Flash is dead?
OK, this is really surprising… but not… I guess Adobe, a company whose roots are steeped in Apple, has remained true to its origins by conceding to Apple’s refusal to accept Flash on their devices.
OK, this is really surprising… but not… I guess Adobe, a company whose roots are steeped in Apple, has remained true to its origins by conceding to Apple’s refusal to accept Flash on their devices.
Several friends have requested that I post details about my “Hackintosh” build. It was a time consuming process, but it was worth it, since I saved about $2000!
First of all, I want to clarify that although I’m referring to this as a “Hackintosh”, there is no actual hacking involved. There are a few hoops to jump through to get it to work correctly, but I think you’ll agree that they are minor, in relation to the return you get from your time invested. Therefore, I prefer to refer to it as a MacClonePro.
Researching hardware:
To begin, I heavily referenced tonymacx86.com to decide on the hardware to buy and for OS X installation instructions. This page contains a matrix of several confirmed hardware combinations that have worked. I would recommend not straying far from these options at all to help save you frustration or disappointment after you build. NOTE: I did not bother to get a Bluetooth chip or a WiFi chip. I can add those as USB adapters later on.
Purchasing hardware:
Mostly I used Amazon.com to research prices (I have no faith in eBay at all). I also compared prices over at Newegg.com, since they have had competitive prices in the past and are a reputable company to work with. Each of the parts below are linked to the actual product page from the site that I purchased it from.
Here is a list of hardware that I chose for my MacClonePro:
Motherboard: Gigabyte X58A-UD3R CPU: Intel i7-960 Core - 3.2 Ghz Quad-Core CPU Cooler *1: Corsair A70 Dual Fan High-performance CPU Cooler RAM: Corsair 8 GB (2x4 GB) Vengeance DDR3 Graphics Card: Gigabyte ATI Radeon HD 5770 1GB GDDR5 PCI-e Harddrive *2: Samsung Spinpoint 1 TB 7200 rpm SATA PSU: Corsair TX850W DVD: Sony Optiarc 24x DVD Burner SATA Case: Corsair 600T Graphite Series Mid-tower
*1 – I had to remove one of the fans because it didn’t leave enough clearance for the RAM chips.
*2 – When I first priced these drives, they were $65, but due to the flooding in Thailand where the drives were made, they doubled in price.
Hardware Installation:
Read the product instructions!!!!! Here are some snapshots of the build process:
Photos courtesy of Vince Ammann
Snow Leopard OS X Installation:
As I mentioned above, I heavily referenced tonymacx86.com for this project, including the OS X installation. I followed this page to the letter, and it worked perfectly. In case it’s not clear enough, I’ll spell it out a bit more:
I should say that the boot up isn’t seamless like if you bought an actual Mac, but I don’t have a problem with hitting the Enter key to continue the boot. Also, there were a couple of configurations that I had to set to get the system to work totally smoothly.
Total build cost: $1218 with shipping (The monitor, mouse and keyboard are not included in that amount).
As spec’d on the Apple Store: $3274
Let me know if you have any questions!
It’s time for another installment in the Musical Collection series… here’s Jack Teagarden with Louis Armstrong singing “Rockin’ Chair”.
As the Internet becomes a more robust technology, companies naturally seek to monopolize on this relatively new innovation. In recent weeks, companies like Verizon, MetroPCS and Comcast seek to control their stake in the Information Highway, but the FCC is attempting to regulate their control. The linked article above discusses incidences where MetroPCS seems to block the use of Skype on their basic data plan and Comcast charges Level3 for streaming videos from Netflix. The companies claim that the FCC is stepping out of their authority by imposing Net Neutrality regulations, but it’s important to consider history of a similar technological boom.
Back in the 1800s, as the industrial revolution began to gain momentum, railroads and rail companies started to sprout up and grow all over England and the US. However, just as now with the communications companies seek to control their portion of the Internet, so too did the rail companies try to control their rails. In an effort to curb monopolistic practices, though, the US Government created the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC).
While I’m a proponent of less government and more free enterprise, I also believe that commerce gone unchecked leads to price gouging and inequity of service availability. And this is what we’re beginning to see. I just hope that justice prevails.
Perhaps I wax poetic to the point of stagnation… perhaps you query to weariness why an unknown, such as I, should even dare to wander in and ponder the sources of one’s inspiration. I find, in many times and in many circumstances, inspiration, be that a muse or a fuse for thought, should usually be represented rather inaccessible, even to the point of extinction, at least, in my small sphere. Inspiration, especially when related to feeble attempts at creating anything musical, lends itself very little to my process; though my guitar encased is always a willing victim to my torturous abusings, er, amusings. But it seems that my guitar and I only meet once in a full moon on a Tuesday night when the nightingale sings the blues. I exaggerate, but I believe you caught my gist.
Fear is an unfortunate companion when it focuses on me. If I pass on fear’s attentions toward my Creator, then all things become like the tumblers of a door lock when the correct key is inserted. I find fear, though, feeds upon loneliness with a frenzy which befits a beast ravenous. I find fear, more often than I would choose, though I wish not to frighten by such a statement. It’s merely a sentence of process more than a problem.
Indeed, creativity and worship are things that intertwine and mingle well, as was intended. I feel we frail-framed ones have forgotten this fact. Then again, we do seem to have maintained the inappropriate ability of worshiping our own creations, haven’t we? So, therein lies the passion of my pursuits of the hopeful future. Shall I discover a path divinely designed, which should lead me towards freedom in furthering such Amazing Tidings through vessels mere and weak? One can, for now, only ponder… and wait. In the meantimes, organic endeavours must give way to digital, as these digits of mine do a delicate dance collaborating with a collection of keys colloquially called QWERTY.
How often do we take time to be still, to be quiet, and to just let the thoughts come? Lately I have found myself craving such silence. There are so many distractions and so many noises that push and pull me that I sometimes feel like a boat tossed about by waves in a storm. The only music that satisfies me is the kind that is pensive, simple worship, like the song “My God” by my friend Tom Ewing or something by John Michael Talbot or like the song that I’ve included below by Brooke Fraser recorded with Hillsong United.
In classic fashion, we humans have cluttered up our lives. We’ve gone after our little idols of prosperity (i.e. iPhone, iPad, iPod, etc.) and now we’re paying for it with the shredding of our souls from the inside out from all of the jagged airwaves, microwaves and sound waves.
The psalmist in Psalm 46:10 prophesies the word of the Lord:
“Be still, and know that I am God;
I will be exalted among the nations,
I will be exalted in the earth!”
I believe that we fear silence for what it might bring up from within ourselves. Yes, it will reveal our pain that we try so desperately to cover with our idolatrous musings. But pain revealed is a blessing, for then we can know in what areas to ask the Lord for healing.
We also fear silence because of feeling alone. The American culture is so splintered because of the extreme individuality that our prosperity has afforded us. We hide behind our Facebook, shut out the world with our earbuds and work incredibly hard to earn enough money (or have enough credit), so that we never need to rely on others. The consequence to all of that personal “freedom” is that we are cut off from the joy that true, healthy and pure intimacy with others and with the Lord can give us.
In Psalm 46:11, the psalmist repeats 2 phrases from earlier in the psalm:
“The Lord of hosts is with us;
The God of Jacob is our refuge.”
As you listen to this song below, allow the Lord to speak to you and to bring healing to your innermost being. He is very much alive and very much in love with you. “Be still, and know that I am God.”
The Mulcahy Family playing an Irish jig. This video is from Comhaltas, an organization in Ireland that exists to promote the Irish musical tradition and culture.
By far one of my favorite American compositions, “Rhapsody in Blue” by George Gershwin continues to stay fresh. What’s amazing is that some of what Gershwin played on piano for the premiere of this piece was improvised; quite a feat when dealing with an orchestra.
There are two parts for this performance directed by Leonard Bernstein, filmed in London in 1976. Ironically, this video was recorded from Czech State Television Channel 2.
Everything is becoming symbolic. Nothing is original anymore.
The new HTC EVO 4G phone offered by Sprint comes equipped with a “kickstand”. It’s not really a kickstand, mind you. Honestly, are you going kick out this little stand? No, but this little feature is reminiscent of the feature on every kid’s bicycle had to have, otherwise, one would be relegated to lean one’s bike up against a tree. The horror.
If you happen to still have a desktop computer with a mouse, you’ll know that the “mouse” is not really a rodent. Somehow, from the humor of the developers, the word “mouse” now refers to a pointing device more so than it does to the furry creature that scampers in your kitchen at night looking for any leftover crumbs (we had a few of those in the old farmhouse in Latvia, but our cat took care of them). Even the term “monitor” has nothing to do with lizards nor the first ironclad warship.
Everything is now symbolic of something that existed before. I suppose this shouldn’t come as a surprise to me. We’ve been told by a wise sage centuries ago that there is “nothing new under the sun”.
I feel like my late brother. He would ask thought-provoking questions to which there weren’t really satisfactory answers. So what now? Go ahead and answer.
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