I tried using a SanDisk USB Flash ("thumb") drive as an alternative Time Machine backup device on my daughter's 2020 Intel MacBook Air (Catalina) and my 2020 Apple Silicon MacBook Air (Big Sur). It worked when directly connected to a 2011 MacBook Air (High Sierra), but when connected to an Anker USB-C hub it kept disconnecting:
Saturday, January 23, 2021
Don't blame your hub when your USB Flash (thumb) drive disconnects from your Mac
Migrating from 9yo 11" High Sierra MacBook Air to 2021 Big Sur M1 Air
I replaced Emily's 8-9 yo MacBook Air 11" running High Sierra with Apple's latest (M1) Air (Big Sur). A few notes for others who might be facing migrations....
- I used Migration Assistant over WiFi but I didn't migrate any applications. Apps have changed to much, better to install from source. Pay CLOSE ATTENTION when they tell you to write down the user passwords! (I took a photo). Migration Assistant brings over a lot of old junk but it also saves a lot of time; it's a pain to migrate mail archives without it.
- Only 1Password needed Rosetta so far. As I write Office 365 is installing.
- Citrix Workspace for Apple Silicon worked! That was biggest risk.
- I couldn't get Carbon Copy Cloner email notifications working. I contacted vendor. The app works for back up though.
- I didn't want to use the iCloud Document sync feature and Migration Assistant did preserve my High Sierra settings.
- You need to open Photos and let it update before reenabling iCloud photo sync. There's no error message -- it just won't work.
- For multiple users I couldn't update the User Profile Login picture from the user account, I had to do it from my Admin account in Users and Groups preferences. (Needed update for Retina images)
- I did better skipping iCloud setup initially then doing it from each User account separately.
- I had to reenable Fast User Switching on 1-2 accounts.
Overall I ran into a few bugs and glitches but High Sierra is 3 releases from Big Sur so that's a hard jump. Really wasn't terrible so far.
The new Air is rather faster than the 9yo 11" Air, but not amazingly faster than my 5yo MacBook Air (Best Computer Ever Made). Most delays are waiting for servers, so local speedups don't make a ton of difference.
Update 4/2/2021: Alas, it turned into a bit of a disaster.
Saturday, November 21, 2020
Google's mysterious new blogging platform
Google Blogger has been largely forgotten, but over the past 1-2 years it's been receiving regular updates.
Mostly these have been improvements with a few odd regressions. Some of the regressions have been fixed.
It's kind of curious. Google still uses Blogger for some of their blogs on googleblog.com (ex: Scholar), but they also have a new platform - https://blog.google (Keynote, Data Centers). On the Keynote blog page the RSS feed is hidden (but exists), on Data Centers and Photos blog there's a familiar feed icon top right. Data Centers articles date to 2012, but the .google domain was only registered in 2014. So they've migrated some old content, probably from Blogger.
I looked a the source from a Data Center post and it's surprisingly old school readable. There are commented out tags for handling IE 7 (!) and metadata for Open Graph and Twitter Card. Style sheets refer to "/static/blogv2/css/blog.min.css?version=4.4" />.
I wasn't able to find any articles on "Google's new blog platform". That doesn't surprise me, Google search is fairly useless these days. Clearly they are up to something internally.
If they do make this a public blogging platform I'm sure it still won't handle paragraph spacing correctly.
Blogger will republish old posts with new dates but keep old URL
Updating macOS - the paranoid approach (updated from 2008)
- Make a fresh Aperture backup (still using it!) from within Aperture.
- Test both my Carbon Copy Cloner and Time Machine backups including a test file restore. I create two CCC clones and take one off-site. I don't usually make bootable clones but I do this time.
- Remove my backup drives.
- Disconnect everything.
- Reset SMC, reset NVRAM.
- Run hardware diagnostics, Onyx cleanup, and Same Mode boot.
- Turn off Time Machine backup.
- Update OS.
- Login to each user account on the machine and get iCloud working, check that Google services are connected (Mail, etc), run Notes, Contacts, Mail, etc.
- Do backup to fresh carbon copy cloner drive. Note Time Machine is still off.
- Check the backups are working so I know I have a current backup of data. I like to do a test restore of randomly selected file.
- Have another machine available in case the update runs into problems -- you may need Google.
- Don't do the OS update on a desktop machine during bad weather. This is a bad time to have a power failure. Make sure you can't accidentally pull a plug or turn off the power. (I once bricked a peripheral by hitting a power switch with my foot.)
- Do a safe boot to clean up the system and verify the drive.
- Disconnect all USB hubs and all firewire devices. Attach only an Apple keyboard and an Apple mouse.
- Pull the network cable (see below). You can plug it in when you need to get software updates. Nowadays there are all sorts of things a partly updated machine can destroy if it can get a the net.
- Restart then remove Preference Panes from admin account (ctrl-click then delete in preference view). Review and remove suspicious login items. Use Spotlight to find all apps or utilities with a date prior to 2004 - remove any that aren't needed.
- Uninstall known bad actors. I know, for example, that my copy of Missing Sync for Palm OS won't work with 10.5. I don't need it any more, so time to use the uninstaller. Remove Retrospect's client if present, that will need to be reinstalled.
- Turn off sync services, such as Spanning Sync. Don't turn them on again until you've run iCal, Address Book, mail, etc for the first time. I recommend turning off everything related to synchronization, including .Mac/MobileMe, anything in iTunes, any add-on services. To be extra sure, pull the network cable durign the update. Don't allow the machine to access the net without your control.
- I've already removed the evil Adobe Acrobat Reader and RealAudio.
- Copy the 10.5.4 Combo Updater to the desktop. I don't want to run 10.5.2 a moment longer than necessary. Confirm I have plenty of free drive space left.
- Review Mac OS X 10.4, 10.5: About installation options so I don't miss the 'Archive and Install' option [1] . (Made that mistake before!)
- Insert DVD and click the install button.
- Go walk the dogs, do the dishes, etc. Just the DVD verification takes an age and a half. (Yes, you can skip the verification. I prefer to let it run.) The update should proceed without any questions, so you can let it go.
- After the upgrade and reboot it can take a long time for the admin account to come up. Be patient.
- Restart again (to let caches be build properly) then apply the 10.5.4 compo updater. The machine will restart.
- Check all login items for all users. There's a bug in the 10.5.2 Archive and Install procedure that can cause login items to be applied across user accounts.
- Check for other updates. I was surprised I had to install iTunes 8 again -- it had been installed earlier. I imagine if I hadn't done this, and I'd tried to sync to my iPhone, the heavens would have fallen. You have to keep checking until no new updates are found.
- Run iCal and Address Book. Anyone else notice that 10.5 Address Book backup is under the export/archive menu now? Back 'em both up before any iPhones sync.
- Enable Spanning Sync and do an iCal sync with gCal.
- Run Keychain Access and Keychain First Aid.
- Run any app that iTunes works with or that intersects with the iPhone.
- Cycle through all accounts, looking for obvious trouble.
- Hook up the peripherals, download drivers for the MacAlly keyboard, etc etc.
- Expect Spotlight to suck CPU and drive the fan until the search indices are rebuilt. Let it run overnight.
- The long recovery begins.
- MobileMe didn't appear in software update, so it was only when I went to the old .Mac preference panel that I was asked to update to MobileMe. This might have caused some problems if I'd installed MobileMe.
- iTunes regressed to an earlier version. I had to update to iTunes 8 again. This would have caused serious problems if I'd missed this.
- Spanning Sync keeps telling me its deleting appointments from Google Calendar, but it doesn't say what it's deleting. I don't know why this is happening.
- The update resurrected a number of old apps and login items that I thought were long gone. They're reaking havoc on my syncs.
macOS Mojave Safe Mode can take hours, the progress bar is no help. Also - Disk Utility and APFS
TL;DR
- When you startup in Safe Mode On MacOS Mojave the progress bar goes to 100% in a few minutes. It then sites there for a long time -- hours on my 3yo MacBook Air (APFS 256GB, half used).
- If you startup in ⌘R recovery mode it's not all obvious how to run Mojave Disk Utility First Aid on your encrypted data partition rather than the startup partition. (Different from running when logged in.)
- PS. Disk Utility changed in Catalina.
Sunday, September 27, 2020
Things I miss: drag and drop link creation
I've mentioned here a few times that progress is not linear. Howard Oakley has a piece on a related topic today. For example, no application has done text style management as well as Symantec's MORE 3.1 -- which died decades ago. I don't think we'll ever see the like of Apple's Aperture again -- an insanely ambitious app for professional image editing and especially image management. The iPhone is a bit of an improvement over the Palm III, but it took years to equal Palm's task, calendar and note management (yes, really).
Today I mourn one small example of lost progress. It used to be easy to create a link to a web page. You'd click on the something in your browser URL display and drag it onto your web page editor (MarsEdit, FrontPage, Word, some web client editors) and *bingo*, instant link. The page title was the link text, page URL was, well, the URL. I can't do that any more, at least for Blogger (which seems to be in some kind of resurrection lately).
One day ...
PS. Been a while since I thought of FrontPage/Vermeer - Microsoft's 1990s web site manager. It was the Aperture of its day. Very ambitious, buggy, often flawed, but nothing like it now. Parts of it survived into SharePoint Designer, but now that I've mentioned SharePoint I'm spiraling into PTSD ...