#310556 - 28/05/2008 13:00
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: DWallach]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 17/01/2002
Posts: 3996
Loc: Manchester UK
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It appears my MBP is leaking electricity too. I can charge it up to 100% then disconnect it and leave it sleeping overnight and when I come back to it, it's lost 1/4 of its charge. I'm wondering wether it's not actually going to sleep, it keeps getting woken up. The only way to tell what it's doing would be to open the lid, which wakes it up anyway.
It's getting on for 2 years old, so I'm probably not going to bother apple over it.
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Cheers,
Andy M
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#310557 - 28/05/2008 13:23
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: andym]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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You might try installing Deepsleep. This lets you put your machine directly into hibernation mode. If your computer is still leaking battery, then something is definitely wrong (as it was for my MBA).
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#310565 - 28/05/2008 17:23
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: andym]
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addict
Registered: 24/07/2002
Posts: 618
Loc: South London
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It appears my MBP is leaking electricity too. I can charge it up to 100% then disconnect it and leave it sleeping overnight and when I come back to it, it's lost 1/4 of its charge. I'm wondering wether it's not actually going to sleep, it keeps getting woken up. The only way to tell what it's doing would be to open the lid, which wakes it up anyway.
It's getting on for 2 years old, so I'm probably not going to bother apple over it. My powerbook G4 (still my main computer at home!) battery was one of the ones which got replaced due to the fire risk, I however never bothered to send the other battery back to apple. Infact I never actually unpacked the battery, it sat in the box from apple for about a year! I then had to take a trip to Australia and QF specifically stated that dell or apple computers with affected batteries could not be operated inflight, so I figured now was the time to dig out the new battery. I was amazed at the leap in battery life when I switched over to it! I think because the battery life had diminished slowly over a long period that I never noticed it. However, it keeps plodding along and the powerbook still does everything I need it to do. I suspect I won't need to update until the PPC of obsoleted by the version of OS X that no longer supports that architecture. Adrian
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#310567 - 28/05/2008 17:39
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: burdell1]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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Sorry to derail the thread at all, but I wanted to add that I'm also considering taking the plunge and going Mac. It won't be a complete shift, because I'll certainly be running Boot Camp at the very least, probably Fusion or Parallels. I just had a few questions because at the moment, the number one obstacle is cost. I've concluded that I'm going to have to get nothing less than a baseline Mac Pro (I already have a cheap laptop that wouldn't scare me if dropped, and an iMac would make my 30" monitor kind of unnecessary). Now, if we compare the same computer selling on Amazon and Apple's stores, I can get in on Amazon for about $250 less (I didn't think you could get anything Apple sold for less anywhere). Is that the best I can do? I'm certainly never going to let Apple add RAM to a machine (at what looks like a 500% markup), but is there anywhere else I can shave off the price? I've looked at the refurbs, and it looks like I can either get last year's model, or spend $4100. That's not going to happen. I have two questions as far as longevity of my purchase (since I've never spent this much on a computer): 1) does anyone see any major advancements coming in say the next 6 months that would suggest holding off for something better or a price drop? 2) How easy is it to overclock the dual 2.8GHz quad-core Mac Pro? Then I have one more question relating to computer use: when it comes to computers, I am a man who lives and dies by his folder structures. That's simply how I have to organize myself. Given that I have almost next to no experience with the Mac OS, do you think it will still be conducive to my computing habits? Here's a good example: will iTunes allow me to organize my files on the Mac just as it does on the PC? Thanks for the help, and sorry for derailing this thread
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Matt
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#310569 - 28/05/2008 18:13
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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The only significant discounts you can get on Apple hardware are student discounts. If you have a friend or family still in school (or a teacher), it might be worth it to look. The iMac can take an external monitor, FWIW. Up to 1920x1200 for external digital monitors. I don't know what resolution your 30"er is, but probably more than that. MacOS has hierarchical folders just like Windows does. It just doesn't have the "drive letter" concept. I can't tell you for sure about iTunes (I don't use it on either platform) but I'd be amazed if the Windows version had a capability that the MacOS version didn't. (I did use iTunes on a Mac for a while ages ago, and you could definitely keep your mp3s in their original location and not have to put them all inside iTunes' datastore.) Why not consider the Mac Mini? It's not as fast, but it's certainly fast enough, and it's far cheaper. Oh, it only supports 1920x1200, too.
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Bitt Faulk
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#310571 - 28/05/2008 18:38
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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Sorry to derail the thread at all, but I wanted to add that I'm also considering taking the plunge and going Mac. It won't be a complete shift, because I'll certainly be running Boot Camp at the very least, probably Fusion or Parallels. The key thing to do is to make sure you try to do whatever tasks on OS X first, otherwise you are going to just run Windows on the machine and not bother migrating. If gaming is a concern, use Boot Camp to install Windows, then Fusion or Parallels can just boot the Boot Camp partition. No need for dual installs, and no need to have apps installed twice. I reboot to play games, and do everything else Windows specific in Fusion. Based on your likely choice of a Mac Pro, I'd recommend Fusion. It offers 2 processor SMP to the guest OS. Now, if we compare the same computer selling on Amazon and Apple's stores, I can get in on Amazon for about $250 less (I didn't think you could get anything Apple sold for less anywhere). Is that the best I can do? I'm certainly never going to let Apple add RAM to a machine (at what looks like a 500% markup), but is there anywhere else I can shave off the price? I've looked at the refurbs, and it looks like I can either get last year's model, or spend $4100. That's not going to happen. Refurbs change daily, so check often. They are a good value, but you have to wait for what config you want, and it may not be exact. As for ways to get a discount, check to see if your company gets one. Beyond that, if you are a student somewhere, you can check what your school discount is, or go a step farther and pay $99 to become an Apple student developer. Student developers get a one time discount on hardware, and it will be more then enough to make up for the $99 paid. Developer pricing can be seen here. I bought RAM for mine from OWC. RAM for a Mac Pro is going to be pricy compared to others, since it is server/workstation class RAM with error checking and correction. Also, the Mac Pro is very fussy about RAM heatsinks. Going with something not specifically designed for the Mac Pro can cause it to rev up the fans to an annoying level in an attempt to keep the memory cool. The machine is near silent in most situations, so adding non standard ram will be noticeable. I have two questions as far as longevity of my purchase (since I've never spent this much on a computer): 1) does anyone see any major advancements coming in say the next 6 months that would suggest holding off for something better or a price drop? 2) How easy is it to overclock the dual 2.8GHz quad-core Mac Pro? Apple doesn't price drop equipment over time, it simply discontinues it, throws the leftovers on the refurb store, and starts selling the new configs. Looking 6 months ahead puts things right on the edge for Intel's next architecture change, where the memory controller will be moved onto the CPU similar to what AMD did a while back. Odds are this will be more then 6 months out for availability, and Apple would probably push new Mac Pros out with the chips next January. As for overclocking, I haven't looked deeply, but really have to question why. Doing so will void the warranty, and to me the warranty is a big reason for buying a complete desktop from a vendor like Apple over building it yourself. Then I have one more question relating to computer use: when it comes to computers, I am a man who lives and dies by his folder structures. That's simply how I have to organize myself. Given that I have almost next to no experience with the Mac OS, do you think it will still be conducive to my computing habits? Here's a good example: will iTunes allow me to organize my files on the Mac just as it does on the PC? iTunes for OS X is feature for feature identical to the Windows version. Defaults are a little different, but iTunes can be set to not organize your music. As can iPhoto for photos and such. However, I'd question your methods on OS X. The point of manual organization is to make finding information easier for the person who organized it, and to work around limitations of the system. OS X has Spotlight, and it works very well. I haven't bothered keeping my documents folder clean on OS X since Spotlight finds what I want nearly instantly. Same for my mail. It mostly all stays in the inbox, but a series of smart folders makes it easy for me to group messages, and Spotlight works well to find one particular message quickly. As for photos, iPhoto holds them all, and since I can find the events or keywords I want quickly, I could care less how the underlying folder structure is laid out.
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#310573 - 28/05/2008 19:03
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 13/07/2000
Posts: 4180
Loc: Cambridge, England
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How easy is it to overclock the dual 2.8GHz quad-core Mac Pro? Quite possibly impossible. These things have the 5000X workstation/server chipset in, not the 965 or other desktop chipsets. Intel's workstation chipsets aren't designed to make overclocking easy, because (with the questionable exception of the Mac Pro) the machines they go in are rarely bought by people interested in overclocking. You're best off just buying one that already goes as fast as you need. (Which might not be hard. Even my previous-generation Mac Pro, 1333FSB, 2x2-core, is hooning fast.) The key thing to do is to make sure you try to do whatever tasks on OS X first, otherwise you are going to just run Windows on the machine and not bother migrating. Which, depending on why you're making the switch in the first place, wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing: you'd still be using one of the best-engineered Windows workstations there is. I can't remember when I last booted mine into OS X (from Linux), but it could easily be a year ago. Peter
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#310574 - 28/05/2008 20:02
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: peter]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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Thanks for the responses, guys.
Believe me, I'm going to try my best to use the Mac OS as much as possible. There's simply some Windows programs that I've used day in and day out for years now that I can't/don't want to give up. I'm sure there are Mac alternatives to some of them, but many of them have Windows alternatives that haven't swayed me. Still, my plan was exactly as you described, Tom. I'd use Parallels or Fusion to boot the Boot Camp installation, and just boot into Windows for gaming (I don't game much now but I might if I had a beast of a machine like this one).
One of the biggest reasons I want to switch is to get into an environment that's actually friendly for video editing. I'm so sick of playing the codec game in Windows, and the software that's available has never impressed me. I hate Adobe's UI on all their programs, except for Audition (but they didn't make that - I loved Cool Edit Pro). I've been looking at Final Cut and even iMovie and they both look like better alternatives. Hell, even when it comes to basic video conversion, it looks like Visualhub beats the pants off any Windows app out there.
Bitt - yeah, I ruled out the Mac Mini a long while ago because of the resolution limitation. My 30" is native at 2560x1600, and the Mac Mini, iMac, and MacBook cannot do that. Only the MacBook Pro and Mac Pro can. Plus, I need some decent processing power for video stuff.
Thanks for the student discount links. My brother in law is in college right now, so maybe I'll work something out with him. It certainly looks like the big savings come when you start adding a lot of stuff, so I'll figure out if it's worth the hassle (at the base it's $200 cheaper, so that's pretty good because I can't customize the Amazon box).
Thanks again for the info, folks. I think I'd be happy with the longevity of the purchase for sure. I really don't care about overclocking but I thought I'd ask to be thorough. Thanks for all the help, and now I have to find the cash to drop on this bad boy.
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Matt
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#310575 - 28/05/2008 20:06
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: peter]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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Your marks.tar.gz file is corrupted. It's got a bunch of NULs at the beginning and end, and doesn't seem to have all its data there once they are removed.
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Bitt Faulk
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#310577 - 28/05/2008 21:58
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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There's simply some Windows programs that I've used day in and day out for years now that I can't/don't want to give up. I'm sure there are Mac alternatives to some of them, but many of them have Windows alternatives that haven't swayed me. Out of curiosity, what are they? I had a few apps I though were like that, till OS X versions grew on me. Still, my plan was exactly as you described, Tom. I'd use Parallels or Fusion to boot the Boot Camp installation, and just boot into Windows for gaming (I don't game much now but I might if I had a beast of a machine like this one). If gaming is going to be something you do on the box, make sure to upgrade to the 8800 GT option ($150 more on the normal pricing). It's a noticeable step up from the default ATI 2600 card, and will help to keep the machine a viable gaming machine for how long it will also likely be a viable video editing box. I think I'd be happy with the longevity of the purchase for sure. I really don't care about overclocking but I thought I'd ask to be thorough. Thanks for all the help, and now I have to find the cash to drop on this bad boy. I'm curious to see how long I stretch out the use of mine. I went with the 8 core config at 2.8, and threw in 4 more gigs of RAM on top of the 2 that it came with. I still have 4 RAM slots open, so thats not going to be a limit anytime soon. Down the road, I'm betting the video card will be bumped once at least, but that should be easy enough as the Mac Pro has the just recently released PCIe 2.0 slots in it. Processor wise, my hope is that apps continue to become more and more multicore optimized, so that they can just grow into the 8 procs I have rather then needing a faster one. This is the first true desktop I have had since the Pentium III days, so that alone is taking some time to get used to. Already the jump above my MacBook Pro is noticeable. Handbrake DVD encodes ran at about 20-25 FPS on it with the machine maxed out. The Pro is running them at 130-140 FPS with the same settings, and has enough processor power left over to allow World of Warcraft to still run full speed.
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#310578 - 28/05/2008 22:40
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 19/01/2002
Posts: 3584
Loc: Columbus, OH
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Out of curiosity, what are they? I had a few apps I though were like that, till OS X versions grew on me. I know the question wasn't addressed to me, but I'll throw one out there. I use iTunes to organize all of my music (and buy much of it). After purchasing in iTunes, I strip off the DRM and convert to mp3 so I can use my music on all my devices. Then, I tag them with a program called MediaMonkey. The reason I use MediaMonkey is that it can automatically grab the album art from Amazon and embed it in the id3 tag. iTunes doesn't embed the art in the tag, so when you copy some files to another computer or device, you have to re-download all of the art. Dumb. Once I've tagged my files with the art, iTunes will happily read the artwork from the id3 tag (although it won't write it to the tag.) Are there any suggestions for native Mac tagging utilities that will pull album art automatically and embed it in the id3 tag? If not, I'll just run MediaMonkey with Parallels.
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~ John
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#310582 - 29/05/2008 01:40
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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Out of curiosity, what are they? I had a few apps I though were like that, till OS X versions grew on me. Lets see...I'm looking through my overstuffed program files list... PSP 5.1 - For some reason, I simply love version 5.1 of Paint Shop Pro. It's ancient at this point, but I'm just so used to all the keyboard shortcuts and the layout that I use it all the time. I even have PSP 7 installed on my computer, but I rarely use it. I also love that somehow, my version of 5.1 is portable. DVD-lab Pro - I've preached about this program before, and I'll do it again. I haven't met a DVD creation program I've liked more. And believe me, I've tried about a dozen of them. Naturally, I haven't tried any Mac software yet. The thing I love about DVD-lab, though is the philosophy. It's an incredibly advanced program with a lot of pro-level options, but it's simple and straightforward to use without becoming dependant on wizards and crap that bogs down stuff like Pinnacle's software. THE Rename - A batch file naming utility. I'm sure there are ones available for the Mac OS, but I've been using this one for years (at least four, I think), and I just love it. VideoReDo Plus, Tivo Desktop Plus, and pyTivo - The first two are my only two essential applications that I paid for (I mostly use free software), and the only two that frankly cannot be replaced by the Mac. Tivo Desktop is on the Mac, but I don't believe the Plus (paid upgrade) version is. And VideoReDo is fantastic for removing commercials from Tivo recordings, mostly because it can re-save into the Tivo format, retaining all the metadata. So at the moment, I have every episode of Lost from this season on my Tivo without commercials, so it takes up about 3/5 of the space. It's great if you need to go back and see something from a previous episode (which we've done many times). I don't know if pyTivo will work on the Mac or if there's an alternative to it, but it's the primary way I get stuff onto my home theater. However, I'm hoping to get an Apple TV, and having a Mac would make it easier to convert video for it. MP3-Tag Studio 3 - My favorite tagging software. I've tried others and just don't like them. Granted, I haven't tried any for the Mac... uTorrent - Strictly for Linux ISOs and game patches I really like the slickness of this app, but I used Azureus before this one which was fine, and that works on Mac. Oh yeah, and Revision3 has bittorrent downloads... Picasa - What can I say? My life is in Google's hands. It's a dangerous dependancy that may bite me one day Openoffice.org - I believe they're working on a Mac version, though. GMail Notifier - Essentially I use this every minute of every day. Is there an alternative on the Mac? Applications for USB peripherals - Just did a quick check. Supported: Logitech MX-1000 mouse, Griffin Powermate, Canon photo printer, and naturally my various external drives (which I'll slowly start to format for the Mac file system of just make FAT32). Unsupported: Sony Ericsson phone suite (no big deal, I'll be moving to a smartphone soon anyway), Casio Disc Title Printers (this is a big one - I use these all the time). --------------------------------------------- So, that's my list. I suppose that some of these programs have Mac alternatives, but I just don't think I can give some of them up, and in the case of the Tivo and some of my USB devices, I don't have much of a choice. I'm also missing a bunch of portable apps that I use all the time like Scanner. Most of them are utility programs, though, that have clear Mac alternatives.
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Matt
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#310583 - 29/05/2008 03:57
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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I'll address your full list later when I have more time, but some quick ones I can address with little research: THE Rename - A batch file naming utility. OS X equivalent: Terminal and the many unix commands to do this. Learning how is a great way to get used to Unix commands in general, and the knowledge is highly portable. With Cygwin on Windows, such info is even usable there. I haven't used a GUI app to mass rename files for a long time. Sony Ericsson phone suite OS X equivalent: iSync/Address Book/iCal. Built in, and iSync has always supported SE phones very well. The old T68i was also the phone Apple used to always demo iSync way back when. Openoffice.org - as you already noted, has an OS X version. Give the trial of iWork a shot though, it's really nice in a lot of ways, and is also compatible with all the MS formats along with spitting out PDF and such. Picasa - Exists for OS X now, so transitioning should be easy. Give iPhoto a shot, but it all really depends on what you need out of a photo app. iPhoto can upload to various services with plugins if thats your big tie to Picasa. Really the only big benefit I can see in migrating beyond the native OS X app feel is the iLife integration. Photos in iPhoto show up in iWork for quick addition, in iMovie and iDVD for slideshows, and so on. *edit* Looks like Picasa for OS X is not out yet, but news from Macworld in January did say it is coming. Google provides the Picasa web album uploader for iPhoto now. uTorrent - OS X version I believe, but look into Transmission. GMail Notifier - I've seen some. Look for one with Growl support for an array of notification options. GMail over IMAP to Mail is always a possibility too. *edit* Google has their own too. http://www.google.com/mac/
Edited by drakino (29/05/2008 12:28)
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#310584 - 29/05/2008 03:59
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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PSP: Yeah, I haven't found a good cheap image editor for MacOS. Personally, I really liked Paint.NET for Windows, but I think your best option under MacOS is The Gimp, which ... well ... yeah. pyTivo: Yeah. It'll work under MacOS. Better than under Windows. MacOS comes with the Python interpreter. uTorrent: Yeah, uTorrent really is the best torrent client available. Transmission is a pretty good torrent client. As long as you want to download all the files in the torrent. If you don't, it'll waste hard drive space when it writes three bytes to files you don't want and allocate all the rest of the space for that file. You can use Azureus, too. It's still a good client. As long as you don't mind your computer running at the speed of a TI 99/4A. Openoffice.org: NeoOffice. You can also run the X-Windows version of OO.o, but I don't see any reason you'd want to do that. GMail Notifier: Google Notifier
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Bitt Faulk
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#310585 - 29/05/2008 04:10
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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I don't believe that either uTorrent or Picasa is available for Mac. If you know otherwise, I'd be interested.
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Bitt Faulk
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#310586 - 29/05/2008 04:57
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: wfaulk]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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THE Rename - A batch file naming utility. OS X equivalent: Terminal and the many unix commands to do this. Learning how is a great way to get used to Unix commands in general, and the knowledge is highly portable. With Cygwin on Windows, such info is even usable there. I haven't used a GUI app to mass rename files for a long time. It does sound like a great way to learn, but I don't think I'd use it in practice. With THE Rename, it takes me about 10 seconds to set up a process that will look at a directory and batch rename after doing a find and replace on each file, both with extremely specific instructions (example rename: only find and replace a string 2 times and start from the left while matching case, then add a three digit counter to the end of the name starting at 101 with a step of three, then add specific text to the beginning of the filename based on the folder the file is in). I like the GUI interface for this kind of stuff Cool! I wasn't aware that they had finished the Mac version of OpenOffice. I may try iPhoto, but I use Picasa for pretty much the reasons you gave for iPhoto. I use Google for everything, included online photo sharing. Thanks for letting me know about the SE support. That sounds great. Much better than Windows.
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Matt
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#310587 - 29/05/2008 06:11
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 10/06/1999
Posts: 5916
Loc: Wivenhoe, Essex, UK
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I may try iPhoto, but I use Picasa for pretty much the reasons you gave for iPhoto. I use Google for everything, included online photo sharing.
Despite lots of messing about I never could get iPhoto to import more than a third of my 30GB+ of photos before it fell over. Picasa on the other hand has no problems with that amount of data. But that was a couple of years ago, maybe iPhoto has got better at handling large datasets now.
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Remind me to change my signature to something more interesting someday
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#310596 - 29/05/2008 11:44
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: andy]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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Speaking of Macs and Google integration (thread-hijack mode on): Apple just came out with the OS X 10.5.3 updater. I installed it. Allegedly, one of the new features is the ability to sync Google contacts with Apple's address book. My address book, however, doesn't have the option in the preferences. Any ideas why? EDIT: The Google support is only enabled if you have an iPhone or iPod Touch. Grumble.
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#310602 - 29/05/2008 12:33
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: wfaulk]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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Looks like I'm just remembering an old beta post about uTorrent from here: http://www.tuaw.com/2007/06/27/utorrent-for-mac/A quick check didn't find any public beta out still. Transmissions has been fine for me though on OS X, though my torrent activity is pretty light. As for picasa, I updated my post shortly after submitting that it is coming sometime this year. The iPhoto uploader has been out for a while at google.com/mac .
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#310603 - 29/05/2008 12:41
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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I was a big Picasa fan, and not having it on the Mac is a definite bummer. The rumormill says Google is porting Picasa to the Mac, so hopefully we'll have it soon. Meanwhile, I ponied up for Adobe Lightroom, which is overkill for most things, although it is pretty powerful. It's unfortunately nowhere near as fast as Picasa.
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#310612 - 29/05/2008 13:25
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: DWallach]
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enthusiast
Registered: 15/02/2002
Posts: 314
Loc: New Hampshire, USA
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Edited by phi144 (29/05/2008 13:27)
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Doug
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#310618 - 29/05/2008 14:04
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: phi144]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 30/04/2000
Posts: 3810
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Read the comments in that thread. It's not all quite there. Yet.
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#310623 - 29/05/2008 14:11
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: drakino]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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Transmissions has been fine for me though I actually really like Transmission, except for that one (IMO) major problem. To be clear, here is the issue, spelled out: If you have a Torrent that contains multiple files, you can tell it to only download a particular subset of them. Chances are, however, that a torrent block at the beginning and one at the end of the file you're interested in cross over into the previous and next files, respectively. The correct thing to do here, IMO, is to either store that extraneous data in a cache somewhere or just throw it away (which means that you would no longer be able to provide those blocks to other peers). What Transmission does, though, is write it to the deselected files anyway. First off, that's just irritating. I don't want partially-written files lying around my filesystem pretending to be valid. But, more importantly, the MacOS filesystem, HFS+ will allocate space for a file up to the last byte written, even if there is no data written prior to it. So if the file in the torrent before the one you're interested in is 500MB, even if Transmission only writes a few kilobytes at the end of the file, all 500MB get used up. Even better, once you go and delete those files out from underneath Transmission (and it's not exactly trivial to find those partial files), it notices that those blocks you partially deleted are now corrupt, so it downloads them again. I've submitted bug reports to them about this, but they seem mostly uninterested in resolving the problem.
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Bitt Faulk
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#310624 - 29/05/2008 14:19
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: wfaulk]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
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I think most Torrent clients will do that. Hopefully they'd do it as a sparse file but they'll create a file even if you don't want anything inside it.
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#310630 - 29/05/2008 14:52
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: tman]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 25/12/2000
Posts: 16706
Loc: Raleigh, NC US
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uTorrent doesn't do that. Azureus doesn't do that. Not sure about others.
HFS+ doesn't have sparse files. Period. And since MacOS is one of the major focuses for Transmission, you'd think that would be an issue to them.
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Bitt Faulk
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#310758 - 31/05/2008 12:10
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: JBjorgen]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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Are there any suggestions for native Mac tagging utilities that will pull album art automatically and embed it in the id3 tag? If not, I'll just run MediaMonkey with Parallels. You can use iTunes. I'm starting a new thread about iTunes just to keep the info easy to find and try to avoid cluttering this thread up more... http://empegbbs.com/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=310760#Post310760
Edited by hybrid8 (31/05/2008 12:12)
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#310763 - 31/05/2008 12:34
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 12/11/2001
Posts: 7738
Loc: Toronto, CANADA
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PSP 5.1 - For some reason, I simply love version 5.1 of Paint Shop Pro. Pixelmator - there are a few other compositing/retouching applications available that also get high marks. Seems like all of the good ones came out in the last 6 months. DVD-lab Pro - I've preached about this program before, and I'll do it again.
With most new Macs you're going to get iDVD, so give that a shot. Up from there you have Apple's DVD Studio Pro as well. THE Rename - A batch file naming utility.
The terminal is great, but not for infrequent batch renaming use. Too cumbersome generally speaking. Try Name Mangler - I just got this one last week and it has promise. There are a few others people swear by though. MP3-Tag Studio 3 - My favorite tagging software.
In Windows my favs were a combination of Dr.Tag and Tag&Rename. A lot of people swear by Mp3Tag (not Tag Studio) and I found it does quite a bit, but the interface is shite and the program is buggy. On the Mac I use iTunes exclusively, along with some AppleScripts. This can easily handle all the standard tags supported by iTunes. See my other thread and I can post up the names of every script in my collection as well as my workflows for different situations. If I had a choice I'd rather use a really great stand-alone program for most tagging, but iTunes has been getting the job done. uTorrent - Strictly for Linux ISOs and game patches I feel Torrents suck in general. There are a few programs for Mac OS with all that nice Mac OS glitz, but the whole decentralized Torrent concept is the pits as far as I'm concerned and I generally won't touch a torrent for any reason. A number of providers also packet shape the hell out of torrent traffic. Anyway, there are a few programs you can try out as mentioned by others. Bitrocket is another. Picasa - What can I say? My life is in Google's hands. It's a dangerous dependancy that may bite me one day Skip iPhoto and test run Aperture and Lightroom. iPhoto is really lackluster in every possible sense and is next to useless for even a moderately sized collection of photos in my opinion (it gets really slow and its management abilities are quite week). Aperture will run fine on the machine you're looking at. My biggest reason for choosing LightRoom was its far simpler, yet far superior DAM (superior to Aperture, not as robust as iMatch for Windows). Openoffice.org - I believe they're working on a Mac version, though.
I just use the real MS Office. NeoOffice performed terribly the last times I tried it. However, as Tom mentions, you might be able to get by with the Apple products here, depending on your requirements. Applications for USB peripherals - Just did a quick check. Supported: Logitech MX-1000 mouse,
You will want to NOT install any Logitech Mouse or Keyboard software for the Mac. Not ever. They have never released anything that is not truly horrible in functionality and performance. Do get SteerMouse instead for all your mouse button mapping and tweaks. Much better in my experience than USB Overdrive and some other alternatives. various external drives (which I'll slowly start to format for the Mac file system of just make FAT32). I keep all my externals formatted to HFS+, even those I use mostly with Windows. That's because the slowdown I get from using a third-party driver to access them in Windows isn't as significant as the slow access to FAT volumes in Mac OS. You might have to move to new hardware if this is a function you will eventually really want to use from the Mac side.
Edited by hybrid8 (31/05/2008 12:38)
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#310769 - 31/05/2008 14:04
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: hybrid8]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/03/2000
Posts: 12338
Loc: Sterling, VA
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Thanks for the advice, Bruno. Especially on the Logitech software. Button mapping is the only reason I have it installed on my computer, because IMO their software sucks in Windows too, but I can't live without the double-click button I have mapped (I also have one for Ctrl+Tab, Ctrl+W, and the Start menu). I'll probably check out the others you mentioned, although I'm a big fan of free software, so MS Office and Aperture would run me quite a bit, especially after spending at least $2600 on a computer. And really, "buy new hardware" isn't the best option. There really are no other printers like this, unless you jump from the $120-130 for the Casio to one the $2000+ devices. The only other comparable model I've found is this one, but it looks terrible and appears to barely have Windows support, let alone Mac. But this is getting nit-picky. If I get this Mac there is no question I'm going to be running Windows on it in some form (sorry, purists ).
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Matt
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#310786 - 31/05/2008 17:18
Re: Which Apple computer should i buy?
[Re: Dignan]
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carpal tunnel
Registered: 08/06/1999
Posts: 7868
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I'm in the anti Logitech software boat now too, after seeing their software cause strange issues like breaking Growl. Though I still run it at work, because I haven't found any Mac mouse driver software that supports the MX Revolution scroll wheel yet. For the photo stuff, I know a lot of people have voiced opinions against iPhoto, but honestly give it a shot. It's going to be on the Mac anyhow, and for me it has never given me problems. I think it all depends on your photo workload. I personally am a point and shoot guy, and I don't take a ton of pictures. My library after 7 years is possibly smaller then what some people take in a few months. I've looked at Aperture at the Apple Store, and just don't see a use for it for everyone. Not knowing your specific photo demands, I'd say iPhoto should do just fine, especially if you are happy with Picasa. That is assuming you aren't bringing over some massive DSLR shot library with hundreds of photos a month over to the Mac. With the office stuff, the $79 for iWork was worth it to me, but probably the limit of what I would pay for such apps. I have Office 2004 from an old home use license, but I can't ever see paying retail for what Microsoft is asking for 2008. The road to Office 2008 is a really good article series going into each piece of Office 2008 and comparing it to iWork. Probably work a look to see exactly where your needs are, as iWork is still very basic in some areas. For me, iWork fit perfectly with my occasional and personal use of office apps. But if you have a strong need to exchange MS formatted docs with people a lot, it may be worth it to spring for the full Office 2008 suite.
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