Open Icontainer For Mac

  1. Open Icontainer For Mac Os
  2. Open Container Format

I couldn’t find a decent pack of these so I thought I’d make one. Contains all icons from standard iOS app, sourced from the iPhone 4’s iOS 4.3.2 and in retina resolution, plus few extras from various places. Simply open open the iContainer in CandyBar and apply the icons.

Open Icontainer For Mac Os

Almost all icons are assigned to something, but you can change that if you want. Due to the way Adium overriders it’s dock icon, I’ve also included an Adium ‘theme’ which you’ll have to apply in order to keep the icon as the iOS messaging icon. This method is similar to one Mechdrew posted on his site. Leopard is booted off a USB stick or HDD, allowing vanilla Snow Leopard to be install to the AAO’s internal drive, and then patched to allow it to boot. This process is time consuming so you’ll probably want to try first. Stuff what you need: An Aspire One with 1GB of RAM (According to SL’s specs, it might let you off with 512mb, I don’t know).

An external drive = 8GB in size. IDeneb 1.4 on a DVD Snow Leopard (on a disc + USB DVD drive or a disc image on an external drive) What works and what doesn’t: Sleep & Hibernation – KP’s when trying to resume:-/ Audio – Requires a kext, headphones and speakers work but not internal or external mics. GMA 950 – Works out of the box at full resolution, issues with external monitors. WiFi – Works great after swapping the card for a DW1390 which is natively supported. Ethernet – Requires a fix. Trackpad – Works great, even supports two finger scrolling =D Webcam – Works out of the box. Back up everything on you AAO’s hard drive, it will be formatted during the install.

Step One: Install leopard to an external hard drive or USB stick. For this I used iDeneb 1.4.

You can connect a USB drive and USB DVD drive to your AAO and install it that way, but I just booted the DVD in a laptop and installed it from there. Just choose the iDeneb base package and the Aspire One 150 package, leave the rest. Step Two: Boot Leopard from the USB stick or USB hard drive by taping F12 burring the BIOS. If your drive doesn’t appear then reboot and try again. At the chameleon bootloader type without quotes “-x”. It will take a little while to boot, after that follow the setup process and you’ll be presented with the desktop.

It’s lacking drivers but that really doesn’t matter. Step Three: Launch Disk Utility (Applications Utilities) and click on your AAO’s hard drive, choose ‘Partition’ and choose a single partition, this guide will not go in to dual booting.

Call the drive whatever you want, this can be changed later. Use Mac OS X Journaled unless you’re using an SSD, in which case use non-journaled Mac OS Extended. Now Hit Apply.

Step Four: It’s finally time to install Snow Leopard =D First mount the install DVD, connect a DVD with the disk in or mount the disk image from another external drive. If you can find a way of packing it on the the Leopard drive that will work too.

Open finder and choose Go Go to folder. Type /Volumes/Mac OS X Install DVD/System/Installation/Packages/ and press return. Now launch OSInstall.mpkg, note, NOT OSInstall.pkg.

Follow the prompts and choose the aspire one’s internal drive. I chose to uncheck everything but Rosetta and X11, but you can install whatever packages you want. Let the installer do it’s thing. Step Five: Almost there, if you were to reboot at this point it would kernel panic immediately, not cool. Download Netbook Installer. Ignore the warning about an unsupported device, choose the AAO’s internal drive, check the chameleon boot loader and general extensions, and let it do it’s thing. Now you can reboot, Snow Leopard will take a while to boot, so just give it time.

You should see the welcome video but there wont be any sound, so just hum along if you know the tune Step Six: Now you’re at the desktop you can install to get audio working, download it and install it with. Step Seven – Optional Updating to 10.6.2 is very easy. Intel Atom support was removed from the kernel, but you can still boot using the 10.6.0 or 10.6.1 kernels. Open the terminal and type the following command to backup your kernel. Cd / sudo cp machkernel machkernel.backup You can now safely update via Software Update (I wouldn’t recommend installing other updates).

When the machine reboots leave it and it should boot up fine, otherwise type “machkernel.backup” at chameleon. About this mac should say 10.6.2.

Since neither Sleep or Hibernation work on OS X on the AAO, you might want to install or DoNotSleep.pkg. If you do put your AAO to sleep, when it resumes it will simply reboot and when ever it boots try to load the sleep image which will fail.

If this happens boot your external Leopard drive and use Netbook Installer to reinstall Chameleon and general extensions. About This Mac will show the correct RAM info but show the CPU as “1.6GHz Unknown”. Install package to get the CPU string updated. You can go to System Preferences Trackpad and enable two finger scrolling, which works much better than edge scrolling on the tiny trackpad. Unlike Leopard where the only way to install is via an osx86 distro or Boot132 method, there are a few different methods thanks to.

Open container format

Has posted guides for four different methods using NetbookInstaller. I’ve tried the first two methods without success. I could create a bootable USB drive, but Snow Leopard would always fail to install 25% through, even after trying different version of NetbookBootMaker and two different drives. The NetbookCD method didn’t work for me with either of the two drives I had (waiting for device error). In the end I used a similar method to the direct install which I will be posting soon.

SL runs fine but the lack of ethernet drives, vga-out and working internal – and USB – mics drove me back to Leopard. This is a guide for installing OS X Leopard on an Aspire One A150 and D250.

The whole process should take around two hours. Things you’ll will need: iDeneb v1.4 10.5.6 Disk Image 4.7GB – You’ll find it on most torrent sites. External USB DVD Drive – If you don’t want to purchase one, just buy a cheap IDE to USB lead, and pull an IDE drive from any old machine. – Contains DoNotSleep and GMA950 packages Things you’ll want for updating to 105.8 USB keyboard and mouse What works and what doesn’t: Sleep – Kernel panic on resume. Ethernet – Working, hot plugging is dodgy though. Graphics – CoreImage and QuartzExtreme fully supported, VGA out working perfectly. Audio – Speakers, earphone jack, internal mic and USB mics all working.

Audio in jack untested. WiFi – Working with a replacement wireless card. This is an easy swap and only costs around £10. Webcam – Working OOTB. SDHC Reader – Working SD (no SDHC to test), can cause excessive bootup tims if left in during boot. Back up everything on you AAO’s hard drive, it will be formatted during the install and all files will be destroyed.

Boot the iDeneb disk by taping F12 at the BIOS and wait for it to load. Next select your language for the installer and accept all agreements. The installer won’t show any partions to which you can install OS X so click Utilities Disk Utility. From here select your AAO’s hard drive and then click erase.

Choose Mac OS X Extended Journaled if your AAO has a standard 2.5″ drive, or Mac OS X Extended (which isn’t journaled) if your AAO has an SSD. You will now return to the installer, choose the partition of your choice and next, click customize and check Netbook Aspire One 150 and click next. Now you can let the installer do it’s thing. When the machine reboots it will get stuck at the Leopard intro video playing only the music.

Reboot and start up with -x at the chameleon bootloader. You will now boot to the desktop, now run the GMA 950 package for ‘AAO OSX Tools’ and reboot, no -x required this time (yay!). You now have a fully functioning hackintosh, you can stop here or upgrade to 10.5.8 (highly recommended as it’s required for the latest releases of Apple’s software – iTunes, Safari, iLife etc).

Open osx86 tools and click “Backup Extensions” and choose your desktop as the destination. Next click “Backup Kernel” and leave the name as default. Also enable Quartz GL. Actually you don’t need to touch Quartz GL. Now you can start the combo update.

Open Container Format

The update overwrites the Voodoo kernel with the official 10.5.8 kernel, so in order to get the AAO to boot, at chameleon type “machkernel.backup -x”. At this point you will need to plug in a USB keyboard and mouse, since the update fudges up Voodoo PS2. Open osx86 tools and restore your extensions. Optionally you can move the Voodoo kernel back to “machkernel” you don’t have to choose it every time you boot. Launch the terminal and type: cd / sudo cp machkernel machkernel1058 sudo mv machkernel.backup machkernel You can now reboot without a USB keyboard and mouse and without typing anything in to chameleon (W00P!). Since sleep is unsupported, I’d recommend installing DoNotSleep to prevent the netbook from sleeping when it’s closed, instead the screen will turn off.

If you do close the lid without DoNoSleep installed, the computer will simply reboot:( I’d recommend installing VoodooPS2 to enable extra trackpad functionality like tap to click, two finger tap to right click and two finger scrolling. Feel free to ask questions in the comments:) Posted in Tags:,.

File extension Convert Open Save Edit Create Import Export Extract Convert from No Yes Yes icontainer editor Yes No No No to Yes, Axialis IconWorkshop supports icns file conversion as a target file type. Yes Yes icns editor Yes Yes Yes No The tables with software actions are a good pointer for what a certain program does with various file types and often may give users a good hint how to perform certain file conversion, for example the above-mentioned icontainer to icns.

However, it is not perfect and sometimes can show results which are not really usable because of how certain programs work with files and the possible conversion is thus actually not possible at all.