MacTexan Wallpaper o' th' Week

Sedona Starry Night


Help us, WE'RE BROKE:
AppleStock
Search MacTexan
MacTexan on Twitter

Wednesday
Jul202011

Macbook Air: 3 Reasons Why Its No Longer a Toy

Today's release of the new Macbook Air lineup vaults the machines from "nice to have, but not enough machine to do any real computing" to "the future of laptops".  I'm speaking more specifically about the new top of the line 13" model.  With the processor upgrade to the Core i5 and i7 "Sandy Bridge" line and the addition of the Thunderbolt port, the two biggest knocks on the Air have been quashed.  Additionally, the keyboard is now backlit which, for me, was a total show stopper with the previous model.

It will be fun to see the reviews from the "experts" (guys with enough readers or money to get the new models early) who slammed the previous model for being too slow, too underpowered and with too few expansion options. As I examine the specs for this new mini-mighty 13" model, I can only find one reason not to buy it: there's too few Thunderbolt accessories to date.  As with any new peripheral interface, it will take the third party guys a while to catch up, but in the next couple of months we will have forgotten about today's shortcomings.  So, why do I think the new Air defines the future of laptops?

  1. Moving parts and portability don't mix well. With no hard disk or DVD drive the Air is a true "solid state" machine.  The two most fragile components of a laptop are also the slowest. The SSD is so much faster than a spinning disk that even the previous generation Air with its much slower processor felt snappy and responsive and 256 gigs ain't shabby.  DVD drives are going the way of the floppy disk. I can't remember the last time I slid a disk into my MacBook Pro. Yep, more rugged, affordable and much faster...I'll take it.
  2. Core i5 & i7 = Plenty of muscle.  Let's face it, a 1.4 GHz Core 2 Duo is a bit whimpy when we're talking about modern laptops.  While they're adequate for the $500 Best Buy specials, we Mac users have come to expect a bit more for $1000+.  While still just dual-core, these new grinders have enough beef to handle all but the most demanding number crunching, like video encoding or 3D modeling.  Virtually everything else is quite doable.
  3. Thunderbolt will make all things possible. OK, maybe I'm jumping the gun a little bit, but my mind just reels when I think about all the technology a bi-directional 10 gigabit connection makes possible. I imagine it won't be long before we see gigabit ethernet adapters, firewire hubs, external video cards and much more to go along with the already available super-fast storage devices. The old "lack of peripheral connectivity" argument no longer holds any water at all.

Any one of these improvements alone make a MacBook Air a very desireable machine, but taken together (especially in the 13" model) the Air could become a "MacBook Pro Killer".

 

Friday
Jun102011

Friday
Jun032011

Zero Day: Finally, a Great Novel for Geeks

I've been a fan of Mark Russinovich for years.  Not because he was a novelist, but because he knew more about Windows than Microsoft.  I relied on his site sysinternals.com to research my toughest Win32 problems when I was an IT manager.  He was (is) so knowledgable in fact, Microsoft hired him and bought out his site.

I'm not in the habit of reviewing books.  At least not novels.  In fact, the last novel I got really caught up in was The DaVinci Code.  By caught up I mean I couldn't put it down.  I burned through 200 pages per day, stayed up late and got up early to finish it.  I've read several books since, including a couple of really good novels, but haven't been caught up until I started reading Zero Day.

I've read a couple of novels where tech and/or hacking was a central theme but I either never found them believable or the tech stuff was so over the top it ruined the story.  Not so with Zero Day.  It turns out Mr. Russinovich is as excellent at writing novels as he is at writing code. Zero Day has everything a good novel needs; rich characters, an excellent plot, intrigue and just enough sex.  From a geek angle, Mr. Russinovich nails it. After the first couple of chapters I had no doubt he has walked a mile in our shoes.  I burned through all 320 pages in two days.  Couldn't put it down.  Amazon has the book in two forms, hardcover ($16.49) and a Kindle version ($11.99), of course.  If you enjoy MacTexan.com then I have no doubt you'll love Zero Day. In fact, this book is so well done non-geeks will love it too.

Tuesday
May312011

MacTexan Podcast #31: "Backup Your Mac" Show Notes

News

  • Apple makes huge inroads in enterprise as corporate Mac sales surge 66% | AppleInsider
  • Apple malware evolved – No password required | Naked Security

How-To

Subscribe in iTunes.

MacTexan Podcast #31

 

Monday
May162011

MacTexan Podcast #30 "Storage for Your Mac" Show Notes

News

 

  • Microsoft to Fork Over $8.5 Billion for Skype Acquisition | Mac|Life
  • Samsung announces 2560 x 1600 display, could pave the way for iPad 3 | TUAW
  • Pros choose iPhone over Android; 99.8% choose iPad | The Loop

How-To

  • All About Storage
    • Local
      • Interfaces: USB, Firewire 400, Firewire 800, eSATA, USB3, Thunderbolt
    • LAN
      • Wireless 802.11 a/b/g/n, 10/100/1000 Ethernet
      • Time Capsule
    • On-line
      • Dropbox, iDisk, Box.net, Wuala

Software Pick

 Subscribe in iTunes.

MacTexan Podcast #30

 

Errors occurred while processing template[pageRendered/journal.st]:
StringTemplate Error: Can't parse chunk: {settingHomePageKBArticle}" target="_blank">Learn how.</a></li>
<li>If you have already selected a front page, make sure it is enabled. Click on the Cubes icon (top right) and then click the "enable page" button.</li>
</ol>
</div>

: expecting '"', found '<EOF>'
StringTemplate Error: problem parsing template 'pageRendered/noDefaultModule': null
StringTemplate Error: problem parsing template 'pageRendered/noDefaultModule': null