gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

November 28, 2006

Zune oddnesses: Zune pretty in pink; Zune on a Mac

Filed under: LimitedEdition,limited edition,mac,microsoft,pink,zune — Ryan Block @ 2:15 am

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So as we understand it, apparently Microsoft secretly slipped 100 hot pink (or shall we say, magenta?) Zunes into the retail market for purchase, where only especially eagle-eyed buyers would notice what they were getting before taking it home and opening up their rather eye-catching player. (For lawsuit’s sake, it’s in the fine print on the bottom of the box.) Supposedly there’s another 100 pink Zunes that were given out to the Zune team, but we doubt those will be up on eBay any time soon, as is at least one of the pinks. Kind of a bummer though for that dude. You get what you thought was going to be your white (or brown or black) Zune home just to find out you’ve got a limited edition — great, except that of all the colors to surprise a user with, statistically speaking pink might be the worst selection.

Oh yeah, and in other news somebody hacked XNJB — the Mac app that makes use of select Windows-centric portable media devices — to at least partially rock out Zune style (which so far as we know uses a variant of MTP, kind of like how it also appears to use a variant of PlaysForSure). Hot diggity, pink Zune on a Mac, can you get any more esoteric?

Read – Pink Zune eBay auction [Via Zune Info]
Read – Zune on a Mac [Thanks, Nate]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 7, 2006

Elgato unveils dual-tuner EyeTV Diversity USB stick in the UK

Filed under: Apple,ElGato,TvTuner,coreduo,dtt,dvb-t,eyeTV,freeview,g5,intel,mac,powerpc,tv tuner,uk,usb — Darren Murph @ 4:19 pm

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If you didn’t bite when Elgato released its pocket-friendly EyeTV Hybrid, you may be interested in its supercharged successor, the EyeTV Diversity. The USB 2.0 stick makes for easy travel, and this rendition sports dual attachable antennas and a DSP, “which uses information from both tuners to generate the best signal possible.” Designed to work with DTT / DVB-T signals, the device supports dual tuner functionality, PIP, scheduled recordings via the included EveTV 2 software, and a one-year subscription to the “tvtv” program guide. It touts seamless integration with Toast 7, and even provides easy converting for use on video-playing iPods. The company also notes that 1080i and 720p viewing / recording is possible on Macs housing “dual PowerPC G5 or Intel Core Duo” processors, and the dual-tuner USB stick can be picked up now on the other side of the pond for €149.95 ($191).

[Via digg]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

November 3, 2006

How to turn your Mac mini into a Mac Cube

Filed under: Apple,G4Cube,MacMini,cube,diy,g4 cube,homebrew,mac,mac mini — Donald Melanson @ 11:30 pm

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DIY Mac projects are always a iffy proposition. Not only does Apple make its products more difficult to rip apart than most, the sight of a dissected MacBook or iPod is often enough to make some of the more faint of heart readers break out the smelling salts. Not so for 123Macmini member Anthony, who looked at a mini and a G4 Cube and decided that they must be made one. The goal being, apart from the deserved bragging rights, to add a TV tuner and an expansive 3.5-inch 500GB SATA hard drive more suitable for a media PC than the mini’s comparatively puny 2.5-inch drive. The TV tuner turned out to be the easiest part, with Anthony simply opting for Elgato’s external EyeTV Hybrid unit, but the rest of the project is definitely a don’t-try-this-at-home deal, with modifications aplenty right down to the power supply cables. Still, for specs like these in a genuine Apple box, it’s about your only option at the moment — at least until Apple maybe, possibly fills in the gap itself. Check out a couple more pics of the action after the break, then click through to the source for the complete blow-by-blow account.

[Via Digg]


 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD A new documentary series. Be part of the transformation as it happens in real-time

Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

August 17, 2006

El Gato’s EyeTV Hybrid digital/analog tuner for Macs

Filed under: Apple,ElGato,EyetvHybrid,atsc,dvb-t,el gato,eyeTV,eyetv hybrid,mac,ntsc,televsion,tv — Thomas Ricker @ 10:25 am

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You know you need it: that squishy soft gaze that comes with the kind of numb only a TV can deliver at the end of a hard day. El Gato knows this too, and delivers yet another fix to Mac owners in the form of the EyeTV Hybrid. As the name implies, this USB 2.0 stick delivers both hi-definition capable digital ATSC and traditional analog NTSC tuners to record (in MPEG-2 if your Mac has the muscle), edit, and pause live TV when combined with El Gato’s bundled EyeTV 2 software. What’s more, the kit works with the Apple Remote and includes a break-out cable for connecting composite and S-Video sources like your gaming rig — for “zero latency” play on your Mac’s display — or that dusty VCR to convert the ol’ VHS collection into digital media. Inputs that owners of Apple’s stellar, but otherwise inflexible, 30-inch displays will certainly appreciate. Available now for $150 or €150 for our DVB-T signal lovin’ brethren.

[Thanks, Doug]

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August 9, 2006

Switched On: Time Machine restores best, not first

Filed under: Apple,On,Ross,RossRubin,Rubin,Switched,SwitchedOn,mac,machine,time,wwdc — Ross Rubin @ 6:56 pm

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Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On, a column about the future of technology, multimedia, and digital entertainment:

At this week’s World Wide Developers’ Conference, Apple nary missed an opportunity to jest at how certain features in Vista bear similarity to those in Mac OS 10.4, recalling banners from the 2004 geek gathering enjoining the developers of Windows to “start their photocopiers.” However, the copy machines at Microsoft aren’t the only ones free of cobwebs. For example, a decade before Spotlight shone in Tiger, utilities such as On Locaiton provided classic Mac OS lightning-fast index-based searches. And Konfabulator, now owned by Yahoo, inspired Dashboard.

Spaces, slated for Leopard, promises to be merely the best-implemented in a long line of virtual desktops long known to Unix users and even made available as a PowerToy from those Windows wannabes. And what of Time Machine, the fourth-dimensional feature that was the WWDC showstopper? Among its predecessors are System Restore, a drably named subset of Time Machine’s functionality available since Windows ME; Rewind, a classic Mac OS utility once promised for Mac OS X; and GoBack, a PC utility that was purchased by Symantec. When I first saw GoBack, the earliest of these, which debuted at a DEMO conference, I thought it was one of the most ingenious pieces of software I’d ever seen — even without Time Machine’s extraterrestrial eye candy.

However, none of these utilities could claim Time Machine’s operating system integration or its visual appeal, the latter of which extends well beyond its galactic garnish. Time Machine is a restoration utility for the age of media content. Consumers, who frequently cite photos as the content type they are most concerned about losing, would be at a loss to recall the gibberish that digital cameras assign to photos. In addition to searching for deleted files with Spotlight, Time Machine enables them to browse a folder through a reverse chronology to find the missing file. Operating system-level support also enables applications like Address Book and iPhoto to browse back through time to find an accidentally deleted contact or “roll” of pictures.

Time Machine is one of those features that consumers hope they never have to use, but count on to work right when they do. Indeed, on a Mac with Boot Camp or virtualization software, Time Machine’s approach could make it more effective at bringing back lost Windows files or a botched installation than Microsoft’s System Restore does today. Were Microsoft to integrate backup and restore in Windows this seamlessly, they would have a much stronger case that the functionality was an operating system feature and not merely a bundled utility. As it is, Apple stands to profit more from the feature, giving new Mac owners a convincing reason to pick up an extra hard disk with their computers.

It took too long, but the Mac will finally have an integrated backup and restore application next year. Until then, Apple developers will need time to add features, fix bugs, and track down a universal binary of the flux capacitor.


Ross Rubin is director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group and a contributing editor for LAPTOP. Views expressed in Switched On are his own. Feedback is welcome at fliptheswitch@gmail.com.

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July 20, 2006

Apple on iPhone: “We’re not sitting around doing nothing”

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Apple's been dogged with rumors of an iPod / phone hybrid (the real deal, not a rehash of a Moto E398 with iTunes support) for nearly as long as the iPod's been kickin' around. Apparently looking to beat the dead horse yet again, an analyst mentioned Sony's success with their Walkman line of music-oriented phones during Apple's Q3 earnings call, prompting CFO Peter Oppenheimer to respond with a fairly solid non-denial: "As regards cell phones, we don't think that the phones that are available today make the best music players. We think the iPod is. But over time, that is likely to change. And we're not sitting around doing nothing." Knowing Apple, of course, this is about the biggest admission we'll get until the iPhone actually drops, so relish in the moment, keep your eyes peeled in a year or so, and if you're really hard up, you could fashion your own, like the pictured Nokia 6682 makeover.

[Via MacDailyNews]
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Apple on iPhone: “We’re not sitting around doing nothing”

Filed under: Apple,MacPhone,MusicPhone,ROKR,cell,cellphone,iPod,iphone,mac,music,phone — Chris Ziegler @ 9:26 am

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Apple’s been dogged with rumors of an iPod / phone hybrid (the real deal, not a rehash of a Moto E398 with iTunes support) for nearly as long as the iPod’s been kickin’ around. Apparently looking to beat the dead horse yet again, an analyst mentioned Sony’s success with their Walkman line of music-oriented phones during Apple’s Q3 earnings call, prompting CFO Peter Oppenheimer to respond with a fairly solid non-denial: “As regards cell phones, we don’t think that the phones that are available today make the best music players. We think the iPod is. But over time, that is likely to change. And we’re not sitting around doing nothing.” Knowing Apple, of course, this is about the biggest admission we’ll get until the iPhone actually drops, so relish in the moment, keep your eyes peeled in a year or so, and if you’re really hard up, you could fashion your own, like the pictured Nokia 6682 makeover.

[Via MacDailyNews]

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July 19, 2006

The Missing Sync gets friendly with WM5

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If ActiveSync has been keeping any MDA users out there from springing for that shiny yellow MacBook, your day has come. MarkSpace has just gone gold with The Missing Sync release 2.5, adding badly-needed support for Windows Mobile 5 devices; we can almost hear the collective sigh of relief of Mac-based Pocket PC and Smartphone users across the world. Of course, if the iPhone would hurry up and materialize, maybe this whole point would be moot — but until then, sync away, friends.

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July 11, 2006

Sling opens up Mac SlingPlayer beta

Filed under: Apple,SlingPlayer,SlingplayerMac,mac,sling,slingplayer mac — Ryan Block @ 11:33 pm

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Attention Mac place-shifting fans, you'll probably want to check this one out. It looks like at long last Sling Media's readying their SlingPlayer Mac version (perhaps for WWDC launch next month?), as they've opened it up for private beta over the next two weeks. So if you have a high tolerance for pain and are tired of putting up with running the Windows SlingPlayer client in Parallels, your moment may have arrived. Whereas we can't guarantee anyone will be granted entry to the beta program, you can at least rest assured knowing that we're undoubtedly only weeks away now from the proper Mac client launch -- and with a bit of luck maybe they won't charge us for the player software this time around.

[Thanks, Dave & Ron]
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July 6, 2006

Mac OS X update adds regular check-ins with Apple servers

Filed under: 10.4.7,Apple,MacOsX,mac,mac os x,tiger,update — Donald Melanson @ 3:25 pm

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Well, it looks like Windows isn't the only operating system that thinks your computer needs a daily check up. According to Mac developer Daniel Jakult, the most recent update to Mac OS X not only fixes a few security holes, but adds a three times a day check-in with Apple's servers, apparently to ensure that your Dashboard Widgets are up-to-date. A useful feature to some no doubt, but an invasion of privacy to others, especially since the "feature" doesn't exactly make itself known and apparently can't be disabled. For its part, Apple has said that the tool doesn't transmit any personal information back to them, but given Microsoft's recent troubles with its over-eager connectivity, we wouldn't be surprised if Apple added an off switch in their next update.
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May 30, 2006

Microsoft’s Wireless Laser Desktop for Mac

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Proving that it still has (some) love for the fiercely-loyal army of Mac enthusiasts (especially the dual-booters), Microsoft has released its first Wireless Laser Desktop for Cupertino-created computers. This new keyboard and mouse set, which features a Comfort Curve ergonomic 'board and high-definition laser mouse, sounds almost identical to the company's Wireless Laser Desktop 6000 (pictured above) which was released last year for Windows machines, except for the addition of Mac-specific modifier and hot keys. Available immediately, this package will set you back $100.
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May 24, 2006

Apple’s 17-inch MacBook Pro reviewed

Filed under: 17-inch,Apple,BootCamp,MacbookPro,PcMag,boot camp,mac,macbook pro,mbp,review — Thomas Ricker @ 8:40 am

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You know, for all the talk about those greasy-hot, over clockinMacBook Pros and their mysterious firmware updates, only now has PCMag completed a full review of the 17-inch flavor MBP. Alas, you won’t find any real surprises in the review of this “astounding” 6.8-pound, easy totin’ 17-incher. Yeah, it does indeed get “too hot” by the reviewers standards though apparently not as hot as the 15-inch model due to larger surface area to dissipate heat. And since this is PCMag, they installed Boot Camp as you’d expect, “without a hitch” giving them the same “impressive” (for a mac) gaming results in XP seen on the 15-inch sib. The reviewer calls the move to the 17-inch MacBook Pro a “no brainer” if you’re a creative professional working heavily in graphic design or movie editing. However, if you’re just looking for a “cool multimedia laptop” with plenty of screen then there are plenty of Windows-only systems available giving more bang, for that $3,099 as-tested, buck. Yeah, Mac fanboy enthusiasts, they’re calling you out with that one. Still, PCMag slaps on a 4/5 editors rating which ain’t too shabby?

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I-O Data’s GV-1394TV/M3 analog tuner for Macs

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Sure, it won’t look very nice perched atop your Mac mini but don’t give up on I-O Data’s new GV-1394TV/M3 analog tuner for Macs just yet. Using the iEPG programming guide, this little box allows you to schedule and record your favorite NTSC broadcasts directly to your Mac over Firewire. It will even convert video directly to MPEG-4/H.264 at 320 x 320 pixels for direct transfer to your connected iPod when recording is finished. Included software is fully compatible with iLife 6 making it easy to manipulate video in iMovie or to burn to DVDs via iDVD. Expected to begin shipping in Japan next month for about $240. Still, when it’s this hard to tell the front of the unit from the back on a product destined for the living room, well, we’ll understand if you pass.

[Via Impress Watch]

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May 18, 2006

Apple shows 24x7x365 NYC flagship store

Filed under: Apple,iPod,mac,macbook,new york,nightlife,nyc,retail,store — Marc Perton @ 6:52 am

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New York City nightlife used to mean hanging out in smoke-filled nightclubs at the edge of town and stumbling home as the sun came up. But, from what we hear, you can't smoke in the clubs anymore (not that we're really too upset about that), the real estate boom has squeezed a lot of them out of town, and there's even been talk of more aggressively enforcing the city's decades-old anti-nightclub statute. So, what's a denizen of the night to do? Well, it looks like Apple's come up with the answer. As previously, rumored, the company's new midtown store, which opens tomorrow, will be open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. The store, which has gotten a lot of buzz for its five-story, glass encased, Jobs-designed, cube-shaped entryway, will feature 4,000 square feet of retail space, most of it underground, and will be able to satisfy those musical and computing urges, day or night. Word is that the store will also be giving away one MacBook an hour to lucky visitors over the next couple of days (starting with tomorrow's 6pm opening), so we expect some pretty sizable crowds to show up. Yo, Steve: Add a dance floor and teach your Geniuses to really tend bar, and we may just drop by one night and pick up one of those pods of yours.

[Thanks, Jake]
Photo courtesy Dave Thorup.
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May 10, 2006

Mac “G6″ now available for $499

Filed under: AppleClone,apple clone,bogus,intel,mac,os x,power mac,power pc,ripoff — Marc Perton @ 8:10 pm

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Want an Intel-based Mac but don't want to pay Apple's prices? A company called Red PCs may have what you're looking for -- if you're willing to face the wrath of Apple's lawyers. Red PC is now offering something they're calling a "PowerPC G6 Macintosh" for $499. According to the specs, the box is basically a generic Pentium-based PC running a hacked version of the Intel version of Mac OS X. For your $499, the company is also throwing in copies of Photoshop CS2 and Microsoft Office 2004, making this quite the deal, given that Photoshop alone can go for over $400. But, then, we assume you're prepared to deal with Adobe and Microsoft's lawyers as well if you're ready to buy this. Unfortunately (or fortunately, as the case may be), the Red PCs web site seems to be down, though the machine is still listed on the Alibaba.com site as available for purchase with free global shipping and a one-year warranty.

[Via OSX86]
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May 4, 2006

Mac Universal TiVo Desktop released, hackable

Filed under: TivoDesktop,hack,mac,tivo,tivo desktop,tivotogo — Ryan Block @ 6:51 am

Filed under:

src="http://img.engadget.com/common/images/6189743642128408.jpg?0.4106095929271253" alt="" />Mac users with href="http://www.engadget.com/search/?q=tivo">TiVos, we got a one-two punch for you today. TiVo released the new
version 1.9.3 Universal TiVo Desktop software which
is all fine and good, but sadly we’re href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/12/05/tivotogo-to-go-for-macs-in-mid-2006/">still without href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/01/09/tivotogo-for-mac-for-real/">Mac TiVoToGo or some equivalent, simple,
expeditious way to export video to the Mac. But on the upshot TiVo Commmunity user Dennis Wilkinson discovered a way to
enable the so-called “TiVoBack” video sharing on your home network with an easy terminal hack, allowing you to
drop some raw MPEG-2 files onto a folder on your Mac for playback on your TiVo. We’d warn you to prepare for TiVo to
patch up their bug feature as the Hawthorne Effect will surely kick in after we report this — so href="http://tivo.com/desktop/TiVoDesktop_1.9.3_008.dmg">download it here and now before the next build takes it
all away.

[Via href="http://www.zatznotfunny.com/2006-05/tivo-desktop-mac-universal-binary-released/">Zatz Not Funny]

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April 29, 2006

Apple virtual keyboard patent quite resembles a UMPC

Filed under: Apple,iPod,mac,tablet,touchscreen,umpc — Paul Miller @ 9:32 am

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After that "the display is the camera" stunt they pulled the other day, we really wouldn't put much past Apple's patent department, but this new new virtual keyboard patent of theirs does look vaguely familiar, wouldn't you say? It does seem that Apple didn't get that "two thumbs are better than one" memo, but they seem to have stuck with their usual conceptual artist for the mockup, and are bent on teasing us with touchscreen ideas. The patent also mentions some ideas for learned pressure sensitivity for the keyboard based on what you usually type, which sounds interesting, if a bit too smart for our tastes. Apple also has a recent patent for the iPod that have the device's screen mirrored onto a larger screen, and also allows for remote control and wireless file transfer between the devices. It's all well and good, but Apple has had a patent for wireless file transfer for a while now, so it's nothing to get too excited about.

[Via Mac Rumors]
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April 27, 2006

The Clicker: The conversation that never officially took place

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Every week Stephen Speicher contributes The Clicker, an opinion column on entertainment and technology:

You could all but see the gears turning in his head as he pondered the statement. "Clearly," he thought to himself, "I've misheard. He can't seriously be saying what I think he's saying."

"Excuse me?" Bill replied assuming that he would hear something different the second time around.

"That's right. Apple wants to build a Media Center PC."

There was a brief pause as Bill closely inspected his colleague. Blue Jeans, check... turtleneck, check... half-soothing / half-arrogant smile, check... This was the real deal; this was Steve Jobs.

"Let me get this straight…" Gates, now a little bit confused, continued, "You want to build a Windows Media Center Edition PC?"

"That's right."

"Apple?"

"Yes. Apple!"

"Let me come at this from a slightly different angle. You're telling me that Apple wants to ship a Media Center PC?"

"That's what I'm telling you."

"You do understand that Media Center is part of the OS?"

"Yes, I understand."


"This isn't some program that we can port for you."

"Bill... listen clearly: Apple wants to build a Media Center box with Windows Media Center Edition pre-installed."

"Don't you already have an OS? Marmot? Crocodile? Aardvark?..."

"Tiger, Bill, It's called Tiger. Why do you always have to do that joke?"

"HA! It's always funny, Steve. It's always funny."

Bill paused and pondered the enormity of it all. Finally he would have an OEM whom he could trust to get it right.

"Well… who am I to say no?"

"That's great. I'll have my people call your people."

With business concluded they talked for a few more minutes. Bill admitted that he used an iPod. Steve implied that Windows was his work OS. In truth, both already knew each other's secret. The conversation was pleasant if not revealing.

Steve gathered his belongings and headed for the door.

"One more thing," Bill said with a half chuckle. "Do you have a codename for this project?"

"Yes. We call it iRobot." Steve said as the door closed behind him.



Officially the above meeting never took place and, quite frankly, the concept is little more than the fanciful dream of one writer. However, once the knee-jerk reaction wears off, one must ask the obvious question, "Why not?"

Yes, the idea is: insane, ludicrous, downright stupid, and, once again, insane. However, that doesn't mean that it's wholly without merit.

Let's look at the facts.

Fact 1: There is one thing that both the most ardent Apple fans and the Microsoft loyalists will always agree on: Apple has made a pretty good living producing hardware that's elegant, fashionable, and over-priced when viewed strictly on a function-for-function basis with its competition.

If ever a computer called for Apple's expertise, it's in the world of Media Centers. While traditional PC OEMs such as Sony and HP have been getting better, none have been able to strike a chord with the buying public like Apple would. Apple could immediately step in and corner the market.

Fact 2: Steve Jobs has shown little interest in going the route of the DVR. Apple has dipped its foot into the pool with Front Row, but few consumers are likely to buy a dedicated computer for Front Row. This means that the entire dedicated Media Center market would be fresh meat fruit for Apple. Show me a business that doesn't like exploiting a non-cannibalizing market-segment and I'll show you a company with a losing business plan.

Fact 3: Apple does have a long-term strategy for being in the living-room. It's clear that digital entertainment will play a large part in the future of entertainment. Don't expect Apple to miss out on it. However, Apple believes in attacking the problem closer to the source. Expect Apple to do deals closer to the content layer and to then, once these deals are in place, provide alternate distribution mechanisms. The problem is that this takes time and often produces a "chicken and egg" scenario.

Fact 4: It's not really a technical problem. Apple's move to the Intel platform and their subsequent unveiling of Boot Camp put them in a great position to take the next logical step.

Does this mean Apple would be abandoning MacOS? Heck no. This all returns back to the secret codename, "iRobot." The plan is simple. Each of Apple's Media Center boxes would ship with both operating systems. Slowly but surely these boxes would find their way into the living rooms of the world. Then, one day, when Apple was, once again, ready to change the world, Steve Jobs would climb into his secret tower and begin transmitting "the signal."

All around the world the pleasant blue LEDs on the front of these sleeper-agent Media Center PCs would change to the more ominous RED. This would alert owners that it was now time to give these boxes the OS Alt-TAB and return their boxes back to their rightful state. It was time for them to return to being Macs.


If you have comments or suggestions for future columns feel free to drop me a line at theclicker@theevilempire.com.
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April 17, 2006

OnMac triple boots Mac from Boot Camp

Filed under: Windows,boot,boot camp,gentoo,linux,mac,os x,osx,xp — Marc Perton @ 7:45 am

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Lest you think the team at OnMac.net (you know, the crowd that brought us the original Windows-on-Mac bootloader) would pack it in now that Apple has moved into their turf with Boot Camp, they've come back with a new hack that allows Boot Camp to be used to triple boot your Mac. That's right: no longer are you limited to a mere two operating systems when you start your Mac. Now, you can have a choice of OS X, Windows XP and the Linux distro of your choice (they went with gentoo). Their solution for this turns out to be fairly straightforward: rather than attempting to hack Boot Camp, they've chained the lilo bootloader to run off of the Windows loader. So, Boot Camp still shows you just two options -- OS X and Windows XP -- but if you choose Windows, you then get a second set of choices, which lets you pick Linux or XP. Now that this is done, we're waiting for someone to go to four: we really want to be able to boot into OS/2 Warp, and we suspect the solution is just around the corner.
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April 9, 2006

Vista successfully installed on a Mac

Filed under: BootCamp,Windows,boot camp,imac,mac,vista,xp — Ryan Block @ 9:37 pm

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We didn't think it was anything but a matter of time, but hey, for those closely monitoring the progress of Windows on Macs, it looks like peeps on the OSx86 Project forums have fully done the deed with Vista on an iMac. We're not about to suppose we could fully get into the nitty gritty right here and now, but it sounds like the trick is to get Vista to stop trying to kill the OS X partition when installing with Boot Camp, an urge which it sounds like can kept at bay by taking out the 200MB EFI partition. But if you're the type of person how wants to go for the gold and not just read about this stuff (which you probably are if you've gotten this far), we suggest actually looking into this a little further before knocking around partitions on your Mac just to get a beta Microsoft operating system up and running, mkay?

[Thanks, Mike and Jon]
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April 8, 2006

Cringely: blame Vista’s delay on OEMs, Apple to sell OS X for PCs

Filed under: Apple,PC,cringely,dell,hp,mac,microsoft,oem,os x,osx,pundit,vista — Ryan Block @ 11:42 am

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alt="" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/cringely.jpg" />You’ve got to love the pundit on their soapbox,
don’t you? This week Cringely, whose previous insightful predictions have rung true in href="http://www.engadget.com/2005/06/10/cringely-predicts-intel-to-buy-apple-dethroning-microsoft/">Intel buying
Apple and Apple
quitting their iPod business, in his usual roundabout prose blames OEMs like Dell or HP for Vista’s delay. He
connects the two by asserting that Microsoft must not have anticipated the buffer / test period required by their
larger OEM partners to get the OS running stably on their boxes before release; thus, since Vista had to go gold long
before launch — and MS wasn’t ready for release to OEMs — they had to delay so as to give their partners the time
necessary to confidently release Vista boxes. (All of which kind of invokes the hysteron proteron fallacy of the
unproved premise supposing its conclusion). But Cringley’s not done: after we’re all integrated and settled with our
Macs with Boot Camp either as beta or in Leopard, he’d like us to believe Apple will become a Windows OEM and start
selling Macs with Vista and OS X out of box "if it will help sales." Um, ok, but there are lots of things
Apple could do to increase sales. And what’s more, he goes on to suppose Apple will again fork their processor platform
by going to 64-bit Intel chips, which they’ll use as a ploy to sell a standalone 32-bit version of OS X to Windows users
for installation on their non-Apple PCs (since you’ll no longer be able to get 32-bit Apple boxes). Whoa, Cringely,
you’re gonna have to slow things down next week, ok? So many absurd suppositions at once are making our heads hurt a
little.

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April 7, 2006

That’s what you get for installing Windows!

Filed under: Hummer,case,crash,doh,laptop,mac,mod,powerbook — Marc Perton @ 9:15 am

Filed under:


In the tradition of "The Crash" feature on Japan's Impress Watch site, we present this very sad case: a PowerBook that has seen much better days. However, as shown here, it still runs when hooked up to an external keyboard and monitor. So, don't feel sorry for this Mac's owner. Just think of him as the ultimate case modder, who managed to turn an old laptop into a desktop using nothing but a Hummer H2.

[Via TUAW]
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April 6, 2006

Parallels provides XP-on-Mac in virtual machine

Filed under: ,

While it
probably won’t get nearly as much hype as href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/04/05/boot-camp-lets-macs-run-windows-officially/">Apple’s Boot Camp, the new
beta of Parallels Workstation could actually prove to be more useful for Mac owners than the Apple boot manager.
Parallels Workstation 2.1 Beta for Mac OS X creates a virtual machine on an Intel-based Mac, allowing the owner to
install any guest OS compiled for X86, including Windows XP, Linux or MS-DOS (hey, why not?). This could allow Mac
users who need to run an occasional Windows app to do so without having to reboot first — though they’ll need enough
RAM and processing power to run both OS X and the virtual machine simultaneously. While other apps, including
Microsoft’s Virtual PC, have offered similar functionality for Power PC Macs, they required processor emulation,
seriously undermining performance. By contrast, Parallels Workstation (available as a free beta) is said to provide
"near native" performance, which might be enough for users who need to run Visio, Project,  or one of
the many other Windows-only productivity apps — though gamers will probably still want to use Boot Camp and keep just
one OS running at a time.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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April 5, 2006

Mossberg goes to Boot Camp and survives unscathed

Filed under: ,

While some early message-board reviews of Apple's new Boot Camp software -- which was announced earlier today -- seem to show that there are at least some hazards to running Windows on a Mac (see the pic at right, which is apparently one of the first Boot Camp-assisted Mac BSODs), The Wall Street Journal's Walt Mossberg has given the new boot manager a thumbs up. According to Mossberg (who was able to sneak a copy out of Cupertino a few days ago), after installing Boot Camp and Windows on an Intel iMac, Windows ran "blazingly fast," and all of the apps he tested ran "flawlessly." Mossberg put the install time -- including both installing Boot Camp itself and running the usual Windows installer -- at 57 minutes, 40 of which were claimed by the Windows setup program. Despite being generally pleased, Mossberg did find a few glitches, including having to reset the clock every time Windows is booted (apparently the system clock used by the iMac isn't recognized by Windows) and not being able to use Apple's iSight camera. All in all, however, Mossberg summed things up with what may soon become Apple's new tagline: "Whether you want to run Mac or Windows programs, an Apple computer may be the only computer you'll need."

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Boot Camp lets Macs run Windows … officially

Filed under: Apple,Windows,core duo,dual boot,intel,mac,mactel,os x,osx,windows xp,wintel,xp — Marc Perton @ 4:09 am

Filed under: ,

If you want to run Windows on your Intel-based Mac but found narf and blanka's solution a little too intimidating, you now have another option -- and this one's from Apple. The company has released a public beta of a technology called Boot Camp, which will be included in the next version of OS X. As its name implies, Boot Camp is essentially a boot manager, and allows Mac owners to install Windows XP and choose whether to run OS X or Windows at startup. It also includes a selection of Windows drivers for common Mac hardware, along with a utility to let you burn a CD to run the installation and partitioning tools. Yes, you still need your own copy of XP, but it looks like Apple's taken most of the pain out of dual-booting. Great job Steve, but we're sorry to tell you that the $13K bounty's already been won.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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