Installing GridRepublic Desktop may take several minutes; please be patient.\
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If you are upgrading from a version earlier than 6.8.0, you may see a message "Failed to convert file GridRepublic Desktop Preferences to Unicode." This is due to our addition of full Unicode support to the GridRepublic Desktop. If you get this message, you may need to readjust your column widths and other GridRepublic Desktop view options, but no other problems will result. When you quit GridRepublic Desktop, these settings will be saved in the new Unicode format.\
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Due to new restrictions imposed by OS 10.6 Snow Leopard, there has been a change in GridRepublic Desktop's security implementation. Non-administrative users can no longer run GridRepublic Desktop unless they are added to group boinc_master. As of GridRepublic Desktop 6.10.5, the GridRepublic Desktop installer asks whether or not you wish to allow this.\
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For more options, please see the BOINC Macintosh administrator tools at:\
\b \cf0 Upgrade warning: You may lose unreported results
\b0 if you are running on an
\b Intel Mac
\b0 and upgrading from a version of GridRepublic or BOINC earlier than 5.3.21 on an Intel Mac, or if you are transferring GridRepublic or BOINC Data from a PowerPC Mac to an Intel Mac, or from an Intel Mac to a PowerPC Mac. To prevent this, open GridRepublic Desktop's window, select the
\i Projects
\i0 tab, select each project and press the
\i Update
\i0 button. Then select the
\i Tasks
\i0 tab and make sure there are no tasks "Ready to report."\
\b0 This installer adds the GridRepublic screen saver to your system, and optionally changes your screen saver settings to use the GridRepublic screen saver. You can also select GridRepublic as your screen saver later, using the Screen Saver or Screen Effects panel in the System Preferences (accessible from the Apple menu). \
Note: on some versions of the Mac OS, you may not be able to exit the GridRepublic screen saver by moving the mouse; you may need to press the mouse button or press any key on the keyboard to exit. \
\b0 \cf0 Version 5.5.4 of GridRepublic Desktop for the Macintosh features new, stricter security measures. This additional security helps protect your computer data from potential theft or accidental or malicious damage by limiting GridRepublic projects' access to your system and data. \
If you experience problems with this software, you can re-install a version of GridRepublic or BOINC prior to 5.5.4; this will automatically revert ownership and permissions to the earlier implementation.\
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Once we have tested this security implementation on the Mac, we plan to extend it to other computer platforms, including Linux and Windows.\
\cf0 The installer sets special permission for the GridRepublic Desktop and Client, which allows them to write to the shared BOINC Data regardless of which user is logged in. If you
\b0 the GridRepublic Desktop within the same disk drive or partition. If you need multiple copies, run the installer again after moving GridRepublic Desktop; this will create a fresh copy in the
GridRepublic verifies that ownership and permissions are set properly each time it is launched. It will tell you to re-install GridRepublic if there is a problem.\
The new safeguards use the basic security protections built into UNIX (the base underlying Mac OS X): permissions and ownership.\
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The administrator (usually the owner) of each computer creates one or more users who can log in, can create private files, and can share other files. Some of these users are given administrative privileges, some may not have these privileges.\
There are also groups, which have one or more users as members. For example, users with administrative privileges are usually members of the "admin" group.\
In addition to these "visible" users and groups, the operating system contains a number of "hidden" users and groups which are used for various purposes. A person cannot log in as one of these "hidden" users. \
This structure of users and groups is used to provide security by restricting what data and operations each person or application can use. For example, many files belong to user "system" (also called "root") and group "wheel" so that non-privileged users can't modify them, thus protecting the computer system from accidental or malicious harm.\
The installer automatically gives administrators (users who are members of the "admin" group) membership in the two new groups, so that they can easily manipulate GridRepublic files. Non-admin users are denied direct access to these files (except through GridRepublic Desktop), protecting GridRepublic and its projects files. This is particularly useful where many people have access to the computer, as in a school computer lab.\
\cf0 GridRepublic projects are given permission to access only project files, protecting your computer in the event someone downloads bad software from a bogus project, or in the unlikely case that a legitimate project's server is infiltrated by a cracker.\
The GridRepublic Desktop also blocks non-admin users' access to certain functions, such as Attach, Detach, Reset Project. GridRepublic permits a non-admin user to override this restriction by entering an administrator user name and password.\
For technical details of the implementation, please see {\field{\*\fldinst{HYPERLINK "http://boinc.berkeley.edu/trac/wiki/SandboxUser"}}{\fldrslt http://boinc.berkeley.edu/trac/wiki/SandboxUser}} and {\field{\*\fldinst{HYPERLINK "http://boinc.berkeley.edu/sandbox.php"}}{\fldrslt http://boinc.berkeley.edu/sandbox.php}}\
\b0 users, not just the user who ran the installer. You can add or remove Login Items by using the Accounts Pane in the System Preferences (accessible from the Apple menu). (These items are called "Login Items" in OS 10.4 or "Startup Items" in OS 10.3.)\
\b0 copy) GridRepublic Desktop to any folder you wish on the same disk drive or partition. If you do so, you will need to update the information in each user's Login Items. In most cases, the GridRepublic screen saver should still work properly. If it does not, move GridRepublic Desktop back to the