 6200)
xfx_cube.rom - Cooler running 300/250 MHz.
MLP256XFX2_NoSensor.rom - 350/266 speeds, but with temp sensor disabled (for Mac OS X 10.5 compatibility).
Radeon 9700 Pro:
ati_oem_9700pro_124_agp_full.zip
Misc:
visiontek_5564_original.rom - My original VisionTek 5564 TwinView firmware for PC.
xfx_6200_original.zip - My original XFX 'WANG' GeForce 6200 firmware for PC.
PC Tools:
Random Cards Mac Os Download
nv312.zip - NVFlash 3.12
nv513.zip - NVFlash 5.13
nv563.zip - NVFlash 5.63
cwsdpmi.zip - DOS Extender (if needed)
For my TwinView:
nv312.exe -f 1075.rom -m
For my Elsa:
nv312.exe -f 1100.rom -m
Random Cards Mac Os Catalina
For my 6200:
nv513 -4 -5 -6 -j 6200.rom
Links:
Random Cards Mac Os X
http://www.cybercoment.com/macgeforce.htm
http://themacelite.wikidot.com/
http://www.eden.net.nz/7/20011005geforce2mx.html