Six Months With a Hackintosh Netbook: It Ain’t Pretty

bswindjpegIs hacking a netbook to run Mac OS X really worth the trouble? Two tech journalists today expressed grief with their Hackbooks, so I felt like chiming in with my thoughts about my somewhat controversial MSI Wind Hackintosh. In short, my Hackintosh and I have been pals for six months, but it’s been a pretty bumpy ride.

When I first bought my Wind in October, I was thrilled after successfully hacking it to run Mac OS X Leopard. I loved the netbook so much, in fact, that I almost stopped using my first-generation MacBook Pro altogether. To express my delight, I even made a custom wallpaper for my netbook featuring my favorite childhood ice cream flavor (Superman). The Wind was a great companion device: I use an iMac in the office, so when I got home the dumbed-down, lightweight netbook was perfect for web surfing, chatting and general unwinding.

But over time the problems started surfacing. Like Wired.com’s Charlie Sorrel, I grew to despise the Wind’s dinky trackpad: Whoever designed it had in mind an infant’s hands; navigating became so tiresome that I started carrying around an external mouse to make it tolerable.

Second, the software issues. Seeing as this netbook was hacked to run OS X, of course it didn’t work perfectly. I accepted that, and with some tweaks I got most software utilities working properly. But while I was traveling in Europe, my netbook’s Wi-Fi suddenly stopped working. The Airport utility simply wouldn’t light up, and I discovered a few fixes that worked temporarily, only for the connection to fail again. As you can imagine, a netbook without the net in a foreign country was a huge drag — a piece of useless plastic added to my luggage. I ended up barely using my netbook during my trip, and I instead heavily relied on my problem-free iPhone.

When I returned home, I completely reinstalled OS X, and Wi-Fi worked once again. And then the hardware issues kicked in. Minor ones, actually: Screws at the bottom of the clamshell kept falling out, even after I screwed them in as tightly as possible. I inspected the case more closely and realized it no longer clamps all the way shut, which is why the screws aren’t staying in. This issue was probably a result of cheap plastic or shoddy clamshell design. Unfortunately this created another annoying problem: The battery kept popping out of the case ever so slightly — just enough to shut off the computer whenever I nudged the netbook. I eventually resolved the problem with some double-sided tape, but I wasn’t happy about it.

Given all these issues, I became pretty jaded about my netbook — hence my lack of mentioning it here at Wired.com in recent months. I ended up selling my MacBook Pro and buying the latest unibody model refurbished, and now I rarely use my netbook. So unfortunately, I have to agree with Dave “MacSparky” Sparks and The Unofficial Apple Weblog’s Steven Sande, who both grew frustrated with their Dell Mini 9 Hackintoshes. It’s a fun hacking project, but it’s like the fixed-gear bicycle you built but left sitting in the garage, because over time you realized it was too impractical.

Photo: Brian X. Chen/Wired.com

GE Holographic Breakthrough Squeezes 100 DVDs Into a Single Disc

GE Holographic

Picture a single disc large enough to store your entire DVD collection. GE Global Research has done just that with its latest breakthrough that can put 500 Gigabytes of storage capacity in a standard DVD-size disc.

GE researchers said Monday that by using a micro-holographic storage material they can create capacity of 20 single-layer Blu-ray discs or 100 DVDs in a standard disc. GE’s micro-holographic discs will also be able to read and record on systems similar to a typical Blu-ray or DVD player.

“Our technology will pave the way for cost-effective, robust and reliable holographic drives that could be in every home,” said Brian Lawrence who leads GE’s holographic storage program in a statement. “The day when you can store your entire high definition movie collection on one disc and support high resolution formats like 3-D television is closer than you think.”

Holographic storage differ from current optical storage technologies in that it uses the entire volume of the disc material. DVDs and Blu-ray discs store information only on the surface of the disc.

In case of holographic storage, three-dimensional patterns are written into the disc and can be read out. Micro-holographic players using GE’s technology can play back CDs, DVDs and Blu-ray disc.

GE has been working on the technology for about six years, said the company. For now it is still in the labs but the GE has plans to commercialize it.  It will initially focus on the commercial archival industry for the technology and then offer it to consumers.

See also:
GE Press Release

[via The New York Times]

Photo: Overlapping blue lasers record holograms in a GE disc/GE

Tweetlog: Gateway TC7804u

Gateway TC7804u.jpgMore for less? It’s not a pipe dream with the fully loaded and capable Gateway TC7804u (http://tinyurl.com/djx7qa).

Amazon snaps up iPhone e-book reader app Stanza

(Credit: Lexcycle)

Maybe Steve Jobs doesn’t think there’s a market for e-books on the iPhone, but Amazon seems to. On Monday, it acquired Lexcycle, the company that developed the popular Stanza iPhone and iPod Touch e-book reader application, for an undisclosed sum.

At first glance, it’s unclear …

Originally posted at iPhone Atlas

Researchers tout plans for moon greenhouse, Silent Running sequel

The Google Lunar X Prize obviously hasn’t drawn quite the same number of competitors as some of the more Earthbound X Prizes, but it looks like things are starting to heat up a little bit, with Paragon Space Development recently teaming up with Odyssey Moon in an effort to deploy the first greenhouse on the surface of moon. Specifically, the team is hoping to grow a Brassica plant (a member of the mustard family) in a pressurized greenhouse like the one picture above, and possibly even see the plant re-seed itself within a single Lunar day (or 14 Earth days), which just so happens to coincide with the average growth period for the plant on Earth. Of course, that would only be one small part of the X Prize mission, which first and foremost requires teams to safely land a craft, send some live video back to Earth, travel at least 500 meters, send some more video, and carry a payload. So, still a little ways off, but don’t let that stop you from checking out the (autoplaying) video after the break, in which Paragon’s Taber MacCallum (a Biosphere veteran himself) explains the project to the folks at Engineering TV.

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Researchers tout plans for moon greenhouse, Silent Running sequel originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 18:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Swiss robot wants some time with you

QB1 in action.

At first glance, QB1 appears to be a simple screen mounted onto a black arm and box. But it comes to life through human interaction, for now in the form of a sort of personal DJ service.

(Credit: OZWE)

SAN FRANCISCO–When Swiss developers designed the QB1 robot, they weren’t going for human-like looks or cute puppydog mannerisms.

Instead, they’re hoping QB1 will hook people in on a more meaningful level–by providing a handy music-suggestion service–and thus giving the robot continuous exposure to data stemming from real human interaction.

Artificial intelligence “systems need to learn in the real world, from real people. You cannot program them with knowledge from the real world,” said Frederic Kaplan, CEO and co-founder of QB1 developer OZWE.

The QB1 was showcased to the public last weekend at Swissnex, an annex of the Consulate General of Switzerland here that’s dedicated to bridging knowledge in science, education, art, and innovation between Switzerland and North America.

QB1 is what Kaplan calls a “robotic object”; people interact with it through gestures. In its first application, QB1 is loaded with a kind of disc jockey feature because that invites people to spend time with it.

Kaplan got this idea out of his experience working for 10 years with Sony’s world famous dog-like AI robot, Aibo.

“What was frustrating was that nobody was interacting with it long-term. There are so many objects in your house, so why interact with an object that is only for pleasure?” he said. And as Aibo needed time with humans to learn, this was a fundamental problem.

“The limit for AI is not computing power, it’s getting experience,” Kaplan said. So QB1 tries to steal your time doing something useful, playing your music. The AI system incorporated into QB1 has about five different strategies to intelligently predict what music you want to listen to at the moment.

Originally posted at News – Cutting Edge

HTC Magic out today in Spain: Scorchio!

Behold the Magic of Spain! Don’t worry, you haven’t accidentally pointed your browser at an asinine tourism site. No, this is Crave reporting on the apparent surprise launch of the Android-powered HTC Magic smartphone in Spain, a full week earlier than the rest of the world.

The news …

Voigtländer adapter expands lens pool for Micro Four Thirds cameras

Granted, this was totally expected, but we can’t possibly be more excited to see such a peripheral emerge before the Micro Four Thirds segment even has a chance to blossom. Cosina, parent company of Voigtländer, has just introduced a new adapter which aims to make Micro Four Thirds cameras (you know, like Panasonic’s Lumix DMC-G1) compatible with a slew of existing Voigtländer, Leica and Carl Zeiss lenses. Unfortunately, we’re told that the device is mechanical only, which could cause issues with some of the more advanced features that require tight knit camera-lens communication. Head on past the break for a full list of suitable lenses, and feel free to ping your favorite Japanese importer with a mailing address and at least ¥19,800 ($205).

[Via Wired]

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Voigtländer adapter expands lens pool for Micro Four Thirds cameras originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 17:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Laser-etched Motherboard mirror reflects art, life, and circuitry

Nonesiste’s Motherboard mirror is the kind of design piece that any decoratively-inclined nerd might really want in his / her abode. Its designer, Romolo Stanco, has some really big ideas about the meaning behind the mirror, saying that “the etchings are circuits, an intersection of lines borrowed from the world of electronics, a metaphor for connections, global systems, [and] electronic systems for common use which few of us understand the real technical sense.” We actually don’t understand what he’s talking about, but whatever: it looks pretty cool to us. Stanco’s mirrors have recently been unveiled in Milan, and are limited to a run of six — in oval (as above) and rectangle. One more shot of this handsome mirror (and man) after the break.

[Via BoingBoing]

Continue reading Laser-etched Motherboard mirror reflects art, life, and circuitry

Laser-etched Motherboard mirror reflects art, life, and circuitry originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 17:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Entelligence: Beware of geeks bearing gifts

Today we reintroduce Entelligence as a new column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he’ll explore where our industry is and where it’s going — on both micro and macro levels — with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

Here’s a riddle. Why was a $300 PC with a Pentium III CPU, an 8GB hard drive, 64MB of RAM, 10/100 Ethernet, a DVD player, and an NVIDIA graphics chip considered a killer PC system in late 2001? The answer is because it wasn’t a PC — it was the original Xbox. In recent years, Microsoft has evolved the Xbox quite a bit. No longer is it a PC system with N-1 technology — it is now a targeted and focused piece of engineering that is state of the art and optimized for games — but importantly, a lot more than games. It’s the Xbox that will likely be Microsoft’s beachfront into the digital home, and it will be the Xbox which furthers Microsoft’s role in the digital home beyond the PC.

Continue reading Entelligence: Beware of geeks bearing gifts

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Entelligence: Beware of geeks bearing gifts originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Apr 2009 16:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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