New MacBook Pro line-up

As usual for 2008, Apple’s online store went down today. Every single Tuesday this year Apple has rolled out updates to their product line-up and today was no exception. New MacBooks and MacBook Pros have been anticipated by the masses for several weeks now but today those anticipations became reality.

Unfortunately I’m a little underwhelmed by the new offerings. The price stays the same. I would have liked to see a slight price decrease as it is easy to spend over $3000 on the 17″ MacBook Pro model. I think at this point it should be required that all hard drives come in at least 7200r RPM flavors. The 5400 RPM drives are just too slow for a great deal of today’s demanding applications such as video and photo processing IMO. The screen resolution has always been a downer for me on Apple’s notebooks. The 1900×1200 resolution is only available on the 17″ MacBook Pro model with the other models offering 1440×900. The new Spaces feature in Leopard makes it a bit easier to use this lower resolution, but I would still like to see something a little higher as the standard, like 1680×1050.

I have no doubt that my next laptop will be a 15.4″ MacBook Pro model, but hopefully by that point Apple will realize that a higher resolution is a necessity. I miss my 1900×1200 resolution on my old Dell laptop (15″ model) and wonder why we can’t have a similar resolution offering on the 15″ MacBook Pro model.


Windows Vista SP1

Windows Vista
For some odd reason I was under the assumption that Windows Vista SP1 was supposed to make things better for the Windows Vista crowd but lately the reports that I’ve been reading is debunking that theory altogether. First I saw reports that the notoriously slow file copy processes were indeed not fixed completely in SP1 and now there are reports that even installing the pre-requisites for SP1 may throw your computer into an endless reboot scenario.

Someone please tell Microsoft that we don’t want their bloatware anymore. In the event that Microsoft simply can’t make a decent OS then please notify third party software makers that users are now switching to Mac platforms and that we would love to have their corporate software up and running in OSX.


Apple Genius T-Shirt

I’ve been looking for a 2007 holiday season Apple Genius employee t-shirt for a while and finally found one my size on eBay. Luckily I won the auction and I should have my geek shirt in all its glory next week! I can’t wait to wear it around my Windows die hards at […]


Asta La Vista

Windows Vista
When Windows Vista was made public over a year ago I decided to wait a few months for some of the kinks to be worked out between Microsoft and third party developers (software and drivers). I actually ended up waiting almost a year (after Vista was made available to business customers) and reformatted my work laptop to dual boot XP/Vista. Vista was made my default OS and I started using it full-time in August of 2007. I gave it a shot, the absolute best shot I possibly could, but last month (January 2008) I decided to make XP my default OS again. That’s right, I *UPGRADED* to Windows XP and eagerly await XP SP3 to be released. Why you ask? Here are some of the MANY reasons I have to answer that question:

- File copying took FOREVER in Vista. Things that should have taken a few seconds took minutes. Things that should have been copied in three or four minutes took over an hour at times which is obviously unacceptable.

- I got more system crashes on this particular system using Vista than I ever did with XP meaning it simply wasn’t stable. Granted that Vista did a better job at getting the OS back into a usable state after a crash, the problem was that it simply happened to frequently. For the record, I was using Vista drivers for all of my hardware and yes, my laptop had specific Vista drivers made for it even though it was purchased before Vista was made available.

- At first Vista appeared to be a bit faster than XP, but in reality once I installed all of my needed software it ran much slower than XP (my system has 2GB of RAM so that isn’t the issue).

- Even a year after Vista was released some software that I frequently use didn’t have a Vista compatible version so I was stuck with using alternatives which I didn’t like (in most circumstances).

- Vista comes in five flavors. Why does Microsoft make you choose from FIVE different version of the same OS? With XP I had one choice for business, XP Pro (or XP Home for personal). With Vista it is either Vista Home Basic, Vista Home Premium, Vista Business, Vista Enterprise and Vista Ultimate. No thanks. I’d rather just choose Vista Home or Vista Business. Vista Ultimate has turned out to be a total crock considering it is $400 and even Vista Business is $300! Again, no thanks.

I don’t mind for a minute to just simply skip Vista altogether which is what I plan to do. I am in charge of IT at a company with a little over 100 desktops and I simply refuse to *upgrade* to Vista. What worries me though is that Microsoft doesn’t make it easy to go that route. It is fairly easy to skip one version of Windows, skipping two is quite a bit more difficult. What happens if the next version of Windows is as crappy or worse than Vista?

For the record I have run a dual Windows/OSX configuration at home for a few years but last month I made the move to all Macs. I wish I could make the same move at work but unfortunately software manufacturers haven’t figured out that Macs could play a great role in Business, especially now considering how bad Microsoft has made themselves look.


16GB iPhone

Though I wasn’t an iPhone early adopter I did purchase one several months ago. I opted for the 8GB version since the 4GB had been discontinued (and luckily I couldn’t find a refurb 4GB unit on Apple.com). My wife had previously bought me a 30GB iPod last March but how was she to know I would get an iPhone later in the year? I use my iPhone as an iPod too (my wife has my old iPod) and 8GB seems fairly sufficient for my needs, though I’ll say that 16GB seems awfully tempting. I still have a couple of gigs left on my iPhone, and that is after all of my 3+ star content is synced. I can’t help but wonder if I’ll be longing for the 16GB version once the SDK comes out later this month and developers start making apps for the device. At least it is an easy upgrade, just buy a new iPhone, put your current iPhone’s SIM card in and sell your old iPhone (or give it to your wife, which is likely what I’ll be doing once I eventually replace my current phone).