Archive for the ‘Mac’ Category

Computer Changes

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

I’m very excited about the changes to the computers in the house recently. The wires are moving off the floor and computers are going in and out of the computer room.

One Mac Mini was moved into the bedroom to make video files from TiVo and VCR tapes. It’s a new one and unfortunately they only work with digital TVs (none of mine) and I had to resort to dragging in a computer monitor to put on the floor. This really bugs me. Now though, I have run coax cable from the bedroom to the kitchen and computer room and move the computer. The new Mac OS 10.6 should arrive on Friday and this little gem is the only box to get the upgrade. It’s been working great at transcode DVDs to AppleTV and iPhone formats. The VCRs can move with the Mac Mini too. Clears up a lot of clutter.

The cable used to run along the floor and stop in the guest bathroom. Now it goes through the walls and runs down the hallway (still visible) to the kitchen TV. We’ve been using the AppleTV a lot and it only spits out digital, which is very expensive to move around the house. VCR, DVD, and TV all work fine over the coax. The new wire cleans up the signal a lot and we want AppleTV in the kitchen without spending $200 to do it.

So, I checked an older Mac Mini that I wasn’t sure of, one that can output analog composite video, and discovered that it works fine. Better than fine since it can play on any of my TVs. With the proper cable that is. Which will come in on Friday too. This Mini was 10.4 and is upgraded to 10.5. It’s flakiness came from a possible botched upgrade from 512 meg to 2 gig. Seems like the upgrade was successful. This little gem will go in the kitchen TV. I need to run an Ethernet wire to this spot, but the wireless is ok.

Running the wires along the wall is annoying, but the attic is just too hot, cramped, and awful it’s worth it. The drop in the kitchen works for both the kitchen and living room. That’s very handy. This wires most of the house; kitchen, living room, master bedroom, and one bedroom (computer room). Though I still need coax and Ethernet to the bathrooms and a bedroom. And the “server closet” in one bedroom might need to move to the garage or hall closet.

I’m really hoping for new Macs in September or October. Not so much to get a new one, but to get a current one on clearance for $200-400 less. Maybe, a 24″ with 4 gig and a dedicated video card. The Minis are fine and I love my overheating upgraded Cube, but I would really would like to have transcoding take 1/3 of the time and to have at least one powerful machine. For a long time I wanted a Mac tower, but I just don’t have enough work to make up the $2200+ price tag. This box would replace the Cube as the desktop machine and I could use it as a spare web browser. It will output S Video to a TV, a very handy ability.

A little separate note on cutting off the cable..
The antenna works well and money spent on cable has gone to buying cheap movies and TV series at Walmart. The AppleTV has been a gem, but only because we rip the DVDs we buy and transcode them for it. All the shows are in one enormous list. Purchasing though Apple is ok, but they have not obtained new episodes and shows for everything and rental fees and terms are outrageous compared to Hastings, and downloads take hours or days through standard DSL. There are cheaper boxes that do the same thing, but without iTunes, and I would have chosen one of those if I were doing this again. The Mini going in the kitchen is saving transcoding time and space and $200+ worth of hardware. It’s outrageous how expensive it is to push a component video signal 50′ vs coax.

Home Network Changes

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Lot’s of little things happened yesterday. I hope to set most or all this up an leave it be. The weather will be fantastic this week and I need to be on the bike.

The main router came in an I configured it. The RV042 seems very fast and the interface is easy enough for what I do. Certain web pages, like Hotmail, are surprisingly fast sometimes. I even got the wireless router to work with the netbook.

The Mac Mini for Boxee came in. I got this a good bit stronger than necessary, because it’s so hard to open and upgrade and I need a Mac with modern interfaces to maintain the Drobos. It’s the new Mini, two gig of memory, Core 2 2.0 GHz, and 9400 video. This is now my fastest computer. Drobo2 is plugged into it and it’s Handbraking several of my DVDs into single files for Boxee or iTunes or whatever. This might take a couple of days and then there’s the really big Drobo to do. The EyeTV Tuner is plugged in and it can record TV like Tivo. Not sure how this will integrate. I really like TiVo. Though you can copy anything out of it.

Also, the netbook is handbraking Friends Season 1 that I got this weekend. For comparison, the Mini is clipping along at <30 fps and the Acer is slogging through at <5 fps. Thank God for the queueing feature.

Drobo2 has a 1TB to replace a 250GB and a 640GB that died a few weeks ago in the other Drobo to replace a 37GB. I thought it would say the 640 was dead, but it didn’t. The new 1TB is to ensure there’s no data loss if it decides to fail again and I have a 500GB that came from Drobo1, because it was showing bad during one reboot. This Drobo will stay on the TVMini and be it’s storage, contain single video files. The other Drobo will be permanent deep storage contain the full versions of whatever.

Finally, with the 2 Drobos I don’t feel constantly afraid I’m going to lose everything any minute again. It’s just a matter of seeing that at least one copy of whatever it is makes it to a Drobo. With 1.5 TB drives and sub $100 for 1TB, the price of storage isn’t an issue.

Low End Mac:InvisibleShield Great Protection for iPods, Notebooks, Cell Phones, PDAs, and More

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

May the InvisibleShield be with you….

When you buy an iPod or some other gadget, you immediately think to yourself, “It seems to me that I need to get something to protect it. But what shall I choose?”

There are plenty of cases out there, but some are too bulky. You think, “Wouldn’t it be cool if there were an invisible case that doesn’t even look like a case?” Look no further than InvisibleShield from Zagg.

I have an iPod classic and an AlphaSmart Neo. I found that Zagg has InvisibleShield’s for both. Is it a good investment? Will it protect your gear?

I had a chance to try them out, and those are some of the questions we’ll answer in this review.

The first thing you’ll notice is the minimal packaging. It’s like a tri-fold brochure. Inside you’ll find three things: a squeegee, ShieldSpray, and the InvisibleShield itself.

What is the InvisibleShield? It’s a thin, transparent film that protects the casing of your device of choice.

on Low End Mac

MacWorld ‘09

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

Apple announced it’s new products for Q1, at least. iLife looks cool. Snooze on iWork. And the top end MacBook Pro that was left out of the Sept ‘08 upgrades was upgraded with a very cool custom battery that gives it 8 hr. Unfortunately, it didn’t get a Quad Core CPU. iTunes goes DRM free for more money. This really highlights the fact the DRM is a feature only for the copyright holder and is an obstacle for the consumer. Something artificial that you have to pay not to have. Wait, that sounds like protection racket.

I was hoping for Apple TV, Mac Mini, and Mac Pro updates. Particularly, the first two are looking very long in the tooth. The desktop Macs really have to wait for Intel to make lots of new quad core chips, which’ll be a couple of months. Also, iMacs were left out of the upgrades that the laptops received in Sept. The one where a slide was presented showing just how dog slow the iMac video cards are. I betcha this is all, because of the difficulty nVidia has had with shipping low defect chips. If so, Apple has got to be plenty pissed that many of it’s product lines are delayed, because of it.

Overall good, but boring. Show me the products that I know are going to be updated or tell me when. I don’t want an Apple TV that is obsolete 1 month later. Which is exactly what could happen in the next three months.

BTW, I’m loving the G4 Cube after the upgrade. It’s all back in it’s case, lying on its face, and running great. A few quirks like forget about using sleep mode, and the limited USB 1.1 bus can get drastically overloaded, forget running Leopard, and Adobe doesn’t know how to code Flash for G4s. It looks cool, runs pretty stable, and the CD through USB 1.1 scans and burns just fine. This has been my main computer for the past 3 months.

Cube Upgrades Worth It

Sunday, November 16th, 2008

So, it’s been a few weeks since the Cube was upgraded; a replacement hard drive (quieter, newer), a new video card (way faster and 16 more memory), and a new CPU (3+ times faster). The Cube is still sitting dissembled on the desk, because the video card can get too hot. That turns it off at random times. And because I’m just lazy. It has been running almost the whole time.

The upgrades make the Cube useful in 10.4. It’s no speed demon, but is quite acceptable. I’ll list the problems below. Most are minor annoyances or observations. I like the Cube and it is my main machine right now. The case is attractive. The noise is hardly noticeable now that the hard drive isn’t emitting high pitched whines. This was a good experience.

I would like to get a game or two. SimCity 4 and something else that works on a G4 1GHz or something and try that out. The specs now exceed the original in all respects by 2-3 times.

You can’t multitask as much, because it starts slowing down as you add tabs to the browser and running apps. Coming awake from sleep mode has a ~30 pause, though the mouse and keyboard seem to work that’s an illusion.

Firefox sucks donkey balls on G4 computers. Camino and Safari work well. I like Camino a bit better and miss my FF AdBlock/FlashBlock plugins.

DosBox for Colonization can’t play in full screen. You have to drop the resolution to 800X600 and play in a window. This consumes on average 90% of the CPU. iTunes can play in the background with a rare stutter while you play.

You can’t tell what will make the video card overheat. High resolutions make it worse, but not always. Sometimes I think it would be fine sealed up and sometimes it would melt and take the whole board with it. I’m betting a fan before reassembling it completely.

The hard drive is very cool. The big CPU fins never seem hot. The L3 Panaflow fan in the kit is quiet nice.

The network is not as snappy as Intel Macs. Minor little delays when first connecting. BTW, Macs feel much snappier than Windows when working with the network. Win2K was coughing up something trying to transfer 8 gig. Mac started doing this a little, but fixed itself. Maybe an issue with NIC caching and default settings or traffic or OS caching of massive (in that day) files. Who knows.

iTunes is good. Don’t turn on Genius.

Not upgrading to 10.5. No Motorola disks and I don’t care.

On an aside; I’m loving the big G4 566 Digital Audio in the closet. It is very quiet and a great file server. Works well with the Cube.

Would love to stuff two caseless Mac Minis or a Mini and AppleTV in a Cube or Cube Clone case.

Cube Upgrades

Friday, October 24th, 2008

Some Cube upgrades this week. I just go through completely dismantling the Cube and even now I’m typing this on the half assembled Cube.

The first upgrade was the hard drive. After some attention and consideration I realized the noisiness came from the hard drive and not the fan. A spare 160 gig drive was surrendered to a 128 gig fate and cloned from the existing one. Unfortunately, it seems that 9.2 won’t boot on it, but I don’t have any 9.2 applications. Small loss. The previous drive was date 120 gig Western Digital dated 2003. The replacement is a Western Digital dated 2007.

The next upgrade was huge. To replace the 500 MHz CPU with a 1800 MHz. This requires disassembling just about everything, pulling off the old CPU in the core, and putting it all back together. Lots of chances to break something, which I was able to succeed at. The base fan was plugged into the DC to DC board and I ripped out the plugin from the circuit board. Oops.

Which brings up the final upgrade. A Panaflo fan was already installed. The CPU upgrade came with another. I removed the old one, cut the connector off, stripped the wires, attached it to the DVD ROM power connector, and crossed my fingers.

Everything came back together and I have a much snappier and quieter Cube. First impressions are surprising. DOSBox works better. Firefox is oddly crapping out. It’s actually slower. PandoraJam just won’t run at all for some reason.

Update 10/27/2008:
The Cube has been running for days and in use almost the whole time.

Firefox is very annoying. It’s significantly slower compared to Safari. I’m also looking into other browsers. FireFox plus Flash just won’t run. So, no Pandora. Except it works fine in Safari, but I lose my AdBlocking.

DOSBox still consumes a lot of resources. This surprises me since the box is about 3 times faster. For Colonization I have to drop the resolution to 800 X 600 and run it windowed. Just too slow for full screen.

The video card runs hot and cool. You can’t always tell. Low resolutions are cooler, but low resolution with DOSBox is hot.

The CPU fins don’t seem hot. Neither does the hard drive.

The GeForce 6200 card needs a slow fan. Preferably, one that blows “backwards”. That would normally be into the computer. For a Cube that is blowing up and out. Any other direction only blows against a wall.

New Video Card in the Cube

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

The video card for the cube came in today and I just finished. It looks good. Somewhat faster. You can see that video tasks are off the CPU now. The 256 meg video memory is far more than any video card of it’s day. As a bonus it has an S-Video? jack for TV. It might be possible to use this computer as a second Mac Mini on the other TV.

New Macs

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

The last three days have been spent with my new Macs. One is a ~2000 G4 500 MHz Cube for a quiet personal machine. The other is a ~2001 Digital Audio Power Mac for a file server. I wanted to see if old Macs would suit my needs and see how cheaply I can get things done.

The Cube was slightly expensive $350 and the Power Mac was $180. More memory, 3 sticks of 512 meg @ $110, was ordered to help fill out and run OS X 10.4. Also, a replacement hard drive for the Power Mac to ensure reliability @ $45. And a USB 2 card for $30. Neither machine came with 10.4 and my install disks are for Intel machines. So, I got a copy of 10.3 with upgrade to 10.4 for $180. That was a little expensive.

So, the whole project adds up to $900 for two computers with about $320 in capital costs for all computers. No need to buy another copy of 10.3, the USB 2 card and memory can work in lots of computers.

Turns out that I have lots of PC100 and PC133 memory. Unfortunately, the last 256 meg stick went in to Adam’s computer and most of it is 64 and 128 meg sticks.

My first impressions were that both computers are impressive. The Power Mac is exceptionally quiet, which is something I couldn’t have predicted and is very much appreciated. The cube has a high pitched whine from a user installed fan or perhaps the hard drive. The speed is generally acceptable. The Power Mac feels a little faster and it should. The Front Side Bus is 33% faster and the CPU is slightly faster.

The Power Mac has been setup twice and is on it’s third right now. 10.4 causes problems on boot up. The symptoms might indicate a bad logic board or memory. Since, 10.3 will do everything I need and doesn’t make the system unstable I’m installing it. Hopefully, the never ending process of install and update will finish soon.

The Cube is a little more disappointing. The noise is very annoying and the silence was the reason buying the cube. The speed is a little low for Firefox. More than 3 tabs start to really slow it down. I’m a bit of a multitasking whore. This is going to drive me nuts. I ordered a Mac flashed GeForce 6200 256 meg video card and I’ll probably upgrade with the speed tripling 1.5 GHz processor. Hopefully, this will put me off of upgrading computers until the quad core MacBook Pros come out next year and the new MacBook Pro issues are worked through.

Both computers look good, are relatively quite, fairly responsive, and quite usable. Looking back at when I last used my PC133 memory; I must have chucked all those boxes at least 3 years ago and maybe 5. I’m pleased with them.

Another Hard Drive Died

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Another hard drive died yesterday. The Mac Mini finally drove me to replace the 512 meg with 1 gig. In the process of taking it apart I shook it a little and that killed the laptop hard drive that it uses.

It’s so much better with 1 gig. Just booting up only leaves 300 meg free. So, the OS needs at least 700, before you open any programs. When I had 5 apps open it was hanging alot.

So, I left the Mini open and will find a replacement. One of the office stores carries 80 gig for $45. I just didn’t want to spend any money.

Drive Indexing Programs for Mac

Saturday, September 27th, 2008

So, one way to store digital media is to turn hard drives into big 500 gig floppies. How do you know what’s on each drive?

CDFinder
CDFinder is the powerful disk cataloger and media asset manager software for the Mac.

DiskTracker
DiskTracker is the complete disk cataloging and labeling system for Mac OS X. It features an intuitive user interface and a bunch of useful features.

New MacBook and MB Pro in October

Friday, September 19th, 2008

The rumors have it that new MacBook Pros appear in mid October. They should be more like the MacBook Airs. I can’t wait. Just 1 month. Maybe. Apple doesn’t let you know ahead of time. The stores think so too, since many Macs are on clearance.

Using an Old Power Mac as a File Server

Monday, September 15th, 2008

8 year old G4s can run 10.4 or 10.5. A software RAID is easy and doable using PATA drives or SATA with a card. These are only USB 1.1 and not the 400mpbs USB 2.0. Again, a card is needed. Memory tops out at 1.5-2 Gig. Some have the 137 Gig hard drive limit issue. CPU upgrades are possible that add a second processor and more than triple the speed. These boxes are plentiful and cheap at $100+ depending on the model and features installed.

Links for how to use an Old Power Mac G4 class as a network file server.

This is a quick, terse walkthrough of screenshots taken under OS X 10.3.3 Panther and OS 9.2.2 to set them up for mutual file sharing using a crossover cable. (This procedure appears almost exactly the same for Jaguar(10.2) and Tiger(10.4) or OS 8.5 and OS 8.6 systems. The system preferences / control panels used are almost identical, and differences seem cosmetic.) If you prefer to see the screenshots for OS X 10.2 Jaguar instead, see this OS X 10.2 walkthru.
OS 9 / OS X.3 File Sharing

Using a PowerMac G4 as a server-ish machine?

Power Mac G4 as a Media/File/Print Server

Is PowerMac G4 suitable as a file server?

G4 NAS Drive

G4 Cube

Friday, September 12th, 2008

I ordered one of these a few days ago to be a temporary main machine for 6 months or so. It’s the predecessor to the Mac Mini, a G4 Power Mac Cube. It’s 8″ X 8″ X 10″. I can upgrade the processor, but it’s got 768 meg and a 120 gig drive. That’s close to enough for 10.4. I’m excited. The Mac Mini I’m on now is just underpowered for what I’m doing. This should be better and later I can use it around the house to play music or something off the network shared iTunes.

I also ordered a G4 Power Mac to use as a file server. All the USB drives can connect to that and it will be a constantly running file server. It was $180 for an old G4/466 with 4 PCI slots.

Links for Switching to Mac

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Flip4Mac
VLC
Swap Ctrl-Alt to match Windows
Make Home & End work like Windows
     In FF
SVN
FTP – Transfer
FireFox
VMWare Fusion
iTunes
     Store Purchasing/Track Info
     Audible Authorization
Neo/CrossOffice
RDP
Adium
Chicken of the VNC
Pixelmator
TextMate
Colloquy

Guide to Switching to Mac

10 Things Every New Mac Owner Should Know

Top 30 mistakes made by new Mac users

Switch to the Mac

Welcome to the MacRumors Buyer’s Guide
This page provides a product summary for each Apple model. The intent is to provide our best recommendations regarding current product cycles, and to provide a summary of currently available rumors for each model.

Bye Bye MacBook

Tuesday, August 26th, 2008

So, when the MB broke down recently I was left with an easier decision about upgrading. The new HDD is a clean install of 10.5. There’s a lot of work to do finding and downloading apps, passwords, unique Windows-ish settings etc. The MB was deficient in two areas. Neither were a factor when I got it. One was memory. It originally came with 1 gig and I upgraded it to 3, the max. This helped out quite a bit, but the current ones max out at 4 gig. The second was the built in video card, which uses the CPU and main memory and is a plain 2d business class device.

Over the year I’ve had it my usage and needs have changed. This little thing is now my main machine and I need more out of it. The big driver is Virtual Machines or VMs. I can run several flavors of Windows in one or many different VMs. This is a priceless feature at work and has been handy at home for building Windows applications.

VMWare Fusion had just come out when I bought the MB and since then has expanded from working with WinXP and Win2K to Win95, WinNT, Win98, WinXP, Win2K, and Vista w/Aero. Each VM consumes memory locked away from other apps. And for graphical 3d elements in WinXP and Vista a 3d video card is required. So, the MB is a little constrained for this.

So, I went to Mac of All Trades and got a quote of $600 for it. That’s about half what I paid 1 yr ago. Now I just have to box him up in the original package, which I kept.

His replacement is in limbo. This is the time of the year when Apple announces upgrades and everyone feels that it is time. There’s also the chance of a big change. I’ll hobble along for a month or so until I find out. Then get a clearance or new box. Maybe. It’s a hard temptation to resist.

My eye is currently on the entry level MacBook Pro (MBP). It has a 4 gig max memory limit, 200 gig hard drive, separate nVidia 8600 256 meg gaming video card, FireWire 800, aluminum case, backlit keyboard, and 15″ screen. Though the midlevel MB is very tempting. It has a weak 3d video card, 4 gig memory limit, 160 gig hard drive, glossy plastic case, $700 less, and is 1″ smaller on each side. I like smaller. Either way a 4 gig memory upgrade is needed and doing it myself will save $60.