Heh, some of Steve’s favorite words in one of the new user pictures in Lion.
(Source: cultofmac.com)
And because many web pages are difficult to convey through a screen reader, Apple invented new technologies to comprehend and interpret the visual design of web pages…
Apple - OS X Lion - Universal Access
Lion isn’t just for you and me, its for everyone.
And that makes me happy.
Just hold down Command-R during startup and Lion Recovery springs into action. It lets you choose from common utilities: You can run Disk Utility to check or repair your hard drive, erase your hard drive and reinstall a fresh copy of Lion, or restore your Mac from a Time Machine backup. You can even use Safari to get help from Apple Support online. And if Lion Recovery encounters problems, it will automatically connect to Apple over the Internet.
If you look at the jailbreakme.com closely, it loads corresponding PDF file as image in javascript (through new Image()) to jailbreak the iOS 4 devices. Open the PDF file in the hex editor, you can easily find out what kind of PDF vulnerability they are using: The jailbreak stuff is saved as FlateDecode stream within that PDF file, and vulnerability occurs when Mobile Safari loaded the PDF file, and parsing that FlateDecode filter…[digdog dig];: Jailbreak with PDF FlateDecode filter
The other day, I wanted to find out the web safe color of a particular item on the screen of my Mac for a web design project I was working on. My first step was to go searching the Internet for such a tool (preferably free). Then, in the midst of said search, I was reminded that this little tool was not only already on my Mac, did exactly what I wanted, but also did it better than any of the tools I was able to find.
To take your Digital Color Metering to the next level, you can drag the color off of the well on the right (next to the R G B labels) into any standard color picker to bring it over. Sometimes, you can even drop it straight into an object in another app!
Give it a try: sample a color, press cmd-shift-h to hold it, then drag and drop from the swatch an object in Pages or Keynote.
Edited: The shortcut to hold is command-shift-h, not command-h. Oops.




