MacBook Mod Swaps DVD Drive for Extra Hard Disk Space

Optibay

When the MacBook Air was first drawn from a meme-inspiring manila envelope, we gasped. "It’s so, so, so thin!" we shouted, like Marty McFly meeting his teenage mother. Then we found out that there was no optical drive inside and the hand-wringing began. "How will we install AOL?" cried the blogging world.

A year later and nobody cares. DVD-free netbooks are flying off the shelves and the CD-ROM hasn’t gotten any more relevant. Hell, I have a new MacBook and I don’t want the SuperDrive in there. I never use it and it makes an annoying groan every time the computer wakes up.

MCE comes to the rescue. Using its kit you can replace your optical drive with a second hard drive of up to 500GB. It’s essentially a sled which fits into the optical drive bay and holds a standard 2.5" hard drive. And your old drive? MCE will sell you an enclosure for that so you can have it around for those rare times when you need to reinstall AOL. The new drive hooks into the SATA connector and should just show up upon reboot.

This is a fantastic idea, if a little expensive. The 500GB kit will cost $250 if you install it yourself. Add an extra $100 if you want MCE to do it for you. After opening up my MacBook to add RAM, I saw how easy it is to access the SuperDrive. I’m very, very tempted to try this out.

Product page [MCE via Apple Insider]

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MacBook Pro Sales Spike Suggests Slow February for Apple

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As the economy continues to spiral downward, Apple customers are proving to be as unpredictable as Apple: The MacBook Pro has been the top-selling Mac at several Apple stores in the past week.

Ten out of 15 surveyed Apple retail stores reported the MacBook Pro as its top seller, according to The Channel Checkers. That’s surprising, because MacBook Pros range from $2,000 to $2,800.

What gives? My guess is that there was a sales spike because the 17-inch MacBook Pro just started shipping last week; I’d imagine many were eagerly awaiting that particular model.

Here’s what I find more interesting: The MacBook is typically Apple’s biggest seller. If the MacBook Pro was able to surpass the MacBook in sales, it suggests February is shaping up to be another slow month for Mac sales overall. In January, Mac sales were off 6 percent compared to a year ago.

Apple Computer Sales Slowing, No Discounting on Mac Books, Yet [ChannelCheckers via AppleInsider]

Photo: Jonathan Snyder/Wired.com

Why Some MacBooks Are Becoming CrackBooks

Crackbooks

A large number of MacBook owners have reported cracks appearing in their notebook cases.

The cracks are mostly occurring in the palm-rest corners of the earlier generation, plastic MacBooks. The defect has occurred in enough MacBooks that a Flickr gallery is documenting the problem with over 180 photos to date.

Though the issue only appears to be affecting a small percentage of MacBook users, it’s still a questionable defect coming from Apple — a company most famous for its meticulous, premium design.

iFixIt’s Luke Soules, who performs repairs and disassemblies of Apple products, pointed at the design of the MacBook as the root of the problem. For MacBooks, the bottom part of the notebook is the box that holds the guts of the computer; the top part, where the cracks are occurring, is just a flat sheet.

Soules noted that cracks weren’t an issue with the older iBooks, because the design was flip-flopped: The top part had sides, so it was essentially an inverted box; the bottom part was a flat sheet. 

Affected MacBook users might view this as a design flaw on Apple’s part. Some users have reported the defect is fully covered by Apple warranty. Of course, the new unibody MacBooks aren’t experiencing this issue (since metal doesn’t crack).

MacBook cases still cracking up [Macworld]

Photo: Robplusjessie/Flickr

Safari 4 First Impressions

We’ve spent a little bit of time checking out Safari 4 Beta on both Windows and Mac, and here’s what we like (and don’t like) so far:

Windows
On Windows, if you’ve never used Safari but used Chrome or Opera, it’ll actually feel a lot like that, with the overhead tabs, Speed Dial, and even a few Chrome icons. After years of shunning standard Windows UI elements—which seemed especially dicky in a way, given how anal Apple can be about standardized UI themselves—Apple is actually playing nice. It’s got the usual minimize, maximize and exit buttons, standard fonts and even real Windows shortcuts like Ctrl+Tab to cycle through tabs, so it actually mostly feels like it belongs on Windows now. Well, except for placing the X to kill tabs on the left side, which is annoying ’cause on Windows it should be on the right.

I’m still not quite sure how I feel about the pitch black look of the top tabs in Windows when the window is maximized if your default window color is one of the darker shades—yeah, it matches, but I think Chrome’s approach, with blue tabs set down a little bit that are easy to distinguish, works a little better. Overall, I think I prefer the tabs on top, at least in Windows. What I love for sure is that there’s an actual arrow on the right side which you grab to tear off the tab into a new window—which results in a cool little pop-out animation, like it was a squished up sponge or something—because I’m always accidentally tearing off tabs in Firefox when I just wanted to move it down the line.

Speed is actually not incredibly important in a way—loading sites like ESPN, the New York Times and Slate against Firefox 3.0.6 and Chrome 1.0.154, honestly, they’re all pretty damn quick, averaging around 3 seconds, though on super-Javascript heavy pages Safari 4 and Chrome, both based on Webkit, perceptibly edge out Firefox.

Top Sites is pretty slow to load the first time you fire up Safari 4, but then it’s instant. You can’t manually add sites—it’s automagical—and once you delete ’em they’re gone. A star pops up in the top right corner when there’s something new at that page, which is a nice touch. Cover Flow moves smoothly, at first, but can get jerky if trying to move through a ton of sites at once. I hate how it replaces what ever site you’re looking at if you just click the icon—you have to make a icon or middle-click so it does load over whatever you’re lookin’ at.

The smart search bar brings up suggestions from Google much faster than Firefox does, but the actual address bar is nowhere near as brilliant. It only pulls suggestions using the main part of the URL (before .com or .net or whatever), not from anything after a slash, or even the page’s title. For instance, if you start typing “giz” and you’ve been to Gizmodo, it’ll bring up Gizmodo. But typing Safari, even if you’ve been to Apple’s Safari pages, won’t bring up anything since it’s not safari.com. As some have noted, the blue progress is gone, which is annoying, but I didn’t notice it initially if that tells you anything.

Full search history seems like the crowning navigational jewel here. It actually searches the text of websites you’ve visited, and even with fifty or so pages in my history so far, it’s really fast and works well. I just wish it made it more clear where on the page the text was located before you click, and how many instances there were, though otherwise the use of Cover Flow is nice.

It gobbles resources in Windows: With 14 tabs open, it ate over 400MB of RAM.

Overall, I think it’s a lot more Windows-friendly than the initial Windows versions of Safari, and its excellent performance (if your system can stand up to its resource consumption) actually makes it worth taking a look at again if you didn’t like it originally (I sure as hell didn’t). It doesn’t have the Mr. Fantastic-style extendability of Firefox and it’s not quite as stripped down as Chrome, but it tries to balance between feature rich and clean, and doesn’t do a bad job.


Mac
Despite its Windows improvements, the new UI does look much better on OS X overall—the new tabs on top look works really well, I think, though its break with a more standard OS X layout might vastly annoy some people. Also History and Cover Flow look and feel more natural on Mac too.

Another Mac perk: Multitouch zooming, which lets you manipulate the new full-page zoom with iPhone pinch gestures. It’s not silky smooth, but definitely slick—it’s actually a lot like browsing a page on the iPhone, especially if you’re using two-finger scroll to pan and stuff.

Speed difference between Safari 4 and Firefox is a bit more noticeable in OS X. It doesn’t kill Firefox, but there’s definitely a difference. Cover Flow runs more smoothly, from what I’m seeing, without the jerkiness I got on Windows sometimes, though full history search isn’t any quicker—but that’s still plenty fast. It does use resources more efficiently in OS X than in Windows: Those same 14 tabs only ate about 230MB of memory.

While it’s hard to speak to stability yet and whether or not you should use it as your main browser, it seems okay so far and the new features and UI make it worth grabbing, even if you wanna hang on to a more stable build of Safari or Firefox in the meantime.

A few new rumors point to two new NVIDIA-packing iMacs

A few new rumors point to two new NVIDIA-packing iMacs

With more and more players getting in on the all-in-one market, both on the high and the low end of the scale, you just have to figure Apple’s going to respond with something new and flash to make everyone go “ooh.” There were numerous hints last year about a refresh to the line, and now we have a few more that again point to updated NVIDIA-based machines in 20- and 24-inch glossy sizes. The above photo is supposedly from some secret Apple marketing material, and the company is said to also be reducing stock of the old ones at retailers in preparation of a typically dramatic switcheroo. As far as when that will happen, your guess is as good as ours at this point — you know how much Cupertino loves surprises.

[Thanks, iB3nji]

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A few new rumors point to two new NVIDIA-packing iMacs originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 08:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Wine 1.0 CrossOver 7.0 Released Today

This article was written on June 18, 2008 by CyberNet.

wine birthdayarrow Mac Mac; Linux Linux arrow
It took an astonishing 15 years to complete, but Wine 1.0 has finally been released! Wine, for those of you that don’t know, serves as a way to run some Windows applications in Linux without the need for an emulator. The team has done their best to recreate the Dynamic Link Libraries (DLL’s) that are used in Windows, and it all had to be done without an ounce of code from Microsoft.

The project has been very successful, and Wine 1.0 brings thousands of Windows-only applications and games into the Linux world. Take a look at the different rating systems they’ve come up with for the different applications, along with how many programs fall into each category:

  • Platinum (1300+ programs): Applications which install and run flawlessly on an out-of-the-box Wine installation (ex. Half-Life 2, Photoshop CS2)
  • Gold (1500+ programs): Applications that work flawlessly with some special configuration (ex. World of Warcraft, Command & Conquer 3)
  • Silver (1000+ programs): Applications with minor issues that do not affect typical usage (ex. Call of Duty 4, StarCraft Brood War)

Similarly CrossOver 7.0 for Mac and Linux was released today, and it now supports Microsoft Office 2007 (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook) in addition to the Adobe CS2 line of products. CrossOver 7.0, unlike Wine, will run you at least $39.95, but might be well worth it if you really want to run Office 2007.

Copyright © 2009 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Hackintosh With Genuine Glowing Apple Logo

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For some, hacking the MSI Wind netbook to run Mac OS X isn’t just about having a tiny, portable Mac. As with much hacking, it is instead about the process itself, and the challenges of making the most accurate MacBook Nano possible.

MSI Wind Forums member EdsJunk has taken possibly the final step. Many others have attempted glowing Apple logos, but EdsJunk is the firat that we know of to have done it the Apple way, hacking a hole in the lid of his netbook and letting the LED backlight shine through. He even ordered an old iBook lid from Ebay to mount in his hole.

Full instructions are on the forum thread, but job is rather involved. Aside from the obligatory Dremel work, there is some rummaging around inside the display and much re-routing of wires. Finally, you’ll need to take to the case with some fine-grit sandpaper. The result, though, is worth it, although it would have been nice if, after all that effort, EdsJunk had bothered to hold the camera still while taking the pictures.

Guide to Glowing Apple Logo using LCD Backlight (no wiring!) [MSI Wind Forums]

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Video: Is This the New Mac Mini?

Earlier today some bloggers, including myself, concluded a blurry photo purporting to be the Mac Mini must be a fake. But almost immediately a video emerged showing off the fabled device, spinning it back and forth to reveal its five USB ports in an effort to convince you.

I’m still skeptical, but being a video editor myself, I know that’d be a pretty difficult editing trick. What are your thoughts?

Via Twitter

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Does the New Mac Mini Have 17 USB Ports?

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The recent Mac Mini "spy shot" is so effortless and yawn-inducing that it must be a Photoshop job. But does the inverse of that logic lend the above photo more validity?

I smell a contest.

Via Boing Boing Gadgets

How-To: Adding RAM to Unibody MacBooks

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What’s the first thing you do after buying a new computer? Apart from a good few fingers of scotch to dull the pain of your dwindling bank account? For me, the first online purchase with a new Mac is RAM, and after picking up a shiny new unabomber MacBook I made the traditional trip to Crucial.com, memory suppliers to the smart and beautiful.

And I mean traditional. One of the "features" of the Mac is that the memory comes in matched pairs. This means that it takes up both slots, and therefore bumping up from 2GB to 4GB means buying a pair of 2GB sticks and throwing out the old ones. I have a box somewhere around here full of useless RAM. Can’t use it, can’t sell it. Maybe I’ll make a nerd-necklace for the Lady.

The new MacBooks and MacBook Pros are designed to be easy to open and operate upon. Pop open the battery hatch and you can simply tug the hard drive out — a huge improvement on the old MacBook Pro — changing a drive on that thing was like playing a particularly tricky game of Operation.

But oddly, adding more RAM is actually harder on the new MacBook than on the old white plastic one. Not much harder, but certainly a lot scarier. Read on to find out why. Warning: Lots of pictures

In the old MacBook, the RAM slots were reached through a hatch in the battery compartment. You undid a few captive screws and pulled out the L-shaped cover. Once there, you flipped a couple of levers and out popped the RAM, ready to be replaced. Total time taken, five minutes. Experience level needed — n00b.

With the new aluminum MacBooks, there is a little more work. First, flip the little lever to remove the battery cover:

Mac_ram5

Mac_ram7

The battery pulls out by the little plastic tab, just like the hard drive. Go ahead and remove the battery. Then the work begins. You’ll need a small Philips screwdriver to take out a total of eight screws, three long and five short. Check the data sheet and diagram and print it before shutting down the computer. Or just look in the instruction manual that came with the Mac. Or, failing both of these, do what I did and pull it up on another device:

Mac_ram11

Mac_ram10

Mac_ram12

And we’re in! See what I said about being scary? The machine is barely two days old and already it’s opened up on the slab. I don’t have a problem with this (I once took a hot air gun to the inside of an iBook to reflow solder on a dry joint) but for the average user this is probably a little too much. But then, I guess that’s what the Genius Bar is for.

Next up, the RAM. I always use Crucial. The prices are good, the online selector means I always buy the right sticks and the stuff turns up fast. This order was placed on Wednesday afternoon and arrived this morning, and that’s slower than usual.

I bought 2x2GB of DDR3 memory, running at 1067 MHz, to give me a total of 4GB, the maximum allowed in the MacBook. The price was OK, at €56 (about $70) plus taxes and shipping. All in, €73.07 ($92.05). Certainly not the least I have paid, but then Apple always wants us to put the good stuff in our machines. Actually, buying the extra memory from Apple would cost $150, double the price, and much less fun.

Here it is, freed from its anti-static bag. The new stuff is at the top, with twice as many chips. I guess that’s better.

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The instructions for memory removal say to flip a lever, but in my Mac you just pull a plastic retainer to the side and the memory springs up.

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Then you take out the second one and pop in the new sticks. Pretty simple, and almost no pressure required. Then the back plate goes back on. Make sure you don’t let the tiny screws stick to your arm and then drop onto a cowhide rug like the one in this room. Just saying, is all. Before it goes back on, here’s a quick look at the bottom plate:

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It’s every bit as solid as the rest of the machine. After screwing the plate back in place and replacing the battery and hatch cover, its time to see if we broke anything. Hopefully it will go well, as I pulled of some rather important stickers from one of the sticks:

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Oops. Let’s switch it on and see:

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It lives! Fantastic. Now to see if it’s working properly. Here’s a before and after of the About This Mac panel.

Before

All working fine, although the Startup Disk section seems to have gone missing. The disk is still there – I saw it – so I’m not too worried. Total time, including going to buy a new set of tiny screwdrivers and digging the lost screws out of the rug, was around 20 minutes. You could do it quicker by not taking so many photographs.

Does it feel faster? Yes. Lightroom, where I processed the images you see here, screams along now. Flipping between library and develop modules, for instance, feels faster than my old MacBook Pro. €70 well spent, I’d say.

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