TwONE Mac OS
TwONE Mac OS
Town of Passion community. A topic by MasterBaiter created Aug 18, 2019 Views: 207 Replies: 2. Viewing posts 1 to 3. MasterBaiter 1 year ago. Some of my older applications, such as Adobe Creative Suite version 1, no longer run with the new OS. My plan is to install an additional hard drive in my Mac Pro (2009 dual Xeon version) and go back to my original software (Tiger) and install that on the new drive, then update to Snow Leopard with that software package. Heaven Benchmark with its current version 4.0 is a GPU-intensive benchmark that hammers graphics cards to the limits. This powerful tool can be effectively used to determine the stability of a GPU. Squash was built exclusively for the Mac, that's why it's fast, fun, and powerful. Optimising the file size of your images shouldn’t mean making them grainy or blurred. Squash can maintain quality while reducing file size and saving space. Drag & Drop Image Compression with no visible loss of quality. Mac Linux; Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7: OS X 10.9 Mavericks: Any common 64-bit Linux distribution 1: CPU: A dual-core CPU: A 64-bit dual-core CPU: RAM: 2 GB of RAM: Hard Drive: At least 500 MB free space: Graphics Card: An OpenGL-compatible card with at least 256 MB of graphics memory 2: Internet Connection: Any internet connection.
Windows
- Windows 10 or Windows Server 2016 - Go to Start, enter About your PC, and then select About your PC. Look under PC for Edition to find out your version and edition of Windows.
- Windows 8.1 or Windows Server 2012 R2 - Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.). Next, Tap or click PC and devices, and then tap or click PC info. Look under Windows for the version and edition.
Windows 8 or Windows Server 2012 - On the Start screen, type Computer, press and hold or right-click Computer, and then tap or click Properties. Then look under Windows edition for the version.
Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 - Click Start or the Windows logo right click Computer then click Properties. Look in System.
Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008 - Click Start or the Windows logo depending on what you have then click Control Panel->System and Maintenance->System.
You could also try Clicking Start or the Windows logo then if you have a 'Start Seach' field type winver then Double-click winver.exe from the results. If you had a run box instead of search just click Run type winver click OK.
Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 - Click Start ->RunType winver then click OK. You could also try typing msinfo32 or sysdm.cpl or winmsd if you like. Lastly you might try typing dxdiag. Windows might prompt you to verify drivers click No.
Windows 95/98/ME - Click Start->Settings->Control Panel double-click System click General tab. Locate version number under system heading. Click here for chart to match version number to release.
Windows CE - Click StartSettingsControl Panelclick the System applet. If that does not work you might just have to look in the General Tab or somewhere in the System Tab.
You can also find out if your computer is running a 32-bit or 64-bit version of Windows in the same areas listed above.
Macintosh
OS X (Mac OS X) - Click the Apple menu at the top of your screen then click About this Mac. To get more detailed information after that click More Info -> Software. Note: Apple has changed the name of it's OS to OS X from Mac OS X.
iOS (iPhoneOS) - On your iPhone touch Settings ->General ->About. Look under version. Note: Apple has changed the name of it's OS to iOS from iPhoneOS.
Linux
Open a terminal program (get to a command prompt) and type uname -a. This will give you your kernel version, but might not mention the distribution your running. To find out what distribution of linux your running (Ex. Ubuntu) try lsb_release -a or cat /etc/*release or cat /etc/issue* or cat /proc/version.
FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD/DragonFlyBSD
Open a terminal program (get to a command prompt) and type uname -a. This will tell you the version (release) and type of BSD your running.
Android Phone
Go to the Home Screen (push the home button or just keep pressing the left facing triangle (back button)). Then push the Applications button (looks like little squares or like 3 colons :::). Find and touch the Settings icon. Scroll to the bottom of the list. then touch About Phone. Look for lines that say Firmware version or Android version.
Blackberry (RIM OS)
Mac Os Versions
Go to the Options menu and choose About. If that does not work try the Tools icon then click on Settings then About.
Solaris (SunOS)
Open a terminal program (get to a command prompt) and type uname -a or for lots of info (on newer Solaris machines) type showrev -a.
AIX
Open a terminal program (get to a command prompt) and type oslevel -r or uname -a or lslpp -h bos.rte.
IOS (Cisco)
On the command line in enabled mode (enable) type show version.
Towne Mac Os X
XOS (Extreme Networks)
On the command line at an administrator privilege level type show version.
IronWare OS (Foundry)
On the command line at an administrator privilege level type show version. For more Foundry commands look here.
Towne Mac Os 7
OpenVMS
At a terminal propt type show system /noprocess
TwONE Mac OS