Can’t use a Vise Installer? Here’s the fix…

Evidently, some versions of the Vise Installer don’t quite work properly under Mac OS X…

Here’s why…  The symptom is that your computer slows down or stops responding…  The Installer splash screen may display, but the Vise Installer typically stops at the “Gathering Details” screen.

Why?  You have a “network volume” mounted, it could be an WEBDAV, SMB, or NFS volume…  Even your Time Machine drive may cause this problem.

Quit the Vise Installer, and then eject ALL your ejectable drives & network drives, and try it again.

See Mac OS X 10.3: Slows or Stops Responding While Using VISE Installer for Apple’s tech note on this topic.

Apple Releases Fifth Build of Mac OS X 10.6.5 | World of Apple

Earlier this week Apple released to developers the fifth build of Mac OS X 10.6.5. The release comes just a couple of weeks after the previous release of Mac OS X 10.6.5.

The current version of Mac OS X Snow Leopard was released in mid-June after just under two months of developer testing.

Mac OS X 10.6.5 build 10H542 weighs in at 571MB for the delta update and contains six focus areas and no known issues. World of Apple sources state that Apple has not included a list of fixes with the latest build, yetMac Rumors has published a list.

Changes in build, according to Mac Rumors

  • improve reliability with Microsoft Exchange servers
  • resolve a delay between print jobs
  • address a printing issue for some HP printers connected to an Airport Extreme
  • resolve an issue when dragging contacts from Address Book to iCal
  • address an issue where dragging an item from a stack causes the Dock to not automatically hide
  • add SSL support for uploading files to iDisk
  • resolve an issue with Wikipedia information not displaying correctly in Dictionary
  • improve performance of MainStage on certain Mac systems
  • resolve spacing issues with OpenType fonts
  • improve reliability with some Bluetooth braille displays
  • resolve a VoiceOver issue when browsing some web sites with Safari 5
  • address stability and performance of graphics applications and game

Known Issues

  • None

Focus Areas

  • 3D Graphics
  • iCal
  • Mail
  • QuickTime
  • Time Machine
  • USB Devices

A Soapbox? Doctor Who a Family show? (David Mitchell is right…)

Folks,

As Luke Harrison says, Let’s get some perspective here... David Mitchell has made this simple statement in his video blog.  I am going to paraphrase here:

  • I (David Mitchel) liked Classic Doctor Who better than Modern Who
  • Classic Doctor Who was targeted towards the Children, it was a “Family Show”.
  • Modern Doctor Who is targeted at the Adults (or Teens), but it’s a Family Friendly Show.

What’s wrong with this?  Why are we even having to dissect this?

Doctor Who, when it started back in 1963, it was fully intended to be an educational children’s show, using what we now are calling Pseudo-Historical adventures.  Adventures where the Doctor and Companions travel back in time to fix, change or otherwise mess with history.  A good modern Pseudo-Historical adventure example, would be the Shakespeare Code, from Season 3…

The Tenth Doctor takes Martha Jones on her first trip in the TARDIS. Arriving in Elizabethan England, they meet William Shakespeare, who is writing his play Love’s Labour’s Won. However, evil, witch-like Carrionites plot to end the world by placing a code in the new play’s closing dialogue. Shakespeare will have to give the performance of his life in order to save the Earth.

The Pseudo-Historical adventures are set in the best, have real world elements, but often add Science Fiction / Science Fantasty elements, to make it uniquely Doctor Who.  For example, in the Shakespeare Code adding “Alien” witches to the plot.  In the Classic series, possibly the best example, would be “The Talons of Weng-Chaing”, or “Horror of Fang Rock”, etc.

Now, the series being aimed at the older market, isn’t unexpected.  After all, The series was placed on hiatus in 1989, and the telemovie in 1996.  So, figuring someone that was 10 in 1989 started to watch the series in 2005, they would be in their mid-twenties.  Even someone that was born in 1990 would in their middle-teens…

These days, ratings are important, if the BBC wanted a hit, it would have to be something that the adults, teens, and children would watch.  I presume that restarting Doctor Who was potentially a risk, and Russel T. Davies and Julie Gardner, wanted to keep the spirit of the show as a family friendly show, but maximize their potential return on viewership.

Keep in mind what episodes we had for the first season….

  1. Rose
  2. The End of the World
  3. The Unquiet Dead
  4. Aliens of London
  5. World War Three
  6. Dalek
  7. The Long Game
  8. Father’s Day
  9. The Empty Child
  10. The Doctor Dances
  11. Boom Town
  12. Bad Wolf
  13. The Parting of the Ways

What episodes were really frightening?  The Unquiet Dead, Dalek, Father’s Day, The Empty Child,  and The Doctor Dances.  I would argue that Unquiet Dead, and Father’s Day shouldn’t be on the list, since I didn’t personally find them too concerning…  But the really scary episodes, were a DALEK episode, and a scary little kid asking for his Mommy…  (The Empty Child & The Doctor Dances really really really was a great 2 parter…  I’m not trying to make light of those episodes).

My Point?  There were not a large number of scary episodes that season….  Compare it to Season 2:

  1. New Earth
  2. Tooth and Claw
  3. School Reunion
  4. The Girl in the Fireplace
  5. Rise of Cybermen
  6. The Age of Steel
  7. The Idiot’s Lantern
  8. The Impossible Planet
  9. The Satan Pit
  10. Love & Monsters
  11. Fear Her
  12. Army of Ghosts
  13. Doomsday

Even if we eliminate “Fear Her”, and the “Idiot’s Lantern”, right off the top, there are still significantly more peril, and danger in Season 2…  More than half the episodes in Season 2 probably had children running for the back of their couches.  (As any good Doctor Who series should….)

Doctor Who has always been a children’s show, but the new series is aimed for an older base audience.  That isn’t better or worse then the original series, it just is.  By my guess, the original series was probably aimed for a target audience in the 8-12 range, but was family friendly (Do I dare say Peri?).  The new series is probably aimed more for the 12-15 crowd, but is just as family friendly.

As the TV market has changed, Doctor Who has changed.  Take a look at the number of Teen Angst series running on TV these days, we should be glad that The Doctor didn’t regenerate into a Teenage Emo Goth…  After all, hasn’t Smallville been running for almost 10 or 11 years now?  What about The Vampire Diaries, One Tree Hill, Supernatural, Gossip Girl, and all of the other popular shows that are on lately?  How could they have adversely affected Doctor Who.

The only complaints that I have, are:

  1. There has been too much reliance on the Daleks, and Cybermen in the new series.  They need a rest, and Steven Moffat has stated that in Season 6 there are no plans for the Daleks to appear…  Hopefully, this will give the writers a chance to use the Daleks as they deserve.
  2. Too many of the Doctor’s companions have had crushes on him.  What happen to the Father / Son, or Father / Daughter, or Mentor / Trainee relationships of the Old series?  Out of 6 companions only Donna Noble and Amy Pond have broken out of this, “I pine for the Doctor mold”.
  3. I want to see more of the TARDIS.  Season 5 has shown us more, and given us a larger more impressive control room…  But let’s see more of the interior…

While these are issues I have, neither have really harmed the series in my eyes too badly.  I am looking forward to the future of modern Doctor who, and hope that even more elements from Classic Who return as Steven Moffat leads on.

Keanu Reeves Discusses Live-Action Cowboy Bebop

Actor Keanu Reeves (The Matrix, Animatrix, Johnny Mnemonic) discussed the current status of the proposed live-action Cowboy Bebop film project with the Collider movie news website in a Monday interview. Reeves premiered his new film Henry’s Crime at the Toronto International Film Festival on Tuesday.

When Collider asked for an update on the Cowboy Bebop project, Reeves responded:

I haven’t heard anything back. They turned in the script and it was very expensive. I don’t know if they’re going to…it would cost, like, half a billion dollars to make that script. So, I don’t know where it’s at right now.
Reeves had told MTV News last September that writer Peter Craig was rewriting the script. He added at the time that the producers were ‘just trying to pull it back’ in scope”

(See the Rest of the Story at Keanu Reeves Discusses Live-Action Cowboy Bebop – Anime News Network.)