Archive for the ‘Apple’ Category

iTunes selling HD movies now. How about BD-R next?

Friday, March 20th, 2009

So, now that you can buy and rent HD video content from your computer using iTunes, is it not a logical step to want to view your HD content on your HDTV?  Given, one can do that if you’ve got a Mac mini home theater system or an AppleTV, but what if you just have a good ol’ BluRay player?  I think that the best thing Apple could do to introduce BluRay to the Mac is to allow burning HD video to BD-R discs in iTunes.

When iTunes music was still DRMd, you could burn it to an unencrypted audio CD and still play it on your stereo.  With the plummeting costs of BD-R drives, and relatively low cost of BD-R media, I think that now would be a fantastic opportunity to allow the conversion of the video into a (maybe even still DRMd) more usable format! Given, most of us would prefer a non-restricted format, but most folks are just looking to play their content in a format they have easy access to. Audio CD is one format. BluRay is another.

I know that licensing these things is a pain in the anus, but I believe Apple could own the market in downloadable-to-BluRay video, and it should not be underestimated.

FUCK APPLE

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/03/apple-adds-still-more-drm-ipod-shuffle

EDIT 2009-03-18:
It would seem that Apple has not restricted so much as made the documentation available only to those who wish to properly license the “Made for iPod” certification mark on their products.  Assuming nobody C&Ds independent manufacturers of headphones who reverse engineer but don’t infringe on the certification mark, I’m not against this.  Sorry for the alarm.

Big Frank, Little Frank, and the Nehalem Mac Pro

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

I was screwing around with a new single quad-core Mac Pro the other day and saw this on the logic board:

BigFrankLittleFrank

and thought “what the fuck is that?” I haven’t seen an easter egg, hardware or software, on an Apple product in a LONG time. I have no idea what the “Big Frank” non-socket or “Little Frank” actual-socket is. My only speculation is that the single quad-core board is the “Little Frank” and that the dual quad-core board is “Big Frank”.  I’ll speculate some more and say that maybe the connector is for the equipment testing hardware.  Any other guesses?  I love mystery ports on Apple’s boards.

This wouldn’t be the first time Apple’s used the same base board design with different connector placement depending on the model. If you have an original or ALS iMac G5 (all-white, no iSight camera) and you look at the logic boards, the 17″ and 20″ models have essentially the same board, but with the LCD inverter plugs in different locations and DIMM sockets facing the other direction. There are a few other minor differences, but one time I got a board almost-seated in the wrong size machine. I only noticed it when some of the plug locations were in the wrong place.

Back to the Core i7 Xeon Mac Pro. I wonder if the huge processor/memory board on the single quad-core machine is replaceable with the board from a dual quad-core machine with full function?  I would assume “no” because Apple rolls that way with often-unnecessary firmware limitations on its hardware.  Is there someone familiar with Intel boards able to tell me why or why not?

Hey Assholes: Stop Abusing Your MacBook Airs!

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Like most people who beat the shit out of their expensive electronics, when it breaks, these douchebags immediately cry about a line-wide defect necessitating a class action lawsuit.

Never mind the fact that I’ve, since the age of 14 (13 years ago, for those counting) lived out of PowerBooks from the Duo 270c on up and NEVER NOT ONCE had a broken hinge despite my not-always-nice treatment of my equipment.  Never mind the fact that the MacBook Air was the first of Apple’s portable computers to use the block-of-aluminum manufacturing technique to increase structural stability.  Never mind the fact that I saw a guy at a Starbucks walking around holding his MacBook Air BY THE SCREEN when his hinge did just what the whiny tools at Engadget are saying (at the submitter’s request, I suppose) is a defect.  The other thing I’ve seen cause the MacBook Air hinge to do just that is just plain pushing the screen back real fast, real hard and ignoring the METAL ON METAL TENSION that would cause normal people to stop pushing the goddamned screen back.  Push too hard, and *SNAP*.

Next thing you know is a class action lawsuit against Apple for not making the Unibody MacBook line strong enough to take impacts from a 5 foot drop because, you know, they’re built stronger and should be able to hold up to “normal use.”  Kind of like the human knee not being able to extend 270 degrees.  I smell a class action lawsuit against God…

Western Digital loves the AppleTV

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Just last week, I noticed on XLR8YourMac.com that OWC was advertising 320GB Western Digital 2.5″ EIDE hard disks.  I thought it was a typo, since nobody makes an EIDE drive bigger than 160GB except for WD, and I thought it pretty unlikely they’d push R&D dollars into a dying connection standard.  To my pleasant surprise, a day later, the WD3200BEVE was listed on their corporate site.

This is good news for anyone who, for whatever reason, needs to keep their older PowerPC Mac portables alive a bit longer, and even better news for those who wish to hack their AppleTV with a 320GB hard disk!  Going from 40GB to 160GB is decent, which is why Apple chose to offer it as an option.  But why only go to 250GB, which was for a long time the previous largest disk option available?  The new drive allows hardware hackers to get a bit more utility out of the AppleTV, which is becoming something of a surprise hit.

Considering that the AppleTV has not been updated in the 2 years since its launch, it’s amazing that the little thing is selling as well as it is.  I hope that Apple sees fit to officially offer a 320GB drive option on the AppleTV should they continue to stick with EIDE.  But, seriously, is there a good reason why the next AppleTV wouldn’t have Serial ATA?  Then I could toss the (amazing) Western Digital WD5000BEVT in it.  Or, even better, hack it to get one of those sweet new 2TB Caviar Green drives running it.

And, for the record, I am not being paid by Western Digital for all of the gushing I give them.  I consider not losing my data to be payment enough.

My 25 Years With The Macintosh

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

My 25 years with the Macintosh is, maybe, a different experience than others you’ve read online. If you’ve seen Apple’s “1984″ commercial, you’ll know that the original Macintosh computer was introduced on January 24, 1984. When the commercial aired at that year’s Super Bowl, I was still over 3 months away from my second birthday, and almost a decade away from my first in-depth experience with the Macintosh.

It was late 1993, probably November or December, that I convinced my parents to buy me a two-pack of 3.5-inch floppy disks at Sav-On so I could move information between the Mac we had at home and the Macs I used at school. Early versions of System 7 were what I first got accustomed to, and the Apple hardware varied quite a bit.

Earlier in elementary school, my 4th grade class participated in a program sponsored by National Geographic, where students would dial into a service over a POTS modem and communicate with other students across the country, and if I remember correctly, across the world. That would have placed my first REAL computing experience in 1991 or 1992, dialing into an internet gateway at 2400bps using an Apple IIgs. I recall having a binder of information about the program, but it has long since been discarded. It would be another 2 years before I had another revolutionary computing experience.

When I got my two floppy disks (one of which I threw away because I wasn’t using it at the time) I realized that I could copy software from the school computer to my home computer. Now, the SE/30 I had at home wasn’t nearly as pretty and colorful as the LC520 I was using at school, but it got the job done. I spent most of my days of 6th grade in front of the computer, playing with the software and figuring out how to take games my friends brought to school back home with me. I wasn’t able to get my hands on any printed information about the Mac, so everything I learned was from trial and error.

In junior high, I was involved in the video production class, and the infant non-linear editing systems that were sprouting up. Most of what we did, though, was deck-to-deck on SVHS, but I remember the PowerPC LC series opening up the door to the Gryphon Morph program, which was used to consistently embarass students at school my turning them into animals on the video magazine program aired each week. By the end of 8th grade, I’d developed enough skills in troubleshooting the Macs that I was frequently called out of class to fix other teachers’ machines since the school district’s technical support was (and to this day is) terribly lacking.

At the beginning of my freshman year, I got the first Mac I called my own: a used PowerBook Duo 270c. 240MB internal hard disk, 12MB of RAM, and a 14.4 modem (which could be software-upgraded to 19.2!) For a month or two, I was diong well, moving files between machines through LocalTalk or modem-to-modem with Zterm, until one day I screwed the OS. I had to get disks and a Duo Dock, or I was done. I learned my lesson, and try to keep myself prepared at all times.

About a year and a half later, I upgraded to a PowerBook 3400c/180 with a CD-ROM built in (!) and a spiffy PowerPC processor. It allowed me to do much better web design with its 800×600 screen and it ran software so much better than the good, but tiring 33 MHz Duo. I ran that machine into the ground, until OS 9 and its 1.3GB hard disk and 144MB of RAM was no longer adequate.

My freshman year of college, my parents helped me buy a PowerBook G3 with FireWire which was quite possibly my favorite portable of all time. It was relatively easy to upgrade, and by the time I got rid of it, I had installed 1GB of RAM and an 80GB hard disk. Its specs were far beyond what I had envisioned when I bought the machine.

My current computer is a 2.6 GHz MacBook Pro with a 15-inch screen, 4GB of RAM, a 500GB hard disk and faster “legacy” ports than the fastest cutting edge technologies from only a few years ago. The amount of power WASTED on single processes on this computer is probably more than the maximum speed of my PowerBook G3. There is only one feature lacking on this MacBook Pro that would make it better than the old Pismo: swappable optical drive. Road warriors demand battery life, and I always had two batteries in my G3. I have a spare battery, of course, but not having to worry about a switchout was a marvelous experience.

In late 2002, I began employment in an industry close to the Macintosh, and have remained with the company until the present day. Everything that I’ve experienced and learned since then has made me realize how little I knew back in junior high and high school, and compared with the UNIX “real” sysadmins, and developers, how little I know now. Even in 6 years, I’ve seen the world of Apple and the Macintosh change more than I could have imagined.

The Macintosh has become more popular, in unit sales, than at any time in its history. The Macintosh operating system has morphed into a solid BSD UNIX based, but friendly for consumer use, platform for the most robust and capable end-user media experience on the market. The switch to Intel processors was always rumored from the earliest versions of OS X, but flatly denied until 2005. The “big switch” was executed as a brilliant marketing campaign by Steve Jobs and company. Apple has become a major, respected player in the mobile phone market in under 2 years. Apple has also become one of the fastest-growing consumer electronics retailers in the world.

What I see under my fingertips, and what I use this machine for, is an almost unimaginable progression from my own humble beginnings with the Macintosh 15 years ago. I consider the gift of computers a blessing and a curse. It has given me the opportunity for a career doing something I enjoy (most of the time) but it has proved to be an addictive experience, not unlike caffeine, nicotine, or opiates. When used properly, these tools are amazingly useful. When abused, they create havoc.

In another 15 (or 25) years, I don’t know if I’ll be working at the same company, or even in the same industry. I could never have predicted my current technological experiences with accuracy back in 1993, and I will not attempt to predict technology and its impact on our lives that far into the future. I’ve forgotten more about Apple and the Macintosh over the past 15 years than most people learn in their entire computing experience. I can only hope that I’ll be able to look back on this anniversary of computing technology and realize it’s only gotten better.

WebKit now using Sparkle for self-updates!

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

This is glorious!

(Note I had to make this post in Safari 3.2.1 because WebKit Build 39953 seems to have an issue with WordPress 2.7′s semi-WYSIWYG editor adding a link to selected text.  Beta FAIL.)

Why I Don’t Jailbreak or Unlock My iPhone

Saturday, January 3rd, 2009

With the recent release of the software unlock for the iPhone 3G, and comments like the one on this Slashdot article basically saying that Apple is an evil corporation and they only approve apps for the store that will further their evil corporate desires (because 17 shitty “flashlight” apps will further their market share, right?) and as a result, users are “forced” to jailbreak their phones.

I want to state clearly that I do not want to stop people from jailbreaking and unlocking their phones.  You bought it, and you’ve got a right to do what you want to it.  However, don’t be pissed if someone at Apple tells you to pound sand because you’re dropping a lot of calls after installing baseband firmware written by a bunch of guys freezing their asses off in Ostrov Rudolfa. Think of it like this: you are a leet iPhone hacker kid, which means you own a Honda Civic (of course) and you put “Nos” in your Honda, not knowing that “Nos” is a brand of nitrous oxide injector systems made by Holley (of carburetor fame), not a genericized trademark for nitrous systems.  You’re driving down the 405 to Irvine (because that’s where all of the kids with modded Civics live) and you crack a piston trying to race a guy from Newport Beach in his Murcielago.  You aren’t going to take it back to the Honda dealer and ask them to fix your engine under warranty, right?

My iPhone works pretty damn well with the factory programs and the few iPhone apps I’ve downloaded from the store.  Unlike most JesusPhone owners, I don’t consider it a way of life nor do I consider it a political battleground.  I consider it a tool, and people will use their tools as they see fit.  I’ve got Chess with Friends, Shazam, TouchCalc, the iTunes Remote, the Weather Channel, WootWatch, and a couple others that I screw around with.  Other than that, my phone serves every purpose I want, and it’s only gotten better with the launch (and later, usability) of MobileMe, the over-the-air information syncing service from Apple.

Last year, I unlocked my phone and played around with the jailbreaking apps, and it was fun for a while, but like my experience with Linux on the desktop, I wanted to actually do something productive rather than just have a novelty toy.  Apple’s development of the iPhone software hasn’t been perfect, but it’s been good and it’s been better than anything I’ve experienced, long term, from a jailbroken device.  Recent jailbreaks require, rather than running a website that exploits security vulnerabilities to crack it (which is sketchy anyways) that you install custom software installation images.  I’m sure that the folks posting those images are not using that medium to spread malware, but what is stopping them?  I’ll trust factory images to run my phone thankyouverymuch.

My iPhone does pretty much everything I want it to do, with the narrow exception of what some of my smaller candybar Sony Ericsson phones do.  But all in all, it’s a nice device that I don’t feel I have to hack and customize to display my uniqueness as a human being.  I have the rest of the internet to do that with.

Canon G10 Raw & Aperture: About Damn Time!

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Took long enough: Digital Camera Raw Compatibility Update 2.4

Dave Coffin had it done a while ago: DCraw

Now, since I’m about ready to die, I’m going to go back to sleep.

Upgrade to Vista… to use these speakers!

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

So I was screwing around looking at Windows Vista information and stumbled upon this little gem on Microsoft’s website:

 

Click to see full image...

Click to see full image...

I began to channel my inner rant-mongerer instantly:

See, I’m a trendy twentysomething and I hang out with all of the other metrosexuals with nothing better to do at the Gateway Apple Store trolling for whatever it is I troll for, and I was inspired by the artful design of some speaker set designed by a European with a name I cannot pronounce from a country I didn’t know existed.  I want to hook it up to my (shhhh…) Dell laptop, but it is running Windows XP.  I didn’t realize that even though the audio out jack thing that looks like a headphone plug needed Windows Vista to be compatible with these EuroFab ButtPlug Bass Thump Pro speakers, even though it looks like it should just plug in.  Thanks Microsoft for enlightening me!

I realized that I did want to upgrade my computer to run Windows Vista.  See, even though my current computer has an audio-out jack, I want to get the best performance out of its sound capabilities.  I hope Vista’s performance will be OK on it:

 

Click to see full image...

Click to see full image...

And yes, children, the Macintosh SE/30 (the best little all-in-one Apple ever made) did have the same audio out jack your MacBook has on the left side.  Amazing, isn’t it!  To think, we had to wait all these years for Vista to unlock its full potential!