Inkjet9 and cupsd runaway processes. Today my computer was running hot all day, fans buzzing wildly.
Honestly I didn’t think too much of it since I was working with the iPhone simulator and just assumed that that was the cause. After taking some time off to play with the dog, I came back to it still buzzing loudly. I checked my iStat Menu to see what processes were taking up the most resources and saw ‘cupsd’. Google told me it was related to my printer. But I couldn’t kill the process for the life of me. In activity monitor I saw another process Inkjet9 that was taking up even more resources. Uh oh … I’ve been hacked. What I did find with my ps -A was a few print jobs that I had sent off this morning to my wireless HP printer. It is a good thing my aging laptop didn’t fry after running hot for some 8 hours.
Anyway. Hope this helps! Mail iCloud - Réception (1777 messages) Omnis Studio and SQL (Part 2 of 5) What to Do if Your Mac Can’t Run Mountain Lion. Apple + How To + Recommended + Security & Privacy + Security News NOTE: A version of this article is now available for Mavericks.
Please refer to this article instead: What to Do if Your Mac Can’t Run OS X Mavericks Last week Apple released a new version of its Mac operating system, OS X Mountain Lion (version 10.8). As usual with major new Mac OS X updates, support for some machines has been dropped. Some older Macs cannot be upgraded to Lion, meaning they’ll be stuck with Snow Leopard (version 10.6.8) or older. For the past several major versions of Mac OS X, Apple has only released patches for OS vulnerabilities in the current and one previous version of the operating system. In other words, don’t expect to get a corresponding Security Update for Snow Leopard the next time Apple patches vulnerabilities in Mountain Lion and Lion. Apple dropping Snow Leopard support was inevitable. Following are lists of Macs that can run a supported version of OS X.
Mountain Lion Capable Macs. À propos de la mémoire NVRAM et PRAM. Langues Consultez cet article pour obtenir des informations sur la mémoire PRAM ou NVRAM de votre Mac et savoir quand, et de quelle manière, il est nécessaire de la réinitialiser.
Votre Mac stocke certains réglages dans une zone de mémoire spéciale, même lorsqu’il est éteint. Sur les Mac à processeur Intel, ces réglages sont stockés dans la mémoire NVRAM ; sur les Mac à processeur PowerPC, ils sont enregistrés dans la mémoire PRAM. Les éléments suivants sont notamment stockés dans la mémoire NVRAM et PRAM : Volume des haut-parleurs Résolution de l’écran Sélection du disque de démarrage Dernières informations relatives à une panique du noyau, le cas échéant Si vous rencontrez des problèmes liés à ces fonctions, il peut être nécessaire de réinitialiser la mémoire NVRAM ou PRAM.
Remarque : OS X ne stocke pas les réglages réseau dans la mémoire NVRAM/PRAM. Éteignez votre Mac. Réinitialisation de la mémoire NVRAM à partir d’Open Firmware Dernière modification : 18 sept. 2012 Oui Non.