Faster, Bigger, Longer: How Snow Leopard Will Improve Your Hardware

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Some are calling Apple’s latest version of Mac OS X, Snow Leopard, little more than a service pack. From a distance, it certainly looks that way: There’s no new eye candy, no big-ticket features and even the ballyhooed addition of support for Microsoft Exchange (ironically, even Windows doesn’t come with it) is, well, boring.

But under its furry black and white skin, the $30 upgrade is worth it, and will reach into every corner of your Mac to speed things up. Surprisingly, Snow Leopard’s biggest improvements are to your hardware. Think of it as a tune-up for your machine.

Longer Lasting Batteries

All of Apple’s built-in software, from Safari to iPhoto, and a lot of third-party applications launch faster, run with less memory and use up fewer CPU cycles. But don’t concern your pretty little heads with that. What it means is a cooler computer and therefore a less thirsty computer. The fans spin slower and juice in the battery isn’t used to scorch your lap.

The difference is striking. For instance, on my MacBook, Safari would run at around 25-35 percent of CPU, and spin up to around 100 percent+ under stress in 10.5 Leopard. Right now, under 10.6, it’s not even showing up in the Top 5 list, meaning it is idling at under 4 percent. This is with 12 tabs open. Make a Skype video call and the battery meter still goes down like a cheap … well, you know, but in everyday use, you’ll get extra battery time.

Bigger Hard Drive

Apple makes much of the reclamation of hard drive space when you install Snow Leopard, unusual in an OS upgrade on any platform. This is achieved by both installing less (printer drivers are downloaded on demand instead of loading gigabytes of them up front) and by optimizing and compressing code. But this alone can’t explain some people’s claims of 20 GB or more being freed up.

In fact, plug in any drive, not just the boot drive, and it will be bigger. How? Because Snow Leopard now reads drive sizes the way humans do, as chunks of 1000 kilobytes. Computers usually define a megabyte as 1024 kilobytes. Not much with a small drive, but when you get up to the terabyte drives we have today, that discrepancy rises to 10 percent, or 100 GB, as big as some whole drives.

Of course, your 500-GB drive is now listed as having 500 GB, but just because 10.6 reports sizes in base 10 instead of in base two doesn’t mean your drive has grown — it just looks like it has.

Faster Everything

The whole OS is snappier. Applications now load instantly instead of bouncing sleepily in the dock for a moment. Menus appear and disappear faster (although this is surely an interface timing trick). And when software vendors update their wares to take advantage of some new tech, slow, heavy applications should scream along.

There are two key features that allow this. Grand Central Dispatch and Open CL, which press into service parts of your Mac that normally spend a good deal of time loafing around, smoking cigarettes and catcalling girls, while the CPU does all the work. Grand Central Dispatch lets apps make use of the multicore processors in modern machines without having to write complex management code. A developer pretty much points its tasks at GCD and everything is taken care of. This speeds everything up.

Open CL does something similar for your graphics card, a device capable of astonishing speed when processing a gazillion tasks at a time. This is usually wasted on rendering graphics (of course), like using a Ferrari to drive to the corner store once a week. With Open CL, now it can be accessed for more mundane computing tasks, and promises a quantum leap in performance. Oh boy.

Tweaks

Along with these big, behind-the-curtain additions, there are plenty of little things that will make your life easier. For instance: when you plug your camera in, you want images to download automatically. Fine. But when you hook up an iPhone, you don’t want Image Capture to open. Every. Single. Time. Now, you can decide how the OS handles all of your cameras: Ignore the iPhone, send DSLR pictures to Lightroom and point-and-shoot pics to iPhoto.

Or Services, the stealth hit of 10.6, which takes the dusty, cluttered old submenu item and lets it add functions to your software. For instance, you can rotate or resize a photo right there in the Finder, or in iPhoto you can right click and tell it to address an e-mail to everybody in the photo (using face-recognition), or to pull up a Google map with all their addresses shown.

Sounds like magic, huh? It is, and you can download or write your own Services in the revamped Automator.

In short, the new OS has more than $30 worth of new features, it’s just that they don’t stick out at first. But think about this. What are the usual reasons to upgrade a computer? Bigger hard drive, faster processor, better battery life, right? For just $30, you get all this on a DVD.

Product page [Apple]

Photo: Tambako the Jaguar/Flickr

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Santech LV1 is low voltage and low fat, but not low price

Santech might not be the most familiar name around here, but the company has a bit of history in the mobile field, and its latest 13.3-inch effort definitely merits a second look. Coming in under that magical mental barrier of an inch in thickness and sporting an Intel CULV processor, it’s slinky and (just) powerful enough to be called an ultraportable. Add in a claimed 12 hours of battery life, and the LV1 would seem like a viable competitor to Acer’s Timeline series, but it falters on pricing, which — once you add the 8-cell battery to the base unit of a SU3500 1.4GHz CPU, 2GB RAM and 160GB HDD — is €701 ($1,003) after taxes, or €100 more than an almost identical Aspire 3810T from Acer.

[Via Notebook Italia]

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Santech LV1 is low voltage and low fat, but not low price originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 08:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: Pre virtual keyboard developing rapidly, gets easy install method

We know you just can’t wait to get typing on the Pre’s lush touchscreen, and the folks at WebOS Internals must feel the same way as they’ve been hard at work making their on-screen keyboard a functional reality. Installation has been made a breeze thanks to the Preware app, and usability seems to have improved markedly since the pre-alpha version, but a few kinks remain that need to be ironed out. Still, if you’re willing to put up with some buggy behavior and the potential for your Pre to melt into a puddle of fiery lava, then slide past the break to get educated on the how, what and where to download.

Continue reading Video: Pre virtual keyboard developing rapidly, gets easy install method

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Video: Pre virtual keyboard developing rapidly, gets easy install method originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 08:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HP LP3065: 30 inches of pure silicon, with a carrying handle.

You know, there’s just something about 2560×1600, that makes everything look great! Even Goblins.

(Credit: Eric Franklin/CNET)

Finally, a 30-incher has come back to C…NET. Yes, I’m a “Rock” fan and yes that is a loooong throwback to a bygone era, but it seemed appropriate.

Last …

Mac OS Snow Leopard: Great news for Windows 7, too

OS X 10.6 includes Boot Camp 3.0, a new collection of software drivers that make Windows run much better on Mac hardware.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)

Every time I see the “I’m a Mac/I’m a PC” ads on TV, I can’t help but wonder, “Why not both?” And it has never been a better time for that.

It’s been a three weeks since I first got my hands on Apple’s new Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. (If anything, this means lots of hard work benchmark testing the product while trying to keep my mouth shut about it till now, which was even harder.)

Overall, personally, I found that while the new Mac OS doesn’t warrant a “wow,” it’s still definitely worth the $29 upgrade price. Mac users can read more about Snow Leopard in my colleague Jason Parker’s full review. On the other hand, for Windows users, especially Windows 7, the release of Snow Leopard is straight-on great news.

Boot Camp 3.0 enables Windows to read files from OS X's partition.

(Credit: Screenshot by Dong Ngo/CNET)

I recently blogged about running Windows 7 on a 15-inch Unibody Macbook Pro, which required some tweaking with Boot Camp 2.1. Snow Leopard comes with Boot Camp 3.0, which makes installing and running Windows on a laptop a much more pleasant experience.

First of all, the new Boot Camp includes all the drivers necessary to run both the 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows 7 smoothly on the Mac hardware.

(Note that you only need to run the Boot Camp Assistant, BCA, if you want to dual-boot OS X and Windows on the same machine. The utility will then create a new partition for the installation of Windows. In this case, make sure you run the BCA first when the computer boots up to avoid file errors. If you want to run just Windows and skip OS X altogether, you can boot from the Windows 7 install DVD and start the installation the way you would install the OS on any PC from scratch.)

After the installation is done, Boot Camp 3.0 can be installed from the Snow Leopard DVD. Then, without further ado, you got yourself a great Windows computer.

Video: Tech21’s iBand protective case and its mystical, magical, non-Newtonian goo

Video: Tech21's iBand protective case and its mystical magical non-Newtonian goo

If you’re the clumsy sort you have absolutely no shortage of protective cases and coatings to shroud your pricey gadget in, but most are ugly, bulky, and likely ineffective. The iBand from Tech21 isn’t particularly attractive nor svelte, but after watching the video below there’s little doubt about its effectiveness. It’s made of a substance called d3o, which is a fancy orange non-Newtonian substance, starting out stretchy and gushy but, when put under pressure, hardening and protecting its precious contents. We’ve seen this stuff applied to high-impact applications like motorcycle armor, but we’re glad to see gadgetry getting a little attention too. The video is a bit curious as it appears that the d3o is just applied around the edges of the case and yet the enclosed device survives a face-down landing, but it’s an impressive demonstration nevertheless. Right now the £15 ($25) iBand is only available for the iPhone and iPod Touch, but future gadgets should receive the oobleck treatment soon.

Continue reading Video: Tech21’s iBand protective case and its mystical, magical, non-Newtonian goo

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Video: Tech21’s iBand protective case and its mystical, magical, non-Newtonian goo originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 07:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Samsung Application Store announced, the mobile mall gets a little more crowded

Samsung Application Store announced, the mobile mall gets a little more crowded

Oh, look, it’s another place to buy bite-sized mobile apps, this one courtesy of Samsung. The company isn’t exactly new to the whole application store thing, launching a little outlet for Nokia users earlier this year, but piggy-backing on someone else’s platform and boldly blazing a trail of iFart knockoffs on your own hardware are two very different things. The imaginatively named Samsung Application Store launches on September 14 for British, French, and Italian Omnia and I8910 HD handsets, later coming to the Omnia II and OmniaLITE as well as users in various other nations. Samsung is pledging “over 300” apps to start, while partners like Electronic Arts, Capcom, Gameloft, and TAITO have signed on for the fun. Omnia BUST-A-MOVE, anyone?

[Via NewsWire]

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Samsung Application Store announced, the mobile mall gets a little more crowded originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 07:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nikon Coolpix S1000pj won’t be with us until October, others also delayed

Alas, our dream of rocking parties with the projector-packing s1000pj will have to wait an extra month. Turns out that demand for the shooter was so high that even Nikon, whose sole purpose in life is making imaging equipment, couldn’t satiate it in time. The new dates for your calendar are October 23 for the 12.1 megapixel, 5x optical zoom S1000pj, and September 19 for its S70 and S570 brethren. The S70 switches out the projector for a 3.5-inch OLED multitouch screen, and should prove quite the attractive proposition in its own right, but for now all we can do is look admiringly from afar. Sigh.

[Via Impress]

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Nikon Coolpix S1000pj won’t be with us until October, others also delayed originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Aug 2009 06:51:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Green Screen Toy Puts You Inside The Movies

yoostar-2

Things have changed since I was a kid. Back at the end of the 1970s, while my brother was singing into a hairbrush in front of the mirror (thankfully he manned-up later in life), I was watching a Saturday morning TV spot on Industrial Light and Magic, the FX team behind Star Wars, demonstrating blue-screen shooting*.

Fast-forward thirty-something years and not only have hairbrushes become passé, but blue screens turned green and this magnificent future-tech is now available at home. Yoostar is a green-screen kit which comes complete with “studio-grade webcam” (whatever that is), green-screen, stand and remote control. Now, you could use this to make your own amazing films, but instead Yoostar wants you to defile the memories of great movies in your own virtual hairbrush/microphone game, and to this despicable end 12 movies scenes are included for your insertion pleasure.

Further, once you are bored of these, there is a whole marketplace where you can buy extra clips for $2 each. This appears to be very much like the cellphone ringtone market: overpaying for snippets. The Yoostar kit will cost $170 and has one saving feature. There are clips available from the best movie ever made, a movie I have seen almost 50 times. A movie whose dialog I know backwards. What is it? Here’s your clue:

Oh well, he’s very popular, Ed. The sportos and motorheads, geeks, sluts, bloods, waistoids, dweebies, dickheads – they all adore him. They think he’s a righteous dude.

Product page [Yoostar via Uncrate]

*Yes, Saturday morning TV was a lot better back then.


Sansa Clip+: If it ain’t broke, just make it prettier

Flash memory and device manufacturer SanDisk clearly has a thorough understanding of the saying “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” And we sure are pleased about that, because when the company decided to update its extremely popular Sansa Clip, it could have mangled a perfectly peachy player. …

Originally posted at MP3 Insider