Lock screen mac os x. Using a serial console on Mac OS X As a network engineer, a fundamental task is putting a base configuration onto a device via a serial console. In Windows, there are several applications from Hyper Terminal to Putty. Solved: I have a MAc book air with OS x 10.7.5, I bought the adapter usb to serial port, but the drivers that come with it are for Windos, I am stuck. No idea what to do for using the mack for connect to the console port of my cisco labs routers. You'll need to get a usb-serial adapter and then connect with a console cable. Connecting to the Console Port with Mac OS X. To connect a Mac OS X system USB port to the console using the built-in OS X Terminal utility, follow these steps: Step 1. Use the Finder to go to Applications > Utilities > Terminal. Hi, Can anyone point me in the right direction for how to connect to my Catalyst Switch over console using OSX terminal. I've got my blue DB9 - RJ45, bought a USB - DB9, ensured the driver was installed and followed various peoples advice and have had no results what so ever. Serial is an app available on the Mac AppStore (and also from the developer’s website), that automates all of this for you. Go ahead and check out how much easier Serial is – Cisco Console Access with Serial. First, make sure you have downloaded the app from the Appstore, or grab the free trial from their website to start.

Original review: Dec. 26, 2018 I must agree with the majority of reviews on this forum. I have been a Quicken user since early 2000 when I bought my first house. I use it for Bill Pay and account register tracking only. The former versions made my household budgeting so much easier.

Now setting up bills takes TWICE the amount of time with a ton of bugs. Every time I try to schedule a bill in advance and select a future date - it reverts to the existing date which if not careful will drain your bank account.

(I still have my Quicken 2005 working on my Mac OS X - Version 10.6.8 (Snow Leopard?) I saw a thread of communications back in 2012/13 where you helped a lot of people find ways to get their 2005 data into new versions - something about a $15 purchase.

The recurring bill feature with the so called pdf bill view is useless and doesn't work the majority of the time. Original review: Nov. 30, 2018 I have been a Quicken user since 1986, (32 years now) and it was originally a pretty good, pretty well-supported product.

I have used various versions from that very early one up to and including QW2014. I will not upgrade further and will not pay them continuously for a failing product. First, I'm a retired 'techie' with 42 years of IT experience from beginning programmer to Database Administrator maintaining hundreds of databases on about 50 virtual server instances. Over the years I have dealt with numerous financial institutions, and have all my financial records, including years of investment account transactions housed in this product. As I have aged, my investment savings records have become far more important than cash and credit accounts records. Granted over the years I made a few mistakes with Quicken in the area of retaining data in my current file. This is because I have experienced performance problems as the file grew, to the point it would take ten seconds or more for the update of a row of data in the register of all accounts.

With my decades of experience in handling data, I know this has to be a structural problem. So the logical thing was to leave behind accounts I no longer used.

HOWEVER, I made the mistake of leaving behind some of my retirement savings and investment accounts. Now I would like to have my complete investment history in a single complete file. This involves nearly 100 thousand transactions housed in about 15 different accounts from over the years, including various employer's 401k plans. Intuit has apparently made some very poor design decisions in their 'secret' file formats, resulting in the lack of ability to export/import investment transactions between files. They blame this on their claim that investment accounts 'do not have a real transaction register'. All of my 32 years of Quicken data files have faithfully been upgraded and will all work with QW2014, so are 'version compatible'. However, they will no longer support the movement of my investment transactions between their own files.

Canon canoscan 9900f driver mac os x • You can accept the default location to save the files. Click Next, and then wait while the installer extracts the data to prepare for installation.

I have never used downloads from financial institutions, so that is not an issue. Now think about the situation. Quicken can visually present my investment transactions in a 'register' format. I can enter my investment transactions in that register.

If they can 'build' the register, and I can manually create the data, why can't they export/import the same data to a different file? They must have done something really, really stupid to create this problem and they should get it fixed. After having spent months of researching this situation, I've found no good method of fixing my data other than printing transactions lists from old files and manually re-keying my historical data into my current file. I know there are supposed to be ways you can 'hack' the investment transaction exports by editing the files that will supposedly allow this, but I shouldn't have to hack the vendor's own data to move it. With my 42 years of IT experience, I'm sure I could do this, but less technically inclined folks are going to be lost. What with their oldest, most reliable long-term users aging and their retirement savings becoming far more valuable that cash accounts, it would make sense to fix this shortcoming so they retain long time users and create new ones. If I were not at an advanced age, I would be looking for and inviting other software developers and data architects to get involved and we would create a competing program with proper design details that would fix these problems.