I had a little help with that: ( Source) for Linux AND OSX you can place it in the “ usr/bin/” directory. There is probably a terminal version to extract ( here) but I stopped trying when I had the file. Stuffit expander creates a file name “hss” other programs create a file named “hss-1.3-osx” The normale decompression program on OSX don’t work with that (Archive Utility), my default decompression program didn’t work either (The Unarchiver).Īnd this is important! The other programs seem to work because there is a file created but its not a “exec”. I had to download it with right-mouseclick and “Save link as…” (Google Chrome).Įxtract the file: the file you downloaded is a “gzip” compression file. The normal way of downloading (just click on the link) for some reason didn’t work for me. Remember this: I work on Mac OS X 10.6.8.įive steps to get started with HSS on OSX Sounds great and it’s written by someone who knows what he is doing, so lets give that a try. HSS is a CSS compiler which supports valid CSS syntax, so for every error that occurs during the parsing of the HSS file, it will display and error indicating at which file and which line the error occurred. HSS is tool that extends the CSS syntax with powerful features such as variables and nested blocks. Not a problem, but what if you want to do it the awesome way? Meet HSSįrom the creator of Haxe (Nicolas Cannasse) comes HSS! But when you want to modify that you will need to write css. Using Twitter bootstrap for styling is very quick and nice. or showing what you can controle in one project using Haxe (jQuery, php, neko, js and now CSS)! This all is not important for the post, I was just showing off… □ …. It’s a little flatfile CMS/website that lets you write Markdown (I’m using mdown from Jason O’Neil) for posts.įor styling (css) I’m using Twitter Bootstrap and for the animations the jQuery wrapper ( jQueryExternForHaxe) from Andi Li. My recent experiments are with Neko and PHP. I’m playing around with Haxe for a while now. In the comments of earlier mention blog, someone mentions a “Automator script”.I will be using bash: create a file named “WacomReboot.sh” #!/bin/bashecho 'Kill the PenTabletDriver (just to be sure)'killall PenTabletDriverecho 'Start the PenTabletDriver again'open -a PenTabletDriver & exitSave file in /usr/local/bin/Now restart the Wacom:Open terminal and type “WacomReboot.sh” and enter: → WacomReboot.shKill the PenTabletDriver (just to be sure)Start the PenTabletDriver againBam … back to work! Now open the Finder > Go > Go to folderAnd copy past this folder: /Library/Application Support/Tablet/It will open een folder with “PenTabletDriver.app” in it.Double click it and you Wacom will work again. Make sure you have the correct driver installed… duh! In a working situation (driver is working) you can see it with “Activity monitor”, search for “PenTabletDriver” So when your Wacom is not working you won’t see it (obviously). It crashes a lot.It’s happens when I startup Illustrator or switch workplace or when it wakes up from sleep mode or connect to an external monitor.Or just randomly.And I don’t want to restart my computer every-time it happens.So I googled the problem before I dive into the problem myself.The post describes the same problem, but the solution doesn’t work for me.So this is my solution.First the specs: The utility will notify you when the removal is complete.You may be prompted to enter your system’s password at this time.Select the option to ‘Remove’ in the ‘Tablet Software’ section of the utility.In each of these located folders will be a Wacom Utility, double-click to launch the utility.Open your Application folder, and locate any of the following folders:.Update #1: I recently run in a situation with my Wacom that everything failed.
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