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Ask TUAW: Picking boot OS, RF remotes with Front Row, Finder view options and more

We're still catching up on some of our Ask TUAW question backlog. So in this round we'll tackle questions on RF remotes and Front Row, Leopard compatibility problems, view options in the Finder, getting rid of duplicate files, using an EFI bootpicker, and more.

As always your suggestions are most welcome, and questions for next week should be left in the comments. And now to the questions!

jesse asks

I have this strange love of have a "themed" desktop, where i change the icons on my desktop to go along with the background picture apparently, the new cat doesn't like this... in leopard, is there any way to over-ride the new feature where .doc and .xcl files' icons are automatically changed to what the actual document looks like?

Yes, this tip at Macworld gives the answer. Just go to the Finder and in the View menu go to Show View Options (or just hit ⌘-J) and uncheck "Show icon preview." Once that done the icons will go back to their old versions.


John asks

I have my macbook located in the office and my HDTV located in the living room. I drilled a hole between the wall that separates the two and ran an HDMI and optical audio cable through in order to view my media on the HDTV using Frontrow. Trouble is, the standard apple remote won't pass through the wall, so I either have to run back and forth to change songs and movies, or use my clunky bluetooth keyboard in the living room. Are there any options to extend the range? If not, is there a bluetooth or wireless usb remote that will work with front row?

A lot of readers chimed in on this one with some good suggestions. Some mentioned the excellent Salling Clicker ($23.95) which will allow you to control your Mac with a Bluetooth phone or pda. Someone else mentioned Remote Buddy (€19.99) combined with a Bluetooth Wiimote (~$40). Perhaps the easiest solution, however, is the RF Remote for Front Row from Keyspan which will do pretty much exactly what you want for $39.


Callandor asks

How can I make cocoa apps follow my choice for default browser? I am using Camino with Leopard. Many apps such as Adium or Textedit have a right click menu feature "Search in Google" once you have highlighted a bit of text. No matter what I try, this always seems to start Safari, rather than Camino!

Well, of course, you can set Camino as your default browser in the preferences. However, I do not think you'll actually be able to do what you want because I believe that "Search with Google" feature is a Mac OS X service of Safari.app. That being the case, I do not think it's possible to get it to work with Camino.


Nate asks

I have iTunes set to "copy files to iTunes music folder when added", and that is great, but I have one problem with that. It does the same with my movies, and TV shows, making it a total waste of my hard drive. Is there any way I can set it so iTunes continues to make copies of the music, but not of my movies/shows?

There's an easy way to override the "copy files" setting temporarily. When you drag the folder from the Finder to iTunes just hold down the option (⌥) key. You'll see that the green plus disappears. It will be added to iTunes, but not copied. You can check and see this is the case by right-clicking the file in iTunes and selecting "Show in Finder."


Jacob asks

I was under the impression that HP and Apple were bff because of the whole information that Apple was allowing HP to update drivers through Apple's Software Update application. However, I cannot use the HP Photosmart Application on my Leopard MBP nor can I scan or do anything besides printing. And this is all on the HP C4280 that I got for free when I bought my MBP (but this was before leopard mind you). Anyways, is there any way that I can get back my scanning function in Leopard so that I can get back full functionality that I had back during Tiger?

Somewhat ironically the Apple Store page for the C4280 has your answer. You can find the Leopard compatible drivers and software on the HP website. I haven't tested it myself.


Pete asks

A few years back I had a hard drive fail, and lost all my data. So, shortly after that I was slightly paranoid about backing everything up, and so I manually copied files to several external drives. Overkill and time consuming to say the least. So what I'm looking for are your suggestions on tools that will help me purge all the duplicates of some of those backups (i know there are multiple copies of a LOT of files). I don't want to blow all of away, because some of it is backups of stuff for which I now no longer have access to. So any sort of cleanup help for several messy external drives would be great.

I have not used it myself, but you might try Tidy Up! ($30) from Hyperbolic Software. Obviously you need to be very careful when using a piece of software like this, so be sure to read the instructions carefully. You might also want to check out some of the reviews linked to on the site.

I've got 2 computers - G4 desktop and a G4 powerBook - that I'd like to back both up to same disk. I also have the new Airport with the USB option, and figured I could plug a USB drive into that. However, backing up the PB wirelessly seems slow (and using Apple's Backup software crashes). I can't use CCC over the network (that I could figure out), so I'm looking for other ideas. Any suggestions or ideas?

Trying to do it wirelessly is just going to be slow. So long as you can mount the disk, however, you should be able to use the excellent ChronoSync ($30) ($27.95) to do differential backups. You should make the initial backups with the drive mounted locally on each machine, and then do differential backups over the network so that you're only copying files that have changed.


Matt asks

I'd like my Mac Pro to ask me which OS to boot into every time I turn it on, rather than having to hold down the option key (or alt key on a windows keyboard). I'm using a KVM switch which emulates keyboard and these keys will not work during startup, I must plug in an additional keyboard via direct USB and hold down the option key to get the multi-boot options to display. I attempted to use a application called Bootpicker, but it didn't work. Don't know if it's compatible with Leopard, I'm using 10.5.1.


I've never used it myself but rEFIt is supposed to allow you to do what you want. It is "a boot menu and maintenance toolkit for EFI-based machines." According to the documentation, "if you have installed rEFIt on your Mac OS X volume, it will be loaded automatically when the Mac starts up." As always when messing with this sort of a thing a word of caution is in order. Make sure you understand what you're doing before you do it.


Kyle asks

Is it possible to use one of the new Dell (or other brand) monitors with built in mic and camera with a Mac Mini or preferably with a Macbook running with the lid closed and have the camera/mic be recognized properly?

According to this thread over at Apple Support Discussions the webcam seems to work fine, but there are apparently issues with the mic. Some people report that it works, others that it doesn't. Even when it does work apparently the audio quality is not very good. Of course you could always just use an external mic.