Set Password Activation Time in Snow Leopard
In Snow Leopard, you can now set an amount of time after your Mac goes to sleep or engages the screen saver before it requires a password to log back on. In Leopard, the option was simply to require the password or not. Choose among several increments, between 5 seconds and 4 hours, from System Preferences > Security.
Submitted by
Doug McLean
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In Memoriam: Bruce Fraser, 1954-2006
We received the sad news that author and Mac expert Bruce Fraser passed away on Saturday after battling lung cancer. Bruce was one of those few people who can be honestly described as being the world's top expert in his field. In this case, that field was color management.
If you've not done much work with publishing or image manipulation, it might seem trivial to make the image on your screen output on paper - that's what computers do, right? Well, the steps required to accurately reproduce colors are numerous, complex, and bordering on mystical. Bruce knew it all. He wrote many books and articles on the topic, including several revisions of "Real World Photoshop," "Real World Camera Raw with Adobe Photoshop," "Real World Color Management," and "Real World Image Sharpening."
I worked with Bruce briefly in 1996 on "Real World Photoshop 3," which he co-authored with David Blatner. I was the newly hired managing editor for Open House Books, a little book packaging company run by Mac author and publishing guru Steve Roth.
I was still getting my feet wet in the book publishing process, so I didn't end up interacting directly with Bruce much, but one anecdote from that time sticks out. During an intense, sleep-deprived period of time working on the book, Bruce was making coffee at 4:00 AM and wondered why one of his faucets was labeled Cyan.
That's the kind of subtle, dry humor that characterized Bruce. The digital world and the real world are both a little less colorful now.
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