Hey there.
I just got a Titanium/400 cheap, and so I've decoded to run X exclusively on it. I'm using it as a mobile/offline Web development box (PHP/MySQL).
Anyway, the way sleep is handled in OS X is annoying me, and before I complain to Apple, I'd like to make sure I'm not being an idiot.
As far as I can tell, OS X has two sleep modes, which I will call "light" and "deep". In the first mode, a cheesy apple logo screen saver-type thing comes on. In the second, the screen is completely blank.
I also have Seti at Home installed, which may be causing problems as well.
My issues are as follows:
(1) Is it possible to prevent the system from sleeping?
(2) The second sleep mode (which I call "deep") results in all of my applications being quit. This is particularly annoying, because if I just run to the store to grab some food, and come back, I have to restart everything and re-acclimatize myself before I can get back to work.
Is this issue related to my setup somehow or is this how they intended it to be?
Any insight would be helpful.
I just got a Titanium/400 cheap, and so I've decoded to run X exclusively on it. I'm using it as a mobile/offline Web development box (PHP/MySQL).
Anyway, the way sleep is handled in OS X is annoying me, and before I complain to Apple, I'd like to make sure I'm not being an idiot.
As far as I can tell, OS X has two sleep modes, which I will call "light" and "deep". In the first mode, a cheesy apple logo screen saver-type thing comes on. In the second, the screen is completely blank.
I also have Seti at Home installed, which may be causing problems as well.
My issues are as follows:
(1) Is it possible to prevent the system from sleeping?
(2) The second sleep mode (which I call "deep") results in all of my applications being quit. This is particularly annoying, because if I just run to the store to grab some food, and come back, I have to restart everything and re-acclimatize myself before I can get back to work.
Is this issue related to my setup somehow or is this how they intended it to be?
Any insight would be helpful.