New videos
Aerial now includes 20 extra videos, kindly shared by Joshua Michaels & Hal Bergman:
Mac Aerials & Satellites are your family run, local Digital Approved satellite TV specialists. For over 10 years we have supplied TV aerial and satellite installation services to domestic and commercial customers across South East England. For more help and information see our FAQs page. CocoaNEC 2.0 Kok Chen, W7AY w7ay (at) arrl (dot) net cocoaNEC 2.0 is a Mac OS X application for designing and modeling antennas. As indicated by the name, cocoaNEC uses the Cocoa framework of Mac OS X. The application is free and it can be downloaded from the Download page (which can also be accessed by using the Download tab button at the top of this page). On an ending note, Aerial is an enticing solution if you want your screen to display high-quality videos when idle. It features footage shot by Apple for their Apple TV, with the array of sceneries. To use the 4K video's instead, download Aerial.exe and Aerial.scr from this folder. Then run the exe from anywhere, click the settings button in the top right, and go to the video source tab and click the 4K button and save. Close out of that program, then install the scr as you normally would and it.
If you enjoy these, please consider supporting them by checking the video packs they have created especially for Aerial on their website.
And by the way...
There's a brand new user interface, that makes it a lot easier to find and enjoy the videos. It's even resizable!
No more filling up your disk...
I heard you, Aerial finally includes better cache management. You can now set a limit so Aerial won't ever use more space than you want. And it can also periodically replace videos in your cache, say after a week, so things stay fresh. (It's still not perfect especially for those of you who are upgrading from 1.9.X, this will be improved a lot soon!).
You can still opt to manually download your videos, or simply grab them all. All up to you. If you allow automatic downloads, you can even specify a list of trusted WiFi networks!
![Aerial For Mac Aerial For Mac](/uploads/1/1/8/6/118693112/522750319.jpg)
On rotation, favorites, filters...
There's now an 'On rotation' feature, so you can quickly switch from watching space videos, to say, your favorites:
There are many other new options, including filters to control vibrance (to adjust the colors of your non-HDR videos and make them pop a bit more), sunset and sunrise videos appearing at appropriate time, and more!
And yes, this fancy website!
But let's be clear, at the core, nothing changed. Aerial is still open source and developed on GitHub. Even this site is on GitHub, check it out here if you are curious!
cocoaNEC 2.0
Kok Chen, W7AY [w7ay (at) arrl (dot) net]
Get Apple Tv 4k Screensaver Windows 10
cocoaNEC 2.0 is a Mac OS X application for designing and modeling antennas. As indicated by the name, cocoaNEC uses the Cocoa framework of Mac OS X.
The application is free and it can be downloaded from the Download page (which can also be accessed by using the Download tab button at the top of this page). The Xcode project with the cocoaNEC sources can also be downloaded from the same page. For non-commercial use, the source code for cocoaNEC 2.0 is free.
Online tutorials, reference manuals and example files for the application are available through the User's Manualtab button. The What's New page lists features that have changed since the previously released versions of cocoaNEC 2.0.
The Snow Leopard version of cocoaNEC makes use of the Grand Central Dispatch technology in Mac OS X to make use of all the cores on a modern Intel based Macintosh. This version works on both Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6) and Lion (Mac OS X 10.7).
The Tiger version of cocoaNEC 2.0 is a Universal Binary application. It runs natively on both Intel based and PowerPC based Macintosh computers that use Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) or newer.
Except for the graphics elements, the Tiger version of cocoaNEC uses multiple cores of a processor only when modeling an antenna at multiple frequencies. The Snow Leopard version will use multiple cores for other parts of NEC-2 that are compute intensive.
Please note that the NEC-4 engine cannot make use of Grand Central Dispatch even with the Snow Leopard version of cocoaNEC. Except for the graphics portion of cocoaNEC, multi-core acceleration only functions when you use the internal NEC-2 engine.