Valve has launched a new stable version for its Steam for Linux client, bringing a lot of interesting new features. (June 4th 2013, Taipei, Taiwan)-MiTAC International Corp. (MiTAC), a leading ICT manufacturing company, is pleased to announce its new... | Sandboxie 4.02 is the latest edition of the powerful shareware sandbox, which allows you to run programs in an isolated environment... Install this update to resolve issues in Windows. For a complete listing of the issues that are included in this update, see the... |
A standards organization has created a boot environment for tablets and PCs that could potentially run a 64-bit version of Windows RT. In this video we will install VMware vSphere vCenter Server 5.1.0b using the Simple Install method on Windows Server 2003 R2 X64 SP2 | Big thank you to all who've sent in Imogen plugins, they're excellent, Keep em' coming folks! This tutorial we'll look at some of the... In this tute we'll look at coding a C++ algorithm to negate a 128bpp image. This will be a benchmark to beat for the ASM versions we'll... |
Valve has launched a new stable version for its Steam for Linux client, bringing a lot of interesting new features. The purpose of this video is to demonstrate a basic installation of Kali Linux from Offensive Security in a new Virtual Machine guest... | Today, I had to install the Java plugin for 64bit Firefox on CentOS 6.4. The procedure wasn’t too bad, but it wasn’t exactly... In this tute we'll get to coding some little ASM algorithms. First we have to look at how parameters will be passed from C++.
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Wednesday, 11 July 2012 19:34
Apple has now confirmed via its Mountain Lion upgrade page that previously published limitations on some 64-bit Macs will extend to the final release. This means that several otherwise 64-bit capable MacBook Pros, iMacs, and Mac Pros will indeed be restricted from upgrading to OS X 10.8 when it goes public later this month. And according to information found in the recently released golden master (GM), the limitation appears to be related to graphics, as we originally suspected.
When the first developer preview of Mountain Lion was seeded to developers earlier this year, the release notes listed hardware requirements showing that some early 64-bit Mac models were not compatible. (Lion is likewise 64-bit, and can run on any Core2 or newer 64-bit Intel processor.) As such, Mountain Lion developer previews would not run on the earliest Mac Pros, MacBook Pros, iMacs, and other hardware.

