Realtek 8111E based PCI-E GbE NIC (installed for link aggregation under Win7) So my build is Intel based, including these parts: That’s pretty much what I’ve bought for this build. Thanks for the magical LGA771 to 775 converter, Core 2 Duo generation Xeons are extremely cheap now, so I bought a Xeon E5450 for this build, along side is a VGA card, Asus GeForce 210 (1GB), since my mainboard does not have integrated graphics. The original CPU bought with the mainboard is a Core 2 Duo E7400, which is only a Wolfdale-3M class processor, apparently not enough for today’s task. Luckily I also phased out a case from work machines, so there’s not much buying needed. And since it’s Gigabyte made, the notion of building a test hackintosh came into my mind. Recently I upgraded my file server to new Haswell i7 platform, so after some switching and swapping job, I end up with an extra LGA775 board. Short notes on 2006 Taipei Goldenhorse Film FestivalĪfter painful two-weeks-long of repetitive trial-and-error, I finally managed to install Snow Leopard onto my custom hackintosh build pieced from old parts.Installing Mac OSX 10.6.8 "Snow Leopard" onto a Gigabyte EP43-DS3R based system (with Asus GeForce 210 1GB). Quick note on installing OSX 10.9.2 onto Gigabyte X79-UP4 w/ i7-4930k & Dell PERC H700.Easiest hackintosh build: OSX 10.9.3 "Mavericks" on Gigabyte Z87X-UD5H.Pphead on Short notes on 2006 Taipei Gol… Origin2 on Short notes on 2006 Taipei Gol… Short notes on 2006 Taipei Goldenhorse Film Festival.Installing Mac OSX 10.6.8 “Snow Leopard” onto a Gigabyte EP43-DS3R based system (with Asus GeForce 210 1GB).Quick note on installing OSX 10.9.2 onto Gigabyte X79-UP4 w/ i7-4930k & Dell PERC H700.Easiest hackintosh build: OSX 10.9.3 “Mavericks” on Gigabyte Z87X-UD5H.I hope that this post has the Google-juice and that it helps someone figure this stupid thing out. All you have to do is drag the 32-bit above the 64-bit. (I know, right? I mean, why wouldn’t you autodetect which architecture you have, and only install the 64-bit JRE if it would actually be useful?) So all you have to do to fix the problem is open up your Java preferences and tell it to give the 32-bit JRE priority over the 64-bit JRE. It turns out that even if you don’t have a 64-bit processor, if you’re running Snow Leopard, you have both the 32- and the 64-bit JREs installed on your system. Well, my MacBook is 32-bit, so I’m like, that can’t possibly be the problem. My googling indicated that this error message on Macs usually happens when you’re on a 64-bit processor, because BlueCove doesn’t support the 64-bit architecture. There is probably a problem with your local Bluetooth stack or API.Ĭaused by: : BlueCove library bluecove not available The error I was getting looked something like this: Finally I figured it out, with the tangential help of this somewhat unrelated thread. Okay, so, there’s plenty of information on the webs about getting BlueCove to work under various flavors of Linux, but I googled and googled until my googler was sore trying to find a solution for Mac OS X 10.6. In particular, I’m using it for WiiRemoteJ, a handler for Wii remotes. It’s pretty necessary to have something like this if you’re trying to use Java to control Bluetooth in any sort of application. BlueCove is an implementation of JSR-82 (aka JSR082 aka JSR82 can you tell I’m trying to get this post to be pretty googleable?), which is the Java API for Bluetooth.
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