Hell In A Hand Basket Mac OS
Hell In A Hand Basket Mac OS
Apr 12, 2010 My Mac was getting hot (literaly) and I decided to check the Activity Monitor to find out what is going on. It was in the plain sight. Firefox as using over 100% of CPU time. No, that is not a FireFox problem, I guess just Mac OS developers need to go back to school to learn how to allocate and calculate resources.
- The phrase go to hell in a handbasket is an American phrase which came into general use during the American Civil War, though its popularity has spread into other countries. The origin of the term go to hell in a handbasket is unknown, the assumption is that the word handbasket is a good source of alliteration.
- To Hell in a Handbasket - Kindle edition by Rose, Willow. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading To Hell in a Handbasket.
My news feed today was full of news about Apple’s WWDC. And it is no surprise. However, I am getting more and more concerned about Apple’s leadership. Reading Bloomberg, I felt that Apple is focused on Google rather than making existing and new customers happy. Users and developers are just a tool to beat Google. But it should have been clear for Apple executives that their customers fill Apple’s pockets for good products, not Google. I guess, Apple clearly belongs to the group of companies that work to try to charge more. I thought this is my opinion that might be wrong.
But later I read another article on Barron’s that appeared to be more disturbing to me. According to Barron’s, Tim Cook dropped this phrase of the day in front of a crowd of loyal Apple developers:
Only Apple could make such amazing hardware, software and services.
I guess, in Apple’s opinion, no one in the audience at WWDC (those who grow Apple’s ecosystem) is capable of making software better than Apple does. Unless they are employed by Apple. Let consumers decide what is amazing and what is not. Okay, this is about the insult. The injury (kind of)? Used MacBooks flooded the market. Yesterday’s treasure is today’s trash. I wonder how much an average Apple customer spends to get comparable functionality available on other platforms.
All above is my opinion as a user of Apple products.
I started having some Apple Keychain issues after upgrading to Mac OS X El Capitan. At random, I would be asked to sign back into accounts that I am logged into through Internet Accounts in System Preferences.
I thought it a minor issue but it became unavoidable though once El Capitan told me it couldn’t find my login Apple Keychain after logging in: Gunslugs (itch) mac os.
Define Hell In A Handbasket
Something related to the ‘login’ Apple Keychain happened during the Mac OS X El Capitan upgrade process I’m assuming and after a reboot this morning everything went to hell in a hand basket it would seem.
I did some searching and found that deleting all the files from ~/Library/Keychains was a workaround (Apple Keychain First Aid was unable to help). Warp tales mac os. I moved them out of the way (moved to Desktop), rebooted, and still had the issue.
I got on the horn with AppleCare. Their resolution was essentially the same. But, they had me completely delete everything in ~/Library/Keychains as Apple Keychain apparently has a way to follow moved keychains (slightly creepy).
After some reboots I’m not getting these annoying “re-sign in” messages. But, I did have to re-sign in to literally everything that was ever signed-in to by me on this Macbook Pro. I should also point out that this seemed to fix issues I was having with the Junos Pulse client not being able to sign in to VPN accounts.
Hell In A Handbasket Meme
EDIT (10/5/2015 at 1340 ET): The resolution to my Junos Pulse issue was short lived. Upon trying to re-connect to a Junos Pulse VPN it literally forces the ‘login’ keychain to become unusable. Upon reboot everything seems to be working okay. More to follow… Hopefully.
Hell In A Hand Basket Mac Os 11
EDIT (10/7/2015): Mac OS X El Capitan and Junos Pulse explains what’s going on.
Hell In A Hand Basket Mac OS