WalkPunk Mac OS

Walkpunk mac os x

Description: This technical article shows how to enable or disable Wake on LAN access in Mac OS X. Select System Preferences from the dock. Click and open Energy Saver. Check Wake for network access to enable Wake on LAN or uncheck it to disable Wake on LAN.

WalkPunk Mac OS

Walkpunk Mac Os Catalina

It’s one thing to recommend safe computing habits. It’s entirely another to implement those recommendations. We asked Senior Editor Rob Griffiths to spend a couple of days implementing some of the suggestions in our Lock It Up series.

  1. Turn on your Mac Device and off the main interface screen, click on the Apple logo on the upper left corner of the screen. Select the “System preferences” option.
  2. INet will show you the MAC address (hardware address of the network card) if the computer is ON. So make sure you turn on the computer that you want to use Wake On Lan with -because you will need its MAC address. Another way to get the MAC address of a computer on your lan (if the computer is OFF) is getting it from your router - usually.
  3. A quick look at the exterior of the new Apple MacBook 2010. We take a walkaround to show the ports, keyboard, trackpad, glossy lid and bottom panel of Apple'.
  4. Enabling WOL on OS X To enable WOL, do the following: For OSX it can be enabled from System Preferences - Energy Saver by turning on Wake for network access. Restart the computer and boot into Recovery mode by holding CMD+R on boot until the Apple logo appears.

Physical security

The toughest recommendation for many of us to follow is to not use an admin account every day.

The first problem I ran into when I tried to implement it was that my administrator account owned some folders on the nonadministrator account because I didn’t set up a nonadmin account on my Mac from day one. Switching the folders over to my new non-admin account took a fair bit of time.

As a nonadmin user, I quickly grew accustomed to entering my password in the Authentication dialog box. It showed up whenever I tried to install an application, use Disk Utility to repair permissions, or work with certain System Preferences panes.

The other big hassle with using nonadministrator accounts is Terminal. I’m used to typing

at the command line before running a command with root privileges—for example, to copy anything out of a system-owned directory. Nonadmin users can’t use . I had to use the command to log in to my admin account, run , and then log out of the admin account when I was done.

Not sharing user accounts isn’t a problem for me. Every user on every Mac in my house already has his or her own account.

Enabling password prompts is similarly simple enough—I’m surprised that Apple still ships systems with automatic login enabled—but they can be a pain. I walked away from my main Mac for 20 minutes and came back to find myself logged out. Time to enter a password. Similarly, I quickly grew annoyed by having to unlock System Preferences panes with a password every time I wanted to change something.

I’ve been using encrypted disk images for some time now, and they aren’t hard to live with. Sure, you must mount the disk image, which requires a password, before you can use the files on it. But it’s worth it.

As far as physical security goes, I figure that if someone really wanted my Mac Pro, they could easily break my desk to free a cable.

Passwords

I’d never bothered to secure my keychain. Having done so now, I feel much better.

To memorize strong passwords, I use the initials of the words in sentences. For example, “Mary’s brother Tom has a 4-year-old golden retriever that weighs 60 pounds” would yield the strong password “MbTha4yogrtw60p.” That password would be nearly impossible to guess, but the sentence is easy enough to remember.

Online

I tried running my browser without any stored passwords for a day or so—but that’s as much as I could handle. I log in to so many sites from so many machines that I really felt the impact of not having stored user names or passwords. So I went back to storing passwords in my now-secured keychain.

E-mail

Walkpunk Mac Os Update

Amazingly, I already do pretty much everything Joe suggests: I receive all my e-mail in plain text, I never use Web mail except as an absolute last resort, and my key e-mail accounts have SSL encryption. The only thing I don’t do is send encrypted messages. I probably send one or two a month that should be encrypted, but I’ve never done it. I might feel differently if my job involved sending confidential financial data via e-mail.

Walkpunk Mac Os X

[ Senior Editor Rob Griffiths writes the Mac OS X Hints Weblog and runs macosxhints.com. ]