Posted on 08/30/2009 11:54:58 AM PDT by Feline_AIDS
Mac Freepers I need your help!
Every time I load hotair.com, Safari loads 3/4 of the way, then crashes.
These are the plug-ins I have now:
-MoveNetworks Quantum Media Player -iPhotoPhotocast -Java Plug-in for Cocoa -Shockwave for Director -QuickTime Plug-in 7.6 -PhotoCenterPlugin1.1.2.2 -Quartz Composer Plug-In -Flip4Mac Windows Media Plugin 2.2.1 -Flip4Mac Windows Media Web Plugin 2.2.1 -Verified Download Plugin -Shockwave Flash -Microsoft Office Live Plug-in -QuickTime Plug-In 7.6 -DivX Web Player
I already tried "resetting" Safari in the menu.
Please help! Safari works so well, but I always forget and go to hotair and then it crashes all my windows. Firefox works fine, but I'm just not crazy about it.
Thanks!
It sounds like you might be hanging on loading one of the ads. I carefully watched the load on my iMac and the content, format, etc., are all loaded before the 3/4 point. Everything after that is ad content. They do have a couple of frenetic flash animations going that start loading about then.
What version of Safari?
Works fine here. Using Safari 4.0.3, which was probably installed when I installed Snow Leopard Friday. (Which rocks, btw.) If you haven’t run Software Update recently, maybe you should.
Gotta say, I generally use Firefox. Prefer its user interface, is all.
My plug-ins:
Google Earth Plug-in
Shockwave Flash 10.0 r23
Java Switchable Plug-in (Cocoa) from file
Silverlight Plug-In 3.0.40624.0
Web Kit Google Gadget Plug-In
QuickTime Plug-in 7.6.3
Flip4Mac Windows Media Web Plugin 2.2.2
Quartz Composer Plug-In
LogMeIn Plugin 1.0.0.298
Flip4Mac Windows Media Plugin 2.2.2
Current version of 10.5 is 10.5.8 - you need to update. I suspect you probably need to upgrade to the latest version of Safari as well.
FireFox does have some really ugly problems with JavaScript these days; the TreeMonkey Java engine in FireFox grenades on a regular basis.
You might give a look in the Console.app to see if an error log has been written out. Console.app is located in in the Applications/Utilities folder.
Following a crash, look at messages in the “All messages” section of LOG DATABASE QUERIES. You might also check the LOG FILES/Library/Logs/CrashReporter and LOG FILES/Library/Logs/HangReporter directories using Console.app for any Safari related log messages.
Once you find a suspect message, googling the error message will often lead you to sites providing hints what the problem may be.
I went on line with my PC one time with out a firewall and lasted for 6 minutes before fatal infection. Ome reason I use a MAC.
barbra ann
I have Safari and Firefox and it is true that sometimes one works better than another for a particular site. Just have them both in your dock and use when appropriate.
Safari opens it just fine for me, I did an upgrade with Snow, no problems and I have 500 gig of apps on a system that hasn’t had a clean install since OS X 10.2
I don’t know Safari but most browsers utilize a cache for html and images. I have had crap in the cache for IE and even Firefox that would cause some pages to crash.
Before you do a lot of reinstalls I would try clearing the cache.
Thanks all!
I upgraded to Safari 4 and it works great! I love those apple computer liberals and their products.
FA
Make sure you run Font Book and resolve duplicate fonts....
Hoss
I’m glad it worked out for ya. Ain’t computers fun?!
Works fine in 10.5.8 (SL arrives tomorrow whoohoo!!!) with Safari 4.0.3 (5531.9). Clicked on many links at Hot Air had no problems.
Some machine specs, as well as a confirmation of OS and Safari versions would be helpful.
Here is what I am on:
PowerMacintosh Dual 1.8Ghz G5
5GB Ram
OS X 10.5.8 (all the latest updates done)
Safari Version 4.0.3 (5531.9)
Hotair.com seems to load ok for me, though it does eventually get “Canceled opening the page” down at the bottom of the window (can’t figure out why).
But no crash.
I think the poster meant to create a new account on your computer and log in via that new account - and try hotair.com in Safari. That would pretty cleanly demonstrate if the problem is a preference or user file causing the crash.
Adobe rubberstamps (only) CS4 for Snow Leopard
CS3? It's not 'not supported' [But, according to all reports, CS3 runs fine under Snow Leopard Swordmaker]
By Rik Myslewski in San FranciscoPosted in Software & Security, 26th August 2009 22:41 GMT Adobe has announced that its Creative Suite 4 (CS4) has been tested and cleared for use on Apple's new Snow Leopard operating system. But it has no plans to test the compatibility of earlier versions.
If you own CS3 or earlier, according to an Adobe FAQ (PDF), you're on your own. "Older versions of Adobe creative software were not included in our testing efforts," the company says. "You may therefore experience a variety of installation, stability, and reliability issues for which there is no resolution."
But Adobe Photoshop's principal product manager Jack Nack is working hard to assure users that this isn't a big deal. "No one said anything about CS3 being 'not supported' on Snow Leopard. The plan, however, is not to take resources away from other efforts (e.g. porting Photoshop to Cocoa) in order to modify 2.5-year-old software in response to changes Apple makes in the OS foundation."
In response to one of the voluminous comments to his blog posting, Nack added: "I'd frankly be shocked if people at Adobe & Apple really hadn't tested CS3 on 10.6. I *think* it's just some corporate conservatism at work here, and Adobe doesn't want to over-promise anything."
Our testing showed that Adobe Photoshop CS - a six-year-old version - ran with no problems on Apple's latest big cat. But maybe we were just lucky, and some obscure action such as moving the Stroke Length slider in Filters > Brush Strokes > Crosshatch could have caused it to blow up in our face.
To Jack Nack, software testing is, as he puts it, a "zero-sum game" of managing finite resources: "There are only so many hours in the day. Time spent testing/changing an older version to work around changes in a future OS is time not spent addressing customer requests, taking advantage of that OS's new features, etc."
Some of those scarce hours-in-a-day are now being used to develop CS5 - which, as we reported earlier this month, may cause another torrent of comments on Nack's blog when it appears, seeing as how it - like Snow Leopard - will run only on Intel-based Macs
In other Adobe-app news, CNNMoney.com reports that Adobe Photoshop Elements is incompatible with Snow Leopard. That report, however, doesn't specify which version of Elements was tested, and the source of that info, snowleopard.wikidot.com was "unavailable due to emergency maintenance" as of 2:00pm Pacific Daylight Time.
We could take some cheap shot about the Wikidot site being written in Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 and running on Snow Leopard Server, but The Reg has more class than that. ®
Adobe PhotoShopCS version 8.0 works fine, using Rosetta.
PCWorld reports: "While Microsoft Office 2008 runs fine, and Microsoft Office 2004 works under Rosetta, there is no report yet on the older Microsoft Office:X." I can attest that Microsoft Word and Excel from Microsoft Office for Mac:X works perfectly using Rosetta. I did not bother upgrading my Office to anything later because that version did everything I needed.
In addition, from MacRumors:/
NOTE: Older non-UNIVERSAL apps require the installation of Rosetta, which is an optional component on the installation of Snow Leopard. Many complaints were heard from people who had neglected to mark the checkbox that they wanted to install Rosetta on the Snow Leopard installation. Once they corrected that oversight, the problems went away.Microsoft Declares Office 2008 Ready for Snow Leopard, Most 'Spaces' Issues Fixed
Microsoft Macintosh Business Unit senior product manager Mike Tedesco announces that Office 2008 has been tested with Mac OS X Snow Leopard and declared ready for use. Importantly, Tedesco also notes that most of the issues related to Office 2008's interaction with Apple's "Spaces" feature have been fixed in Snow Leopard through the combined efforts of Apple and Microsoft.
Q. Are there any differences with Office 2008 for Mac running on Snow Leopard vs. Leopard?
A. Office 2008 for Mac is Snow Leopard tested and ready! Best of all, with the launch of Snow Leopard, the bulk of the Word 2008 Spaces issues have been fixed after our collaborative efforts to address the problem.
Also, I think that most of the reports of problems were the results of the unofficial Wiki list that was being collected of what worked and what didn't work under Snow Leopard. For a couple of days before release, both Photoshop CS4 and Microsoft Office were listed in the unknown and untested categories. They are no longer. The note on Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac was that ONE user had reported problems with slow opening and "lagging" there-after.
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