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- Oct 21, 2011 Directed by Tim Chambers. With Carla Gugino, Marley Shelton, Ellen Burstyn, David Boreanaz. In the early 70s, Cathy Rush becomes the head basketball coach at a tiny, all-girls Catholic college.
- Is there a way to empty the trash in Finder for a USB memory stick only instead of the entire trash for all drives? I've seen a dated post stating that emptying the trash is for all drives, but just wanted to confirm that there isn't a way to select which drive has the trash emptied as this seems to be something that anyone using a USB memory stick would want to be able to do (who wants to.
- Mac Essentials 'Previous' 'Next' Free Engraving. $249.00 Leather Sleeve for 13-inch MacBook Air and MacBook Pro. $179.00 USB-C to USB Adapter.
The Mighty Stick - LD36 The Mighty Stick is a game about the most ancient technology. It's about a stick, which can help you to survive in the cold space. It's a kinda adventure game, but from the first perspective.
2005 – When you take a phenomenon and look back to put the whole picture in perspective, the landscape can reveal some fascinating shapes and colors.
More or less a decade ago, the Macintosh was a closed, tightly integrated platform. Today, it increasingly looks like a PC – minus hardware clones and the Windows operating system.
For almost a decade, the Macintosh was in a world of its own. With its object-oriented operating system; Motorola processors; NuBus slots; Apple Desktop Bus; nonstandard serial, network, and video connectors; and SCSI hard drives, the Macintosh was a bit of an oddball in a computer industry that revolved increasingly around the Windows/Intel standard.
Conformity
Apple’s focus was on ease of use and performance, even if it meant selling machines at higher prices. Its competitors cared more about price and didn’t catch up with Apple’s user-friendliness obsession until much later.
In the mid-90s, Apple started building the Mac around a more open architecture by adopting some standard PC components – and by licensing some vendors to build and sell Macintosh clones. The clone licenses were terminated when Steve Jobs came back to Apple a few years later, but the movement toward industry standard components hasn’t stopped.
If you look at today’s Mac, you can see how the platform has changed. Apple gradually adopted IDE/ATA drives, PCI slots, standard video and network connectors, and USB, among other things. Some “Windowsish” features have become part of the Mac OS. For example, when Mac OS 8 came out, contextual menus and “sticky” menus became part of the Mac OS.
The biggest change ever looked scary at first: Apple announced that it will dump the PowerPC processor in favor of Intel’s chips.
Even the one-button mouse couldn’t resist the revolution when Apple realized that it needed to offer its own programmable multi-button mouse (the Mighty Mouse) to the general public.
In two years, Macintosh hardware will almost be the same as a Windows PC – except that it will run Mac OS X. Apple’s philosophy shows itself more in its system software, software-hardware integration, and general innovation than in building the best possible machine.
Mistakes?
Was Apple wrong with its initial choices?
That’s a tough call to make, especially since every step toward industry standards has been followed by loud boos from some of the Mac’s most loyal fans.
If Apple sacrifices overall hardware quality for better prices and slowly realizes that it sometimes has to follow the PC herd, it also means that the company is eliminating barriers to the Mac’s adoption. Fundamentally, it means that standardization can be a key to survival, especially when Apple’s market share stands at 2.5%.
Many questions remain: Why choose more expensive components when, in the end, Apple’s philosophy shows through its system software? Why ignore the multi-button mouse for so long when there was demand for it? Why choose the PowerPC architecture, only to dump it after hitting a development ceiling?
The answers may not be obvious.
More importantly, how much further can Apple take the Mac towards standardization without hurting its credibility? The switch to Intel chips leaves many of us scratching our heads, especially when we remember Apple’s claims that the PowerPC was technologically superior to anything x86.
Identity
Are we just running PCs with a Unix-based operating system? Are we realizing that as the years go by, our platform is taking the road to conformity?
Do we still “Think Different”? How different are we thinking nowadays?
One of the elements that makes the Mac attractive is the impression that Mac users are different from the masses, the black sheep who escape the conformity of Microsoft’s powerful software monopoly.
In a way, it’s hard to admit that the dissimilarity dwindles with time. It makes some Mac users feel like rebels without a cause, and a few even think that if Apple keeps adopting PC standards, getting a PC may be the right thing to do in the future. I find this argument ridiculous, but I have heard it often enough to know that there are Mac users who are serious about it.
In my opinion, it is Mac OS X that stands out as the main reason to stick with Apple. The security offered by the current Mac OS, its ease of use, its larger commercial software selection than most Unix systems, and Apple’s swift development give the Mac a unique mix.
Apple’s innovations have to be kept in mind, too. It’s always great to be among the first to benefit from the neatest products to hit the market, such as the iPod.
I do have the impression that Apple could make a little effort to strengthen the Mac identity again. A new campaign designed to be the successor to Think Different would certainly be appreciated, so that when we acquire our next Macs some of us “forget” that they have “Intel inside”.
Short link: http://goo.gl/2Gjck4
Sign up for the St. Ignace newsletter to receive updates on this and other year round events and activities happening in St. Ignace.Message From The St Ignace Events Committee
Safety is the top priority of the St. Ignace Events Committee and its event organizers. We are all adapting to new changes and policies to help keep safety in the forefront. We appreciate your flexibility and understanding as we work to make all of our events safe and fun for all. If the event must be drastically changed, postponed, or cancelled for safety reasons, we will offer full refunds to anyone that pre-registered. At this point, we have every intention of seeing all your smiling faces, safely, in September.
2021 Registration Includes:
- Saturday bridge fare
- Busing Saturday (for those who stay in St. Ignace hotels and campgrounds)
- Secure staging, trail maps, UP riding info, onsite vendors
- Lunch
- High Quality Decals
- Donation to UP trail system maintenance
- Special Gift!
LAW ENFORCEMENT/LOCAL ORV ORDINANCE LINKS
You are responsible for having any required ORV licenses or permits. Click here to visit the website to read or obtain a copy of 'The Handbook of Michigan Off-Road Vehicle Laws and Riding Basics 2020'. You can download the handbook to your computer for free, or there are iBook and Nook versions that can be downloaded for $1.99.
LODGING INFORMATION
Stay where the action is! Make your lodging reservation in St. Ignace to ensure Saturday morning busing and weekend-long transportation.
DRIVER MUST HAVE VALID DRIVER’S LICENSE
If you have any questions, please call 1-800-338-6660, or email info@stignace.com. Registration refunds available through Friday, September 17 minus a $5.00 cancellation fee.
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Location: Mackinac Bridge and Little Bear East Arena
Phone: 906-643-6950
Contact: St. Ignace Events Committee
Email: info@stignace.com
REGISTER NOW BY CLICKING HERE!
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We strongly encourage pre-registration. On-site registration will be limited, and there will be an additional on-site registration fee. Depending on our registration numbers, if you register on-site we cannot guarantee that you will get everything in the registration packet. We will provide registration packets to on-site registrants while supplies last.
UTV, ATV, S x S, 3-Wheelers and off-road motorcycle enthusiasts are invited to participate in the 7th Annual Trek The Mighty Mac. Join the growing number of “Trekkers” who gather in St. Ignace every year to enjoy food and gear vendors at Friday staging, a one of a kind parade across the Mackinac Bridge Saturday followed by Saturday evening activities, and weekend long games and off-roading adventures.
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STAGING DETAILS 2021
Staging on Friday ONLY
All machines must be dropped off to the staging area in Mackinaw City on Friday between 12 noon and 10 PM. As usual we will provide security at the staging area on Friday night. Staging area to be determined.
Hotel Information
When you register, the form will ask you what hotel you are staying at. If you are staying at a St. Ignace hotel or campground (which is recommended) we will pick you up by school bus Saturday morning (pick up schedule will be released in the week before the event).
If you are not staying in a St. Ignace hotel or campground (like a private residence or other city) you will need to make your own arrangements for transportation. You may park your vehicle at Little Bear East Arena (in the parking lot with the basketball court across the street from Little Bear ONLY) and get on a school bus from there to take you back to the staging area.