New Mac Day

November 1st, 2006

UPDATE (11/6):
Turns out that 50% CPU utilization was actually the result of a wayward process. For normal kinds of task, utilization tops out around 15-20%, at which the temperature is not really an issue. It definitely is cooler than my PowerBook, at any rate.

Plus, the fans in the MacBooks have an undocumented ‘go faster’ button that you can use to cool it down (substantially) at the cost of a little bit more noise. I’ve been using a little app called
Fan Control
to tweak this.

I imagine if I really push it with a 3d game or something, it will still get hot, but for most normal kinds of work, it doesn’t really seem to be an issue for me.

New Mac Day only comes once every couple of years. It has come today. I write from my new MacBook 2.33ghz.

This was my first Mac-Mac migration in the modern age, and I’m still amazed by how simple it was. It literally only took about 5 minutes of my time (plus about 90 minutes unattended to copy stuff from my old PowerBook). I guess I’m not surprised really, but when I think back to how the set up of a new Win2k machine was always a multi-day affair to get everything just right…well, it’s just neat.

Actually, it’s almost disappointing. Here I am. New machine, same setup. Back to work. There really isn’t much else to say. I’ll play with parallels or BootCamp later - that’s the big difference for me.

Initial observations for now:

  • I love double taps. I love the little remote.
  • It definitely is zippier. The project that I’m working on took around 50 seconds to compile on my PowerBook - now it takes me 9 seconds. I like.
  • It definitely is quieter. I like.
  • It definitely is *not* cooler (temperature-wise). I’m just sitting here at about 50% CPU and the bottom of the case is fairly warm. And both cores are reading around 160 degrees F. My G4 never read that hot even at peak. Maybe it’s a difference in where the sensors are placed or maybe the Meroms are just designed to run hotter, not sure.
  • The keyboard is a little quieter and little ’squishier’ than my PB. It’s subtle but I’m not sure I like it quite as much. Maybe it just needs to be broken in.

Perhaps most importantly, though,
iQuip came up perfectly on my very first login:



END HALLOWEEN IN THE CASTRO NOW

October 31st, 2006

I was going to rant earlier this evening about the disaster earlier this evening. 300k people in a four-square block area. I can’t get home on Muni. Fracking drunken bridgentunnel jackasses blah blah blah…then I thought better of it and went about my business in the relative safety of my living room.

About an hour ago, amidst the screaming and helicopters and dumping of trash cans, I heard a series of sharp pops. I figured it was just fireworks.

Wrong: five ten people were shot about 2 blocks from here.

The results of my handiwork this past weekend:





Introducing iQuip 1.0

October 30th, 2006

I hate Objective C but I can’t stay away. I put together a little Preference Pane for the Mac that puts a random quote in your login window. It’s basically a pretty wrapper around the old fortune program.

You can get it here. Lemme know if it works for you.

Props to thenopp and especially Ralf for helping me track down some bugs.





Stumbling to Concord

October 26th, 2006

The BART ride from SF to Concord, as viewed by my PowerBook’s WIFI radio: