Hi everyone!
So how are you all going with Leopard, everything running smoothly is  
it? According to the technology columns in my local paper yesterday,  
the transition from Tiger to Leopard for many Mac owners has been less  
than smooth.
The writers point out that the first problem which seems to occur is a  
"Blue Screen" when Leopard is installed and the system restarts. Well  
that's an interesting point because when I installed Leopard onto my  
Imac, I wasn't able to reboot the machine but I did have a faulty  
machine at the time so I wouldn't take too much notice of my experience.
I've installed Leopard on 2 computers here, my Macbook and a friends  
g4 Ibook and both installs went without a hitch but I'd be lying if I  
said that I haven't had a few teething problems with a couple of  
pieces of software, the one which comes to mind is Audio Hijack Pro.
This software may require you to download extra modules depending on  
how you use the software, for example if you want to instantly hijack  
an application such as Real Player, VLC, Itunes or Quicktime, without  
this plug-in Audio Hijack Pro has to re-launch the application you're  
trying to hijack before you can proceed. So to put this into context,  
suppose you're listening to BBC7 on the Internet through Real Audio  
Player and you decide you like what you're hearing so you launch Audio  
Hijack Pro in order to hijack and record the output of Real audio,  
Select Real Audio from the sessions table and press the Hijack button.  
Audio Hijack Pro then comes up with a warning message telling you that  
Real Audio player has to be re-launched before Hijacking can take  
place, as you can see this sanario  is extremely annoying but that's  
exactly what happens without the Instant Hijack plug-in installed.
On my systems here and another that a friend and I have tried, Audio  
Hijack Pro (whilst acknowledging that the Instant Hijack plug-in is  
available) will not give you the status, that is whether its installed  
or uninstalled  but its safe to say I think that uninstalled ins the  
likely status <smile>. I've written to the developers about this so I  
hope we see some action before too long.
That's the only really big annoyance I've had to put up with since  
installing Leopard, all my other favourite applications such as Nisus  
Writer Pro (the word processing package I use), Transmit (the FTP  
client I use) all have released updates to cope with Leopard.
so here's another question. We all know that Leopard was in beta mode  
for quite some considerable time (unless I'm very much mistaken at  
least 12 months or more) so why are these software developers so  
behind when it comes to releasing updates for Leopard? Adobe for  
example doesn't have any plans to release updates for Acrobat or Photo  
Shop until the new year.




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