Tag Archive for 'Apple'

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Thoughts on Macworld 2008

Boom. Macworld kicked off today – and kicked is the perfect word to describe it. I went off the grid until the keynote became available online. I watched Steve Jobs’ presentation with no inclination of what was to come. Needless to say, experiencing the reality distortion field was an interesting experience.

Apple launched iTunes movie rentals, revitalized the Apple TV, and revamped many of its mobile platform features. However, I am only truly concerned with two of the announcements:

1. Time Capsule
2. MacBook Air

Time Capsule is a previously disclosed feature, now built into the Airport Extreme. I have mixed feelings on this one. Rather than letting you wirelessly sync Time Machine backups to an Airport Extreme with an external hard drive, Apple is now offering it as a premium feature on a new box. However, it’s a great feature in a good product.

MacBook AirThe MacBook Air is the star of the show for me. At this stage in my life, I have no need for an ultra-portable like this. But it’s an amazing product. The world’s thinnest laptop with 2 gigs of RAM, a 1.6 GHz Core2Duo, running the world best operating system – Mac OS X Leopard – is a win. As I was in the reality distortion field, I thought of selling my MacBook Pro and purchasing a MacBook Air.

When I snapped out of it, I remembered the I/O and looked at the specs. As a primary computer, it’s useless to me. No firewire and only a single Universal Service Bus. 80GB 4200-rpm Parallel ATA hard disk? No way.

I use a daisy-chained Firewire 800 setup for a Time Machine drive (500 gigs) and another hard drive (320 gigs). For me, The MacBook Air is feature and power anemic. Don’t get me wrong; it’s a wonderful machine and I hope to own its later incarnation one day. It’s not Apple’s fault – they’ve done the best they could to create an ultra-mobile laptop and succeeded.

Although I won’t purchase myself a MacBook Air, I take donations. Any takers? ;)

Macworld Expo 2008

I want two things from MacWorld:

  1. Mac OS X 10.5.2. I’m having a few problems with Leopard right now. It’s great, but Spaces has glitches and USB drives don’t eject as quickly as I’d like them to.
  2. A new ultra-portable MacBook. I don’t need a computer right now, but it would be nice to know that the future is shiny.

There are reports of a leaked Steve Jobs keynote flying around. If they’re true, I’m excited.

Possible MacBook Pro SuperDrive 2.1 Fix

This fix has been proven temporary. Many users have used it and had a working drive. After reboots, however, the drive firmware is corrupted again. Only try this method as a last resort.

A more detailed post on this issue is coming soon.

A little backstory… Many months ago, Apple released a software update titled “SuperDrive Update 2.1″ for MacBook and MacBook Pro computers. Unfortunately, the update was flawed. It bricked many drives, and severely limited the function of others. Here’s a quick article on the matter:

Following close on the heels of our recent report that Apple’s SuperDrive Firmware Update 2.1 for MacBook and MacBook Pro is causing widespread failure of optical drives (as witness, for example, the plethora of reports on Apple’s own discussion boards), Apple has apparently pulled the update from circulation. The previous information URL … now leads nowhere. Neither does the download link.

My drive was damaged in that it no longer would recognize CD-R media (blank CDs). Back in July, I sent my MacBook Pro to Apple for a SuperDrive replacement, and they sent it back with a new installation of Tiger. Although I was outraged, that fixed my problem for a few months – until I installed Mac OS X Leopard. Again, my drive would not recognize cd-r media, and would report voltage errors in disk utility.

Again, Apple has shown us the company that they are. They refuse to officially acknowledge the issue to spite the outcry of thousands of users whose computers have been damaged.

Luckily, a very talented hacker (in a good sense) has released a tool to fix the problem. In this thread on Apple’s discussion boards, someone re-posted the fix. In hopes of spreading the remedy, I’m reposting it here. Continue reading ‘Possible MacBook Pro SuperDrive 2.1 Fix’

Mac OS X Leopard on a Power Mac G4 Cube

G4 CubeIn July of 2000, Apple released the Power Mac G4 Cube, a powerful work of art. Originally running Mac OS 9, it held up well with iterations of OS X. In October of 2007, Apple released Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. Although one was created seven years after the other, I believe they were meant to be together. This weekend, I spent upwards of ten hours trying to get Leopard to run on a G4 Cube.

Continue reading ‘Mac OS X Leopard on a Power Mac G4 Cube’

Photo Booth

Photo Booth IconIf you own a Macintosh, or have ever been in an Apple retail store, you’ve likely seen Photo Booth.app. It’s a small application that lets users take some quick pictures of themselves using the iSight camera that’s built into their Mac. The quality of the images isn’t wonderful; the application produces 640px by 480px fuzzy JPEGs. (Here’s an example image. Two external hard drives with a chemistry hipster PDA.)

I love the Mac for many reasons. The design is impeccable, the operating system is stable and feature-rich, and the developer community is strong. Despite all this, I think that Photo Booth has sold more Macs than any true merit of the platform. When I walk around an Apple retail store, I see kids playing with Photo Booth. When I’m browsing Facebook, I find images from Photo Booth.

Although I sound somewhat critical of Photo Booth, I use it daily. It turns my MacBook Pro into a sophisticated mirror. It’s remarkable that such a simple tool is now so pervasive.

Leopard Launch

The Leopard launch was awesome. I had a great time, and got six t-shirts!