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  • 17 inches

    The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) is reporting that Apple has introduced the 17-inch Macbook Pro. Still too big a machine for me personally, but still great as a portable workstation.

  • MacBook Pro Review

    Over on Inside Mac Games is a review of the MacBook Pro that makes a new Mac even more tempting. Though I still think I’m going to hold out for an iMac.

  • What’s the buzz

    There are a crazy amount of iPod accessories out there, but this is the most… uh, interesting one yet. For that special someone in your life.

    iBuzz—iPod Controlled Vibrator
     Images Ibuzz
    Merry Christmas, Mom! Apparently this little device, which hooks up to the iPod and buzzes in time to your music library, is the hottest Christmas gift going. It’s great for getting to sore muscles and aching bones and might even be used for a bit of extracurricular self-induced carnival time after hours, but we wouldn’t condone that at all. The body is a temple.

    Huge buzz for iPod gizmo [The Sun]

    [via Gizmodo]

  • Anime on the iPod

     Ipod Ipod

    More and more content for the video iPod keeps showing up. This time it’s anime from Central Park Media. Their initial offering is a show called Votoms. While I don’t have a video iPod it’s still stuff I can watch on my computer. But people are already putting out content.

    [Via The Unofficial Apple Website]

  • Mac Mini

    I’ve been a little quiet lately. Doing a bunch of reading and playing World of Warcraft. Somewhere in there Apple released the Mac Mini. I seriously want one. I’ve got an old B&W G3 it would replace just perfectly. I’d probably want the $599 one though. I kind of wish they offered a higher end one with the SuperDrive that wasn’t a custom build though.

    One thing I’ve found is that this has many numerous people I know who had been trying to avoid getting a mac finally take the plunge. Bout time Apple made a move like this. Btw, if you’re getting one, bump the memory up to at least 512MB if not a full gig. You’ll be happy you did.

  • Ramblings of a Cultist

    (Okay, before I get into this post I’ll admit that I’m a Mac user. I’ve been a sysadmin for over a decade and have had to maintain all variety of machines and OSes (From Suns to PCs to Macs). Up until the release of Mac OS X I honestly wouldn’t have considered getting a Mac, but now that I have one I am immensely happy with it. So my response to this is both as a sysadmin and as a Mac owner. Okay, on with the post.)

    Rich Brooks over at the Herald Tribune wrote a column about a FL school system’s decision to switch from Macs to PCs running Windows a week or so ago. At the time I read it and just kind of shrugged it off. He’s now written a second article talking about all the mails he got from the people in the Mac cult. So I thought I’d chime in (that’s what blogs are for, right?).

    As I read it, his original argument boiled down to this statement:

    But with PCs locking in 97 percent of the market, deciding what kind of computers to use in a school system is a no-brainer. [Rich Brookes]

    On the surface I agree that it looks to be a no-brainer. But I think there are more issues to look at than that. First off, the cost of this project is $7 million. I’m assuming that’s just the price of the hardware (though he doesn’t say). You’ve also got to figure that if your existing support staff don’t understand PCs they’ll either have to be retrained or replaced. You need all new versions of software. There may be various educational apps that have been in use that don’t exist on the PC, which means more spent on finding alternatives. I also believe that support costs for Windows are higher than OS X. I don’t have any data,this is based purely on the amount of times I’ve had to spend dealing with issues on each OS. And the number of sleepless nights each has given me.

    My biggest gripe with the first article is that he has no idea as to what the capabilities of the Mac are. He’s heard they don’t require as much maintenance, and that they are better for graphics and video. But he doesn’t know for sure.

    Needless to say, the Mac community went nuts over this article. Prompting Mr. Brooks to write a followup column: Revenge of the Mac user cult (and why they missed the point).

    Woe unto anyone who publicly questions the efficacy of Macintosh computers.

    You will be set upon by the cult of Mac users. They will call you names. They will tell your boss that you should be fired. They will write long letters and e-mails detailing the history of home computers. [Rich Brooks]

    Now I’ll be the first to admit that Mac users tend to be very zealous about their computers. I’ll even admit to a bit of it myself. I think they’ve done a great job breathing life back into the Macintosh line in the past few years. I’m someone who always hated having to give into the graphics people and go mac for them. But, I do agree that a lot of Mac users sometimes go a bit too far with their comments.

    While I don’t excuse that kind of behavior I can understand it. I can work with any operating system. Most do at least one or two things better than other operating systems. The problem I run into is that people refuse to even consider Macs most of the time. They don’t even want to think about trying it. So I think a lot of Mac users get annoyed when Macs are just dismissed without a second thought.

    I do think it would make for an interesting article if Mr. Brooks were to try out a Mac for a month and report back. I can’t say that there won’t be issues. I’m just as critical of OS X’s problems as I am with Windows. But I would like to think he’d be pleasantly suprised by the Mac.

    Oh, and floppy drives are dead. With those little USB drives being so cheap these days I can easily see the floppy drive becoming nonstandard on the PC within a year or so.

  • Why Popcap.com Sucks Now

    The other day #!/usr/bin/girl posted about Bejeweled 2 over at Popcap.com. Having liked the original I hopped on over and tried to play. I click on the ‘Click to Play’ link and the familiar Popcap game window pops up with the instructions and no game. I hit reload a few times with the same result. I closed out the window and clicked on Bookworm, then original Bejeweled to see if they worked. Both played just fine (and wasted a good bit of my time).

    So I fired off an email to their customer support asking for help. This morning I got back the following response.

    Which Internet Browser are you using? Zuma, Insanaquarium, Bejeweled 2, and Astropop will only work in Internet Explorer on a Windows machine because they use Active X. ActiveX is a code that defines MicrosoftÂ’s interaction between web servers, clients, add-ins and Microsoft Office applications. ActiveX is MicrosoftÂ’s answer to Java technology from Sun Microsystems.

    So, if you’re a Popcap fan, forget running any new games from them for the moment. They seem to have ditched any support for other browsers/oses. The thing I find more annoying is that Insanaquarium used to run just fine on OS X, so I’m not quite sure when they made the switch. Bastards.

    And yes, I know IE is still the most popular browser out there (Though it sounds like those numbers are being slowly chipped away at by things like Firefox). But the other thing that irks me is that I think these games are written in Java, at least that is what their web site indicates. Anyone know for sure? Oh yes, and Popcap support? ActiveX is not M$’s answer to Java. C# maybe, but not ActiveX.

  • The Mouse I Want

    Gme225B
    I’d written IOGEAR around a month ago asking when the Bluetooth Mini Mouse that they announced during the summer would be out. I got a nice reply back a day or two later that explained it wouldn’t be out until sometime first quarter of 2005. At the time I was kind of bummed because I really like their Mini Mouse line, but was holding out for bluetooth.

    Today I just noticed on one of the blogs I read that it had been released! (I wish I could remember which blog so I could give them credit.) I plan on getting one of these as soon as I get paid next. It’s a much more manageable size to carry around. Also, it comes with rechargeable batteries. A very nice touch. It’s a little bit more than I was wanting to spend on a mouse, but I think I will get a lot of good use out of it.

    I’ll post a review if I end up getting it.

  • Stewart Copeland, Mac Geek

    Derrick Story writes about his Favorite Stewart Copeland Story:

    The next day, when we had a few moments to talk, I asked him what he thought of the laptop. Stewart was in a great mood. He said that since he didn’t have any of his stuff on it, he just nosed around, and quickly discovered GarageBand. Stewart is more of a ProTools kind of guy, so he’s never taken the time to check out GB.

    “I saw this cool looking guitar on the dock,” he said. “So I clicked on it. It seemed like about 20 minutes had passed, but it was more like a couple hours. Next thing I knew, I had some pretty sweet tracks put together. And that was without a USB keyboard (as in the musical type). I was just tapping on the computer itself.” [O’reilly:Derrick Story]

  • Some Mac game News

    Some quick Mac gaming bits from Insidemacgames.com in the last week or two. The first is the re-release of a game that I found quite cool and quite disturbing when it came out: Bad Mojo.

    Originally hatched in 1996 under the gleeful gaze of publishers Pulse Entertainment, Bad Mojo tells the quirky, Kafka-esque story of mad scientist and entomologist Roger Samms, who, one morning, wakes up to find that he’s been temporarily turned into… a cockroach. Players are entrusted with navigating the reborn insect back to safety along a path of discovery across the giant obstacle course that has become his own apartment building. [insidemacgames.com]

    And also, sometime next month or so we should give us the release of The Fool and his Money:

    Further to yesterday’s news item regarding the upcoming release of his new metapuzzle, independent game developer Cliff Johnson has contacted the IMG News Staff with further news regarding his current project, the long-awaited sequel The Fool And His Money.

    According to Cliff, the current projected completion date for the new title has been pushed till December of this year; December 6th, to be exact, judging by the completion countdown clock on his web page.

    Despite the game’s numerous delays, the game developer’s rabid fan base are standing behind the solo programmer, and are offering unconditional support to his latest effort. In his email to IMG, Cliff writes:

    What has been and continues to be both thrilling and heartwarming is the tremendous outpouring of love and affection for The Fool’s Errand (and 3 in Three) from True Believers all over the world, confirming what I’ve always suspected… that folks from all walks of life enjoy the game. To borrow the retired Mac slogan, “a game for the rest of us.”

    [insidemacgames.com]

    This is one I’ve been waiting to come out for ages (here’s my post on it from over a year ago). I am so psyched to see it finally coming out. The Fool’s Errand is still one of my favorite games of all time.