- #Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera mac os#
- #Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera software#
- #Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera code#
- #Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera windows#
His most interesting points, perhaps, have to do not with what it is like to be a Macintosh user in a foreign land - I think everyone on Slashdot can understand these things, regardless of whatever non-Microsoft platform of choice they use - but what it is like to be a Macintosh user in relation to Apple itself. He tends to belabor his point on occasion (OK, we get it, CompUSA's Apple store-in-a-store is all the way in the back, we don't need you to spend two pages describing just how far back it is), but if taken in the good humor intended, it's a satisfying journey nevertheless.
#Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera software#
That said, Kelby is dead-on about many things, like how computer store personnel are mostly clueless (not that this is specific to Macintosh products, but it is more pronounced in that particular arena than in most) how most anti-Macintosh arguments by PC users either don't make sense any more or never made sense to begin with how Apple has been the primary innovator of PC hardware and OS software how Apple seems to succeed sometimes in spite of its own management.
#Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera mac os#
I happily continue to use Mac OS nevertheless. I selected the "Mac" and "DOS" answers evenly, which didn't do well for my overall score.
![imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera](https://static.macupdate.com/screenshots/315785/m/imovie-screenshot.png)
But clearly, any sane person would choose the latter response. On one end of the scale is the Macintosh user ("Average, I'm not a bad driver"), followed by borderline between Mac and PC user ("I'm an excellent driver, very cautious and alert") to obvious PC user ("I obey all posted traffic signs and don't exceed the speed limit"), to "militant" PC/DOS user ("I wish all those idiots would just get off the road!"). This mischaracterization of some Mac users is also evident in his "definitive platform test." The questions, asking for things like a description of your own driving skills, are intended to tell you which platform you should use. After all, geeks are allowed to like ease of use and a consistent and usable GUI, too. So when he belittles those "PC users" who like to build their own computers, and I see the Linux box under my desk that I've recently been fiddling with, I just take it with a grain of salt. A big, preemptively multitasking, geek.īut Kelly takes the perspective that Macintosh is not a computer for geeks, but for creative people who can't be bothered with geek-like things. I am a Macintosh devotee, and have been for more than 15 years, but I am a geek.
#Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera code#
I am inserting a 700MB database dump into MySQL, scp'ing some MP3s, restarting some daemons, copying some source code for later porting, and monitoring disk space.
#Imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera windows#
As I write this, I have four terminal windows running in NiftyTelnet, connecting me to Linux boxes at work and at home. And I proudly use Linux (and, to a lesser extent, other forms of Unix, not even including Mac OS X) daily. This should have tipped me off as to some troubles ahead, as I live as a Mac user in a predominantly Linux-dominated world. The Naked Truth is a book about what it means to be a Macintosh user, in a world dominated by Windows. I am a generally jovial character, so this is not the finest endorsement available, but it is typical of the experience the rest of the book offered me.įunny, irreverent, but kinda bugged me in spots
![imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera imovie 10.1.4 not responding to camera](https://cdn.osxdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/screen-recording-mac-os-x-options.jpg)
The Naked Truth, I was literally laughing out loud. From the opening pages of Scott Kelby's Macintosh.