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Downloads - tonymacx86.com. The Always Up-to-Date Guide to Building a Hackintosh (OS X 10.9.2) Japanese for Your Mac: Typing in Japanese. This is a short guide to entering Japanese characters on a Mac. You can use these instructions with any application that supports Japanese: a text editor, email program, web browser, etc. The instructions and screen shots are based on Mac OS 10.7 (Lion), but should apply for the most part to earlier and later versions.

Before you Start Before you start, you will need to follow the instructions on the first page of this site, to enable the Japanese input system (called Kotoeri) on your Mac. In addition, if you are learning Japanese, things may be less confusing if you open Kotoeri preferences and uncheck the "Show predicted candidates" option. (To get to Kotoeri preferences, select Hiragana input from the input menu in the upper right of the menu bar; then click on the menu again and select "Kotoeri preferences" near the bottom. Entering Japanese Text Once Japanese input is enabled on your system, you can enter Japanese by typing the pronunciations on your English keyboard. Tricky Kana. How To Create Your Own Expandable Memory For Your iPhone, iPad, Or iPod Touch. Unfortunately, there seems to be no way to expand the memory on these devices or add an external hard drive as you can with your computer.

However, as an owner of all three iOS devices, I’ve always purchased the bottom line of each model. I currently use an 8GB iPhone 3G and a 16GB Wi-Fi iPad, and I never long for a larger memory drive. The reason why? Simply put, cloud computing. The best way to expand the memory on your iOS device, almost like adding an external drive to your computer, is to take advantage of web-based storage services and applications that of course only require a Wi-Fi or 3G connection to access your data.

The following are some suggestions for apps and services you can use with your iOS device to expand its memory, so to speak. You can get the same information after connecting your device to your iTunes application. ZumoCast & Zumo Drive Songs, movies, and photos probably take up most of the space on Apple”˜s hand-held devices. Dropbox & Evernote Google & Picasa Album. Why You Cant Downgrade iOS 6.1.3 To 6.1.2, 6.x Using Cydia's SHSH / APTicket.

Advertisements Cydia creator Jay Freeman, better known as Saurik, is well known for his long, insightful speeches on numerous topics relating to the jailbreak scene, and today, has taken to his official blog to give users a better insight into the limitations of SHSH blobs and APTickets. Backing up these little clusters of information offers significant downgrade potential to iPhone, iPad and iPod touch users, but what has recently become apparent to Saurik, is that they’re essentially useless to some of the more recent devices. As well as explaining and clarifying a few matters relating to APTickets and SHSH blobs, he also tries to convey, in layman’s terms, why we cannot downgrade to 6.1.2-6.0 from 6.1.3 or later using Cydia’s SHSH blobs and APTickets on older A4 devices. He describes, in great length, the purpose of Apple’s TSS servers, which are designed not just to ensure we can only upgrade, but that only the very latest, signed software can be installed.

IOS and jailbreak

OS X Mavericks Developer Preview 2 released › Tips and tricks in Mavericks. Development. Special. Icons, wallpaper. Reviews, blogs, etc. Modifications. Information. Tutorials. Information. IOS apps. Apps. Audio and video. Downloads.