Jun
29
4:20am

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Jun
22
4:08am

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Jun
18
11:00am

Living with Michael Jackson

  • thursday, june 18, 2009
  • Jesse Sparks: I just ripped the documentary living with michael jackson. I'm going to send you a copy. No need to thank me
  • Bryan Payne: so it's a child porn movie then?
  • Jesse Sparks: hahahaha
  • no
  • ew
  • Bryan Payne: by the title you would think it would be
  • Jesse Sparks: touche
  • Bryan Payne: man
  • that little snippet of chat is priceless
  • that's going on my tumblr

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Jun
15
7:54am

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Jun
1
7:38am

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May
25
4:25am

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May
18
4:24am

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May
16
4:07pm

How to reset Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard back to the setup assistant

In a service environment, it is often necessary to boot a newly installed copy of Leopard and create a user in order to install additional software, run Apple updates, etc. It’s also nice to be able to give the user the first run experience after this is done. The following will accomplish this.

After installing software and running updates, reboot the system into single user mode. (CMD-S at startup)

Run the following commands:

mount -uw / rm -R /Library/Preferences/ rm -R /Users/username/ /bin/launchctl load /System/Library/LaunchDaemons/com.apple.DirectoryServices.plist & dscl . -delete /Users/username dscl . -delete /Groups/admin GroupMembership username rm /var/db/dslocal/nodes/Default/users/username.plist rm -R /Library/Logs rm -R /var/log rm /var/db/.AppleSetupDone shutdown -h now

Make sure to edit the “username” portions of the commands with the actual name of the user you created. On the next reboot the system will launch the setup assistant and let the user do basic initial setup and create a user for the system.


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May
10
7:48pm

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May
4
5:18pm

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