Leopard’s Parental Controls

October 18, 2008

My children each have their own MacBooks (hand-me-downs) for their own personal use. They do their homework assignments and research anything they want to know about. They use all the iLife applications, have blogs and create podcasts. We have a family .Mac (now called mobileMe) account allow them their own space to upload their creations to. It can very rewarding to watch their creative juices flow.

Leopard’s parental controls that are built right into the OS are perfect for our family. When they surf the internet there are many site that I would deem inappropriate for their ages. With parental controls I can block pop up windows and limited which sites they can navigate to. If you have ever type in a misspelling of a web site and been confronted with questionable content you know you do not want this to happen to your child.

Take a look in the parental control preference pane. If you have created a user for you child you can have control of all their internet time. For instance every piece of mail they receive comes to me first for approval. I can also enter who they are allowed to iChat with.

If they navigate to a web site that I haven’t yet approved they are confronted with a message stating they have to get an approval from an administrator to view the site. You even have the option to allow google searches or not.

My favorite is the settings for computer curfews. I set a limited amount of time they can use the computer per day. I can also set a curfew for when they are allowed to log on and a certain time of day they cannot use the computer. These curfews can be set differently for weekdays and weekends.

While my children find this annoying at times. I can’t rest assure that they are not being subjected to some on the online trash out there. If you need assistance settings these up, please let me know.


iMac: If You Cant Eject a CD or DVD, or Open the Drive Tray

October 9, 2008

via Apple Support

 

Resolution

Important: Make sure the disc is not in use. Quit all applications that are using files on the disc.

1. Place the computer in sleep mode.

2. Press the Media Eject key at the top-right corner of the keyboard.

3. If that doesn’t work, drag the disc’s icon to the Trash.

4. If that doesn’t work, restart the computer, then hold down the mouse button.

5. To restart, choose Restart from the Apple menu.


Repair Disk Permissions

October 7, 2008

Occasionally in OS X  file ownership and permissions get changed by applications and program installers.  When ownership and permissions get changed, things just don’t work as they should.

The symptoms might be programs quitting unexpectedly, preferences not being remembered, programs not launching, etc. This is where Repair Disk Permissions utility comes in.

To repair permissions, open the Disk Utility program found in the Applications/Utility folder on your hard drive. At the top of the Disk Utility window is a row of tabs.  Click on the First Aid tab.  On the left is a list of the disk and volumes mounted on your computer system.

You need to click to highlight your main hard drive. In the right window pane in the lower left click on the repair disk permission. After the repair you can restart your Mac. I would also recommend running this repair after each new software update runs.