Jun 27, 2008 +The only option for 'normalising' the time of the Mac Pro again is to restart without switching off the computer. ZDNet Clock is fundamentally 'reboot-proof'. But there are a few snags. The latest series of the Mac Pro (Mac Pro 3.1) can indeed be overclocked in the ZDNet test up to 3241 MHz while remaining stable. Sep 25, 2016 Outlook Mac Archive Tool is an application for managing your mail and calendar items in Outlook Mac 2016/365 or Office 2011, including archiving not just to your local hard drive/storage, but also optionally to the cloud (such as a Gmail account). Feb 03, 2012 BirdClock is a unique and fun clock app that tells you time by chorus of birds! It gives you pleasant surprises as hours passing by and makes you feel closer to nature. BirdClock can also be used as an alarm clock, allowing you to set as many alarms as you want. There are 20+ available bird sounds for you to choose from. More will be coming. Global Nav Open Menu Global Nav Close Menu; Apple; Shopping Bag. Jul 01, 2008 ZDNet makes Mac overclock tool. Called ZDNet Clock. The results are extremely convincing: the team at ZDNet got the cheapest Mac Pro currently available – equipped with a 2.8GHz. Jun 29, 2008 The ZDNet Clock tool is a free download from ZDNet (the link is in German, click the Jetzt herunterladen button to start the download) and requires a Mac Pro or Xserve running Leopard.
Mac OS X only: Freeware application ZDNet Clock overclocks your Mac Pro's processor for faster performance. As the name suggests, the application is made by the German branch of tech web site ZDNet, and according to the download page the latest generation Mac Pro (3.1) with a 2.8GHz processor can be overclocked to 3.24GHz without increasing voltage to the CPU and without losing stability (translation: faster computer, no major risk). Overclocking has never been as easy on Macs as PCs, but the ZDNet Clock tool aims to make it just that. ZDNet Clock only works on Intel Mac Pros and the Apple server Xserve, requires OS X 10.5. We don't have a Mac Pro at Lifehacker HQ to test it on, so if you feel like being our canary in the coalmine, let's hear how it worked for you in the comments.