Mac OS X Lion Discussion


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They removed it from Disk Utility? Why would you want to disable Journaling though?

Something I did notice is DP2 is the lack of customize options (it forces you to install all languages, printer drivers etc.). Hopefully that's only for testing purposes as will be brought back once Apple finalizes Mac OS X Lion. Not that I care much on my iMac, but I can imagine it being a pain for people using a MacBook Air (for example).

They removed it from Disk Utility? Why would you want to disable Journaling though?

Something I did notice is DP2 is the lack of customize options (it forces you to install all languages, printer drivers etc.). Hopefully that's only for testing purposes as will be brought back once Apple finalizes Mac OS X Lion. Not that I care much on my iMac, but I can imagine it being a pain for people using a MacBook Air (for example).

When I tried to format my USB Drive the only options I got were Journaled with or without encryption (or something like that, I'd have to check it again tonight maybe)

And I don't really want Journaling on a USB Drive, makes sense on a hard drive but not for a usb stick

Apparently Apple got rid of non-Jouraling on Mac OS X Lion DP2. It isn't showing up here either.

Any documentation on what they're doing with HFS+? I always got the impression that rather than create a new file system that they're going to gradually move the file system forward in much the same way that in the linux world ext2fs has evolved into ext3fs and then into ext4fs. From what I understand HFS+ is pretty modular so there is a lot of capacity to move the file system forward in a non-distructive way.

It makes sense to be consistent and have a journal, it's always possible for a drive to lose power/connection mid-write (especially USB devices), and it's also what Microsoft does with NTFS.

There is always exFAT if users want portability and support for large files :D

I noticed the graphite highlights in Mac OS X Lion DP2 are darker. Subtile change but a very nice one, makes things look more refined for some reason. Managed to port it over to Mac OS X Snow Leopard. (Y)

Could you share that port? I really like the looks of it! :)

Sure, why not? :) Just apply with ThemePark. Afterwards you can trash the application, you use it one time only to change those system files. Obviously you would want to keep it around if you want to revert to your original files. A backup is made automatically by ThemePark and saved to /Library/Application Support/ThemePark so don't worry about that.

screenshot20110407at141m.png

screenshot20110407at145.png

Tested on Mac OS X Snow Leopard v10.6.7 only

You have to log out and in again to see the changes. If ThemePark doesn't prompt you to authenticate you have to press the "Apply theme" button again. It does that sometimes. Enjoy!

Mac OS X Lion.LeopardTheme.zip

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Thanks I'll try that tonight :D

It also works restored to another partition (even one on the same drive).

My drive has three partitions (SL, Lion running, and Lion installer) for that reason.

Installing from a hard drive partition is *always* faster than installing from an optical drive.

I did the same with SL (the installer is restored onto a *spare* hard drive partition on a different drive).

Smaller SATA hard drives (100 GB or less) are, in fact, ideal for this use (especially used or pulls) - break them up into 10 GB partitions (OS install restores, common applications, utilities, etc.).

It also works restored to another partition (even one on the same drive).

My drive has three partitions (SL, Lion running, and Lion installer) for that reason.

Installing from a hard drive partition is *always* faster than installing from an optical drive.

I did the same with SL (the installer is restored onto a *spare* hard drive partition on a different drive).

Smaller SATA hard drives (100 GB or less) are, in fact, ideal for this use (especially used or pulls) - break them up into 10 GB partitions (OS install restores, common applications, utilities, etc.).

I ended up buying an 8GB usb drive (I needed one anyway) and it worked like a charm (and the install was FAST ;))

You're welcome! Just let me know if everything went right for future reference. :)

Only just found the time to log out and log in again. :p

Everything went right. It's VERY subtile but definately better looking. Much like Aqua Extreme. ;)

Everything went right. It's VERY subtile but definately better looking. Much like Aqua Extreme. ;)

Yeah, I immediately noticed the change when I first logged into DP2. Unfortunately ThemePark won't read the resource files from Mac OS X Lion properly so I had to make this mod by taking screen shots. Luckily with minimal Photoshop & Preview work I managed to make it a 100% 1:1 match with the real deal.

Anyway, glad you like it! :)

PS It's funny because with this modification applied the Menu Bar and Spotlight highlights are actually consistent with the highlights of the black Dock contextual menus. Never noticed that before.

Sure, why not? :) Just apply with ThemePark. Afterwards you can trash the application, you use it one time only to change those system files. Obviously you would want to keep it around if you want to revert to your original files. A backup is made automatically by ThemePark and saved to /Library/Application Support/ThemePark so don't worry about that.

screenshot20110407at141m.png

screenshot20110407at145.png

Tested on Mac OS X Snow Leopard v10.6.7 only

You have to log out and in again to see the changes. If ThemePark doesn't prompt you to authenticate you have to press the "Apply theme" button again. It does that sometimes. Enjoy!

Can you please share the wallpaper that was used in the screenshots? Looks cool (the part of it)

What's weird is that I just compared those screenshots to the Graphite appearance on my Snow Leopard machine and found no distinguishable difference. Perhaps it's just the color profiles in the browser messing with things...

Anyway, if it actually has changed then that's cool. I just can't see it for some reason, so I'll stay with the system default.

Are you using Firefox?

Anyway, the highlight color of Mac OS X Snow Leopard is more elephant grey, while the one found in Lion is more asphalt grey. It's a subtile difference, but noticeable nonetheless on my 27-inch iMac.

I was comparing against the menu that drops when you click the menubar's Apple. In any case, I normally use Blue anyway so maybe the difference wasn't as stark for me.

I just remembered the other day that Apple filed in a patent request for a system that unmounts drives automatically: They're being locked down when not in use so you can disconnect without having to unmount them yourself first. Much like what happens with your iPod/iPhone/iPad when iTunes is done syncing.

I was kinda expecting that for Mac OS X Lion, with it being being all iPad-centric.

I just remembered the other day that Apple filed in a patent request for a system that unmounts drives automatically: They're being locked down when not in use so you can disconnect without having to unmount them yourself first. Much like what happens with your iPod/iPhone/iPad when iTunes is done syncing.

I was kinda expecting that for Mac OS X Lion, with it being being all iPad-centric.

I still eject my iPod after it's done syncing... I guess it's just habit.

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