MacMiniColo.net, the folks who run a co-location service for over 500 Mac minis, has posted a hands-on review and setup walkthrough of the new Mac mini configured with Mac OS X Server. Also included is a now-standard unboxing and teardown of said mini, confirming what we already know: the optical drive has been replaced with a second 500GB hard drive, Apple uses screws in its construction practice (say it ain’t so!), and the mini has an awful lot of technology crammed into a very itsy bitsy box.
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Despite its frequent use in the consumer market as a souped-up AppleTV, the mini is a surprisingly versatile general-purpose server, limited before now only by its single internal drive bay. Until recently, Mac OS X Server itself cost $999 for the unlimited-user version; that same price now gets you both the operating system and a mini to run it. The MacMiniColo team also notes that though the new minis (both server and standard) ship with 4GB of RAM standard, their firmware supports up to a hefty 8GB of memory.
- Installing Mu for Windows or Mac OS X Installing Mu for Linux Using Mu Mu Packages Creating and Editing Code Creating Code Editing Code Your code changes are run as soon as the file is done saving. Use an editor that writes out the file completely when you save it. Eject or Sync the Drive After Writing.
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The ItsyBitsy M4 Express has BAT G USB on the top left, right next to the micro USB port. These pins are: BAT - battery input for an alternative power source to USB, the voltage can only be from 3.5V to 6VDC; GND - Power/data ground; USB - This is the same pin as the MicroUSB connector's 5V USB power pin. This should be used as an output to get 5V power from the USB port.
I’m not endorsing MacMiniColo’s services (I have no experience with the company), but if you’re curious about either the server software or the new, cheap hardware configuration, check out the walkthrough. (And note Apple’s upcoming seven city tour of seminars about 10.6 Server, in case you’re interested.)
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How to load a PDF file in a webpage is a rather old and well-debated topic, as this StackOverflow question proves. So far, there are only a couple solutions popularized (I will only summarize them quickly because this post is not about them)
Using a third party service
The perfect dream boy mac os. Either a javascript library, like PDF.JS, developed by Mozilla, or using Google's PDF viewer. In a way, it's a simple solution and pretty much cross-browser but it's not so great because you have to depend on a 3rd party service.
Using the object tag
A straight forward approach, using only plain HTML, something also customizable via PDF options added to the PDF's source, you can find more info about this here.
Using the embeded tag
Another simple approach, pretty much like the object method. This one supports Adobe's pdf parameters as well.
So, you could say you have these 3 main methods. They are pretty great and could fill the needs of almost everyone. However, they didn't do the trick for me.
The following method works only for Safari, on either the Mac OS, or the iOS. The Mac part is so-and-so, since its market share is tiny, but its beauty lies with iOS. What is this method? It is..
Paper drumpf mac os. Using a PDF file as an img object's source
There is a catch here though. This is a rather particular case and works only for one purpose: clarity.
We had to zoom some images with text using a cross-browser/device approach. The standard approach that used CSS3's transform: scale worked pretty good on desktops, for every major browser that supported it. On the iPad and particularly the iPhone, not so much.
We had to zoom some images with text using a cross-browser/device approach. The standard approach that used CSS3's transform: scale worked pretty good on desktops, for every major browser that supported it. On the iPad and particularly the iPhone, not so much.
It's a know fact that the hardware accelerated CSS transformations treat the images or the HTML elements as textures and this makes the text blurry on scaling. And using larger and cleared images was not an option. You can use a larger image just to a point in a mobile app since you have to consider the traffic induced by larger images and the download time.
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By using single-paged PDF files as images, even though the image itself would still remain blurry after a certain scale, the text will remain clear and very, very readable!
And using it is just as simple as using a regular image:
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And the amazing part is that you can set the source of a javascript image object as a pdf just as well, and then draw it on a canvas, if this suits your purpose.
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Of course, there is a catch with the zooming too, but I will speak about this with another occasion, providing some samples too.
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Until then, if you need a quick solution to display a single-paged pdf file on an Apple device, well, it's just as easy as using an image!