Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Installing “Boot Camp”

Friday, May 28th, 2010

If you have an Intel based Mac, and at least 10.5 “Leopard” MacOS, then you can install Windows natively into a separate partition and dual boot between the two.

Just run the Boot Camp application from Applications/Utilities, and have a Windows XP/Vista/7 install disc ready.

The first stage in this process is to re-size the current MacOS partition, and create a partition for Windows on the end of your hard drive. This stage has caused problems for me many times, due to this error:
“”The disk cannot be partitioned because some files cannot be moved.”
The solution to this, according to Apple Support, is to backup everything and reinstall MacOS, formatting the drive. Pathetic

I’m not backing up my whole hard drive and formatting?! I’ve got homework due tomorrow and I need this done now!

It seems there is quite a common cause to this problem: the sleepimage file. This file is used for safe sleep, which is a feature of newer, portable macs which allows the computer to be restored to it’s previous state if all power is lost during sleep. It is a large file (the size of your total RAM). The crucial part though is that it seems to be stored right at the end of your partition, and “cannot” be moved!

So, you can safely delete this file for the purposes of the Boot Camp partition re-sizer, because the file will be automatically re-created later.

Run Terminal from Applications/Utilities and type the following:
’sudo rm /private/var/vm/sleepimage’
then type your administrator password.

Straight away, after the prompt returns for you to type something again, type ‘exit’ and try the Boot Camp utility again.

If this doesn’t work, there is more things you can try:

Use an offline disk defragmentation tool. Offline is key here, because if it is running like a normal application inside of MacOS, it will not be able to move these pesky mystery files either. iDefrag is an excellent choice for this.

If neither of these have worked, it might be because your disk is somehow corrupted, or in some other bad state.

Boot from the Leopard Install Disc, select Utilities at the top, and run Disk Utility. Select your hard drive, and clicking “Verify Disk”, and then “Repair Disk”.

Or, if you don’t have access to the Leopard Install Disc, reboot into single user mode by holding down Apple + S at start-up, and then type ‘fsck -fy’ and the prompt. This will repair any hard drive errors.

Deleting the sleepimage file took less than 20 seconds. The people in forums saying things like “if Apple says you have to format your whole disk, then that’s what you have to do!” really  infuriate me. It comes from an attitude towards computers caused by a lack of understanding. There’s nothing wrong with a lack of understanding, but posting that kind of advice is not helpful.

The Very Great Contents of My Photo Booth

Monday, February 15th, 2010
Jessie and I pulling funny faces

Jessie and I pulling funny faces

Tim when he gets excited

Tim when he gets excited

I can be decorashun in ur flashy tree?

I can be decorashun in ur flashy tree?

How Good Is University? About 10 + i337

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

I just started my 3rd week at the University of Sydney, and it’s pretty awesome.

Undertaking a degree in Computer Science and Technology is pretty tough. I’ve barely had time to sleep at night. For example – in 2 weeks I have learned

  • How to plot imaginary numbers on the imaginary plane
  • The beautiful inter-connectedness of the dot and cross products in vectory multiplication
  • How to use styles in Word
  • How to search Google
  • How to use tables in html
  • The difference between a local C: drive and the network attached U: drive
  • How to make a pyramid of *’s on the command line with java
  • That computers work by switching on and off really really fast
  • and how to circumvent the undergraduate download limit