![]() I recently heard that flash memory has a finite number of read/write cycles before it stops working completely. Thanks to the commenters, especially KiltBear. He points us to a Chroot tutorial for OS X. Fortunately, reader KiltBear has the solution. Update: As several folks have pointed out I didn't understand the question and so failed to answer it. If you create the user as a non-administrator then the user permissions should be the same over SSH as they are locally. You can do this with FTP for example but is it possible with SSH? I have enabled SSH and want to create a user that has SSH access but is limited to staying inside their home folder. I have a question for you regarding remote access to a mac. You might then try using a third-party authenticated SMTP server such as Google's (requires a free Gmail account). ![]() If that doesn't work the problem may be that your SMTP servers don't recognize the other two Macs for some reason. If it does then at least you know that's the problem.) (Just for testing purposes you could try turning the firewall off altogether and seeing it works. If you're using SSL you'll need to figure out which port your ISP uses, probably 465 but maybe 587. Well if you're sending mail through the unsecured SMTP protocol you can open port 25 in your firewall on the G5 iMac and see if that works. The question is, is there a proxy that needs to be set up on the iMac to allow that specific type of traffic through? The host iMac can send mail and the other two have complete internet connection and can receive mail. I cannot send e-mails using the two Macs that are sharing the connection. Everything works flawlessly with one exception. I fixed the problem by relocating a desk to have my G5 iMac with the ethernet cable plugged in directly and sharing the internet connection through the Airport Extreme card to the other two Macs in my home. This was my router for internet connection for all three of my Macs. I recently lost my Airport Express base station to a complete hardware failure. Just hit the plus sign and select the (mounted) drive in the dialog sheet. All you have to do is mount the drive in the Finder then add it to the Login Items tab of the Accounts Preference Pane for your account. If all you want is to mount a drive automatically at startup that's easy (we even covered this earlier). Is there an equivalent in os x to "map a network drive" in windows? I know how to mount shares over my network but getting them to appear automatically at login is what i need. We'll get to more questions in the near future, but please leave suggestions and new questions in the comments. For this episode we'll tackle questions about auto-mounting a network drive, sending email across an internet sharing Mac, wearing out iPhone flash, using Adobe XMP photo metadata in Windows and OS X, monitoring bandwidth usage and more. Improved and new localisations ( 36 languages in total).Last week's Ask TUAW prompted an avalanche of questions, so we're going to have to pace ourselves. Reorderable dropdown menus, with the ability to hide sections. Additional options, like dual line menu bar clocks, and condensed text for showing more in less space. Hotkeys to open and close menu dropdowns, for quick keyboard access. More colors and theme options, including light and dark vibrant menu dropdown backgrounds. Notifications, based on CPU, network, disk, battery, weather and other events. ![]() Refined menu bar items, dropdowns and other aspects match the new design of macOS 11 Big Sur. ![]() Weather with current temperature, hourly forecast, weekly overview and so much more. ![]()
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