VMware vs. Parallels revisited

Since Scoble praised VMware, I decide to take another look at the latest version. I own both VMware and Parallels, but I currently use Parallels.

The new VMware converter made it easy to move my Parallels VM to VMware, so I was able to run my most recent Windows VM with it. Although there’s very little speed difference, I find that Parallels generally feels smoother and better integrated with OS X. Shared folders seem to work better in Parallels, and I like that it will boot directly into Coherence. With VMware I have to manually switch to Unity after Windows fully boots and I’ve already logged in.

Snowball Effect

Rainer Brockerhoff explains how the snowball effect resulted in some of the often-criticized design features of the MacBook Air.

From what I can tell, the Air was designed from the outset to be extremely thin and rugged, while maintaining adequate battery life and performance. These considerations snowball to the extent that the battery uses up 2/3 of the space, and seems to be (along with the keyboard) itself a structural element.

Everything else flows logically from that. To put in a FireWire connector means reserving resources for a 7W additional power drain – that’s 1A extra current at the 7.2V battery. It also means an extra power supply to jack this up to the 9 to 12V required at the connector, extra PCB traces, and so forth. The battery has a capacity of 37 watt-hours, meaning that at the rated duration of 5 hours, the average power draw is slightly over 7W; this would double when a FireWire drive is connected, meaning battery life would be only half, 2.5 hours. Also, the extra connector would mean widening the flip-down door and shaving off maybe 2cm off the battery on that side… more capacity reduction. The 45W external power supply would also have to be beefed up, and the internal charging circuitry as well… this means more heat dissipation. It would probably have been necessary to make the battery itself thicker, maybe 5mm or more.

Now look at a typical Ethernet connector; it’s thicker than the Air’s door, so some millimeters would have had to be added to the Air’s thickness, too; as well as taking the extra chunk out of the battery as well.

Same applies to an internal DVD drive. If it doesn’t work as a burner too, they’d have complained – but imagine the power requirements, or read the Lenovo x300 review; Lenovo engineers are very capable too, but they decided on different trade-offs. I have handled some other brands of small laptops from Toshiba and I must say I was unimpressed by the feel and finish.

Finally, imagine the Air with a removable battery. This means extra connectors, a case opening, of course with either a full-width extra wall (meaning at least 4mm extra thickness) or some heavy-duty latches (considering the battery is 2/3 of the size and a similar proportion of the weight of the Air). Consider the loss of rigidity that would imply, and the extra size and weight that would have to be “wasted” to counteract that.

AppleTV

My AppleTV arrived today. The setup was quick and easy, although it took about 20 minutes to sync with my MacBook Pro over 802.11n. The picture quality is excellent, even though I’m using component video rather than HDMI, since the lone HDMI input on my TV is being used for my Comcast HD DVR.

AppleTV

AppleTV

Kernel Panics

This morning I had two kernel panics while my MacBook Pro was sitting idle. In both cases it was caused by backupd (Time Machine). I had it set to back up wirelessly to a drive attached to my Mac Mini, but I shut time machine off for now. I also back up my home directory to my server automatically every night using rsync and back up the entire drive manually using SuperDuper to an external drive, so I don’t depend on Time Machine for my backups.

Aperture 2.0 is amazing

I took a few photos this afternoon, mostly to practice using manual focus with my new lens. One shot I took of the sky facing the sun came out pretty dark, but Aperture was able to do an amazing job of bringing out color & detail.

Here’s the original image:

Original
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Since I was shooting raw, I was able to work with the exposure. After some adjustment and enhancement, here’s how it looks:

Enhanced
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The rest of my pictures are posted at Flickr.

Firefox 3.0b3

I tried Firefox 3.0b3 today and I really like it.

I change browsers fairly often, because I usually get annoyed with slowness, bugs, or quirks in each of them. Until today I was using Safari. Before that it was Flock, until I got annoyed with its window and tab handling bugs.

I had tried other Firefox 3 betas, but I always ended up missing my extensions, which don’t work with Firefox 3. Most of them still don’t work in 3.0b3, unfortunately. I really missed having a del.icio.us posting extension since none of them are compatible. I’m now using Shareaholic, which seems to be the only del.icio.us posting extension that works in Firefox 3.

The new beta is beautiful. It looks more like Safari with its nice new toolbar and more Mac-like tabs. For the first time, Firefox now looks and feels like a real Mac application.

SDHC Card Compatibility

I got a 8GB SDHC card, since my D40x creates very large images and can only hold about 500 in large (10MP) JPEG and less than 200 RAW images on my old 2GB card. The SDHC card worked perfectly in the camera and can hold about 600 raw images or about 2000 large JPEGs.

However, when I tried to read the card on my Mac, I found that my Griffin ExpressCard/34 5in1 reader won’t recognize it. I also tried an older USB multi format card reader, which also wouldn’t recognize it. Fortunately the USB reader that came with my EyeFi card is able to read it.

TextMate Rocks

I’ve used BBEdit for years, but TextMate blows it away (except for one thing). TextMate’s bundles and plugins really make it shine. The only thing I miss in BBEdit is the FTP browser, which lets me open files directly from an FTP server, rather than using a separate FTP client.

Ciarán Walsh offers some great TextMate tips in his blog, including some features I wasn’t aware of. In his latest entry, he discusses the HTML bundle.

One unique feature of TextMate is that bundle commands can interact with the selection intelligently. For example, ^< (shift-ctrl-<) with no selection will insert opening and closing <p> tags with the first 'p' selected. If you change it to something else, the closing tag will reflect it. As far as I know, there's no way to do anything like that in BBEdit. If only TextMate added FTP support, it would be perfect.

More on the iPhone jailbreak

iPhone Atlas warns that the 1.1.3 jailbreak may prevent official third party apps from working.

iPhone firmware 1.1.3 includes a mechanism for approving signed applications. Signed apps use private keys to authorize themselves for installation on the iPhone/iPod Touch. This gets damaged by the jailbreak, although it’s reversable. It does mean that official and unofficial third party apps won’t be able to co-exist.

Since there’s an official SDK coming soon, which will be available to everyone, there’s no reason the developers currently writing unofficial applications won’t switch to the SDK and release the same applications in a form that won’t require jailbreaking the iPhone.

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