Our Collection of Tech Tip Tips

Tech Tip: Your Adobe CS4 Licensing Stopped Working?

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We’ve seen sporadic cases of Photoshop, InDesign, or Acrobat that stop working at various design firms, with the dialog box show above.

“Licensing for the product has stopped working. This product has encountered a problem which requires that you start your computer before it can be launched.”

If this happens to your, make note of the error code, and take a look at this handy, exhaustive entry in Adobe’s Knowledge Base:

Adobe: “Licensing for this product has stopped working”

In that article (far too lengthy to summarize), Adobe helpfully explains nine different ways your legally purchased and properly installed Creative Suite products might have licensing failures, and the variety of ways those issues can be addressed.

Source: CreativeTechs technician, Jasson Lewellen, has discovered and solved many of these issues firsthand at various studios around Seattle. This issue is also covered this week in our sister technical blog, Make Mac Work: CS4 Licensing Stops Working

Popularity: 2% [?]

Tech Tip: Preview iPhone Websites in Safari

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Last year we published a tip showing how web designers could test their website designs on Apple’s iPhone Simulator. Here is another, simpler, tip along those lines.

Many companies today are creating special versions of their website that automatically display for iPhone visitors. Some examples include Amazon, Google, Bank of America, and even our CreativeTechs Tips blog.

Turn on Safari’s Developer Menu option and you can easily tell Safari to impersonate an iPhone (or other browser types) when visiting different webpages. It isn’t the same as a full iPhone simulator, but this can be pretty useful for web designers testing custom site designs.

Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 2% [?]

Tech Tip: Mactracker keeps info on every Mac made.

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MacTracker-Icon.pngMactracker is a free utility that maintains detailed information on every Apple Macintosh computer ever made. Including items such as processor speed, memory, optical drives, graphic cards, supported Mac OS versions, and expansion options. The collection also includes information on Apple mice, keyboards, displays, printers, scanners, digital cameras, iPod, Apple TV, iPhone, Wi-Fi Cards/Base Stations, Newton, and Mac OS versions.

For long-time Mac users, browsing through the history of Mac models can be a fun trip down memory lane. On a practical level, this information can be useful when manually compiling an updated inventory of your studio’s computers. Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 1% [?]

CreativeTechs: Feedback Wanted: Make Mac Work.

MacMakeWork.pngThis is a bit off-topic from our tips format. I’d like to put out a request to the more technical readers in our audience. Our lead enterprise engineer, Jordan Bojar, has been asked to pull together a book proposal based on his Make Mac Work blog.

If you have never visited, Make Mac Work is our sister blog covering IT issues facing Macs in Enterprise environments. If that sounds interesting, you can browse some of the essential articles in the blog archives:

» Portable Home Directories
» Master Open Directory
» Configure And Deploy NetInstall
» Manage Account Preferences
» Control Software Update
» Bind to Active Directory

If you are an IT professional who is responsible for supporting Macs in larger corporate networks, I’d recommend you bookmark this blog. And we’d appreciate any feedback or suggestions you might be willing share to help Jordan flesh out his book proposal.

Thanks.

Popularity: 1% [?]

Tech Tip: Copy Music from your iPod to your Computer.

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“How do I copy music from my iPod back to my computer?”

This is one of those common questions we get all the time. Typically a drive fails and the iTunes music library wasn’t properly backed up. Or maybe someone wants an easy way to copy music from a friend’s iPod. This week we’ll take a quick look at a number of tools you can use to move music and videos from your iPod back onto your computer:

» iPodRip ($20)
» TuneAid ($15)
» Backstage ($10)
» YamiPod (Free)

In researching this tip, I found dozens of utilities that do basically the same thing. This is by no means a comprehensive list. But if you need to get your music back onto your Mac or PC, read the full tip for mini-reviews of several utilities that do the trick.

Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 2% [?]

Tech Tip: AreMySitesUp.com

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The URL says it all. Here is a free site that monitors up to 20 of your Web sites and notifies you if they go down:

http://aremysitesup.com/

I’ve looked at a dozen similar services over the years, and this one is as straightforward as it gets. You can also upgrade to a paid account at $75/year that checks your sites more frequently, as well as adding additional options to test for specific words or phrases on your site.

Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 1% [?]

Tech Tip: Access Files from other Time Machine Backups.

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One of the best features Apple incorporated into Mac OS X Leopard is their built-in Time Machine backup system. For small studios, or individual designers, Time Machine is one of the best automated backups available.

You can click on the small backup-clock icon in your menu bar to access many Time Machine features: Check the date of your last backup, force an immediate backup, or jump back to search through the recent backups of your computer.

But what if you want to look through the files from another computer? By default, Time Machine’s restore interface only shows you files from your computer. But hold down the Option key and a menu option named “Browse Other Time Machine Disks” will appear in that menu.
Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 2% [?]

Font Management: Understanding Mac OS X Font Folders.

This two-minute video clip comes from this CreativeTechs’ January 8, 2009 workshop Font Management for Designers in Mac OS X.

A lot of designers feel powerless when it comes to managing their fonts inMac OS X because they see all these font folders spread throughout their computer. Since they don’t understand the folder structure, and there are so many fonts in so many different places most designers feel nervous about removing fonts. Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 1% [?]

Font Management: Font Management 2009 Best Practices.

This two-minute video clip comes from this week’s CreativeTechs’ January 8, 2009 workshop: Font Management for Designers in Mac OS X.

This short video lays out the a description of the best practices for font management in 2009. Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 2% [?]

Font Management: The Problem with Long Font Menus.

This two-minute video clip comes from this week’s CreativeTechs’ January 8, 2009 workshop: Font Management for Designers in Mac OS X.

Why do designers need to manage fonts anyway? Here is a nice visual example. This video shows the default font menu from InDesign before we’ve done any font management at all. A lot of designers have forgotten that they can have a short font menu. You should be in control of that choice, you shouldn’t be having a bunch of fonts in your menus just because they happen to be pre-installed by a bunch of applications. Read the Full Tip »

Popularity: 1% [?]