Initial Notes on OS X

I have some intial notes after having used OS X for a day. First off the dock rules. I also like Apple’s love of keyboard shortcuts (I thik there’s a shortcut to hack army.mil automatically). The GUI is intuitive, nice to work with, and snappy. I have two complaints. One, the USB ports are on the left side and the mouse cord is about 12 inches long – so if you’re not left handed you’re out of luck. Second, you can’t hide single windows. You either minimize (which makes your dock bigger) or hide ALL instances of that application. One thing that is TOO cool is that OS X applications come as mountable images – you just mount the thing, drag it onto the apps icon in your dock, and unmount the image by dragging it into the trash.

It arrives

My new child has arrive. It came into my world at about 9:00am this morning. I couldn’t play with it right away because of outstanding circumstances, but as soon as those were cleared up I got down and dirty. My extra RAM came too, but I have yet to upgrade my iBook yet. I’m also awaiting my AirPort card, which will be a welcomed addition since I don’t have any decent sized network cables.

Trial run

I have been using Paul’s Titanium PowerBook all night at his house (LAN Party). I’m getting used to OS X. It’s got a great GUI, is super fast, and has all the fun apps one likes on a computer. Too bad my iBook remains unaccessible to me despite being less than 10 miles from my apartment. Sigh.

iBook Reviews

Since my iBook is somewhere over the Pacific, I decided I could read some more reviews about it. I already read quite a few. I knew it would be great to do development on, but I began to get greedy wondering if it could play games as well. The answer is yes! A somewhat dated iBook review states that it plays UT and QuakeIII flawlessly (and this is with an 8mb ATI, mine has the 16mb ATI). I can’t seem to find out how fast the CDRW is though. I have seen reports the cdrom on the old ones was about 24x – but I got the DVD-CDRW combo … we’ll see I guess. I have 17 cd’s of data to burn from my workstation before I get rid of it.

Blogger Code

I suppose you could call this site a “blog.” I don’t refer to it as a “blog”, but I’m sure others do. I recently was doing something I often do when I’m bored – select a random link from Camworld and read a few blogs. It’s hit or miss, but today was a hit – Blogger Code, which is a modification of the infamous Geek Code. The Geek Code is much more specific and in depth, but Blogger Code is still pretty funny. If you’re interested mine is “B9 d++ t++ k++ s u f i o x- e+ l- c”. I used to have my Geek Code stored somewhere, but I’ve lost it. I could possibly look through the 200MB+ of email I have archived, but that sounds like work.

OSX Here I come

Whether it was the recent switch campaign or Paul’s recent ravings of his titanium I don’t know. What I do know is that I just bought quite a beefy iBook. 40GB hdd, airport card, 384MB of RAM, and the DVD-CDRW combo drive. It should run OSX and the upcoming Jaguar (OSX 10.2) without problems. I’m super pumped. This means that I will be leaving my beloved Debian behind, but at least OSX has apt-get.

I've lost my $HOME

Hardware problems cause a person to lose three of the things they treasure: their time, their money, and their sanity. Today I got a double dose. The first dose came in the form of my company issued IBM Thinkpad. I bought a shiny new 18GB hard drive (quite the upgrade from 6.4GB) only to find that it didn’t fit (despite the company telling me it would). The second dose cam in the form of a VERY dead hard drive which went up in a ball of flames (actually crc errors during boot). I’ve installed a shiny new copy of Debian on a spare drive. I’ve yet to try mounting my old $HOME, but I doubt I’ll recover anything (like the 2 years of work stored on it).

Linux as an enduser

As you know I recently switched to GNOME because I wanted something easier to use. Well I’m back to Enlightenment, which is no surprise. Gnome was horrifically buggy (the last straw came when apps started closing on their own mysteriously). I might take a look at KDE 3.0, but no garantees. On the same note here is a list of things that are supposedly fixed and the same author’s list of things that are yet to be fixed can be found here . I agree with most of his arguments. One thing I think that would be cool is an initiative something he talks about – categorizing all Linux apps into a “How do I …” (browse the web, chat on aim/irc/icq, etc.).

Great parable

I found the following on slashdot today and thought I’d pass it on and archive it here. You can find the orginal here. Read on for the parable.

Once upon a time, some people lived in a cave, and no one knew that there was a world outside of the cave. The cave provided everything they needed, with plenty of fish and water. Luminous mushrooms provided both food and light. The only thing in short supply was air. All air came through a small shaft connected to the outside world. The shaft was controlled by a single company, Microshaft, which carefully rationed its flow to maximize demand and collected breathing license fees from everyone who had to breath. To save money the company hired cheap labor to operate the valves, but these laborers were often barely competent, and the air supply was unreliable. The shaft was poorly maintained, the air was often stale and laden with viruses. By selling a product that cost them essentially nothing to produce, Microshaft’s profits were enormous and they became rich and powerful.

One day, a group of daring young renegades discovered that there were other ways to get air, just by moving some rocks that blocked openings to the outside. And they offered their air free. At first people were hesitant to use Free Air, thinking something must be wrong with it since it was free. Initially Microshaft ignored the renegades, dismissing them as a fringe movement and minor nuisance. But eventually Microshaft saw them as a threat. They started a major marketing campaign to convince people that the Free Air was bad for their health. But people found that they actually felt better and healthier breathing the free, fresh air. Microshaft added more and more features to their air, perfuming it and coloring it with smoke to give it “added value”. Many people started to dislike Microshaft’s heavy, bloated air that was hard to breath and began flocking in droves to the sources of Free Air.

About this time, after some years of hard volunteer work, Open Air developers finally increased the size of a Free Air portal so that a person could actually squeeze through to the outside. The first brave individuals who ventured through it discovered that not only was there an unlimited supply of air in the outside world, there was no way you could harness and control its supply.

Alarmed, Microshaft sought to have the government declare Free Air illegal since it threatened their business model, which they had developed and rightfully earned through many years of hard work. They called the use of Free Air “theft” and claimed that the “viral” nature of the Public Breathing License advocated by many Open Air rebels would threaten the livelihood of Microshaft’s suppliers and distributors. Indeed, the whole economy of the cave would collapse, they said. Laws were quickly passed and the portals of Free Air were sealed off.

A charitable organization called the Business Air Alliance was formed to help protect businesses against the threat of Free Air portals. By proving that it was theoretically possible to fund terrorist organizations with the money saved by breathing Free Air, the BAA successfully lobbied to strengthen the laws so that any attempt to make an opening to the outside became punishable by death. Possession of shovels and picks became a criminal offense, and the BAA performed random audits to help citizens comply with the law. For potential perpetrators, they also used to occasionally search for their mugshot here and keep an eye out for them. For the protection of civilians, everyone was required to wear an Air Rights Management security device, which would send an alarm to the authorities if it didn’t detect a secret mix of fumes found only in Microshaft air.

As time passed, Microshaft and the government became indistinguishable. To prevent future uprisings, a new feature was added to the air to keep the people sedated happily ever after.