Mulva All American 3942 Posts user info edit post |
During a backup and reinstall of my OS a few weeks ago I apparently made a whoops while backing up address book. Instead of 'exporting' the address book I hunted down the root files where the data is contained and thought that was how you backed it up (shows how long I was a PC user).
Now I can't seem to find a way to restore the address book from those files. Is there any way to restore my old addresses? I hate that they're still all sitting right there and I have the data but can't access it. Anyone have any ideas? 12/3/2007 11:06:57 AM |
tchenku midshipman 18586 Posts user info edit post |
maybe you can download it
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=1039503823611908862 12/3/2007 11:19:05 AM |
Mulva All American 3942 Posts user info edit post |
I've seen the clip but unless Nick Burns solves my problem then why are you posting the vid [no troll] 12/3/2007 11:37:04 AM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
if you used a legal version of leopard this would not happen 12/3/2007 12:28:52 PM |
qntmfred retired 40726 Posts user info edit post |
>.<
[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 1:19 PM. Reason : karma's a biotch] 12/3/2007 1:18:24 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
qntmfred 12/3/2007 1:29:30 PM |
Nighthawk All American 19623 Posts user info edit post |
Anybody else read the topic and thought it meant MAC addresses? 12/3/2007 1:46:25 PM |
El Nachó special helper 16370 Posts user info edit post |
I did. and then I wondered why you would need a book for your MAC address. ] 12/3/2007 2:18:38 PM |
joe17669 All American 22728 Posts user info edit post |
I keep a book of all my MAC addresses... in case I ever need to mess around in my router. I give each of the four computers in my condo (desktop, file backup, laptop, girlfriend's laptop) a static IP address based off of the MAC.
Call me a nerd, but I hate trying to find the IP address of a computer when I need to \\connect to it. Plus \\computername doesn't always work well with Macs (the computers).
It's not really a book, but a text file. ] 12/3/2007 2:21:07 PM |
evan All American 27701 Posts user info edit post |
that's why you run your own dhcp server and have it assign hostnames
whatever hostname the device reports gets prepended to e00.lan
so the computer i'm on right now, for instance, can be accessed by:
leoplurodon.e00.lan
gets resolved by dns, none of that netbios shit.
this is how we do it in the real world. 12/3/2007 2:25:24 PM |
joe17669 All American 22728 Posts user info edit post |
Can you do that on a regular linksys router? I've got a wrt54g v2 with dd-wrt on it. plz to advise 12/3/2007 3:50:50 PM |
qntmfred retired 40726 Posts user info edit post |
not that you deserve it, but this may or may not help
http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20071118134839992 12/4/2007 4:09:20 PM |
skokiaan All American 26447 Posts user info edit post |
Address book takes in xml data. You can write a script to make vcards of the data and just drag and drop that into the address book.
You coudl probably also go directly into whatever xml format address book uses 12/4/2007 10:23:18 PM |