Plus ça change

Apogee Press Release: Santa Monica, CA, February 23, 2009 – As of 2009, Apogee Electronics will no longer develop products for the Microsoft Windows platform. Apogee has made this decision in order to focus all research, development, and support resources on the Apple platform with its unparalleled power and stability. Apple offers a wide range … Continue reading “Plus ça change”

Apogee Press Release:

Santa Monica, CA, February 23, 2009 – As of 2009, Apogee Electronics will no longer develop products for the Microsoft Windows platform. Apogee has made this decision in order to focus all research, development, and support resources on the Apple platform with its unparalleled power and stability. Apple offers a wide range of affordable, powerful desktop and laptop solutions ideally suited for music creation and audio production.

A couple of years ago, Wil Shipley wrote about why he develops for the Mac and how it allowed him to score a big fat Lotus sports car.

Frankly, I see this happening more and more in the near future as people change their needs and there are realisations that beyond the FUD, there’s not much difference between Vista and Mac OS X in terms of casual surfer utility and once you break this hold on people, it changes them forever.

I’d like to think that ten years of running NIMUG and five years of running Mac-Sys would mean something in the current tsunami of people coming to the Mac platform in Northern Ireland but in truth we’d have to point at the Apple Store in Belfast as having a huge effect on general acceptance. Actually having a store on the high street was something that I’d considered (but frankly the margins available to me as an Apple Reseller did not permit that – and that’s fine. The Apple Store excels at bringing people to the platform and giving them the basic training skills and Mac-Sys excels at fixing their computers (according to Apple, MacSys has a 93.3% approval rating which put’s comfortably in the top 10% of Euro Apple Service Providers.)

Having a complementary relationship with Apple was always something we strived for. We didn’t have cash flow to sell Apple hardware but there was always room for us to help customers find the best and cheapest place to buy. And we spend hours on the phone every month fighting for value for Mac owners in terms of dealing with insurance companies, Apple Customer Service and other repair companies (who don’t specialise in Mac repair). We’re responsive to the market which is why Mac-Sys now has a “Free on Friday” health check, waiving diagnosis fees for hardware we receive on Fridays, the Enterprise Park is open late on Tuesdays and so is Mac-Sys and lastly, the guys have dropped the charges for picking up hardware – we have guys out in the field already doing installations in homes and offices and it’s going to be a minor detour to have your Mac picked up and dropped off after repair.

Like Apogee, we’ve responded to the market as a result of making the decision to specialise on the Mac platform six years ago as no-one else was doing it in Northern Ireland.

Find your niche, own your niche and when folk in your market tell lies about you, try to resist the temptation to punch them in the mouth 🙂

NiMUG meeting tonight…

NiMUG are having their January 2009 meeting tonight. Agenda CrossOver Office- Simon Whittaker to give a demo using Crossover Office on the mac to get outlook/project 2000 etc in a Windows office. He has been a Mac user for about 5 years and uses a MacBook Pro for work and a G4 PowerBook for home. … Continue reading “NiMUG meeting tonight…”

NiMUG are having their January 2009 meeting tonight.

Agenda

  • CrossOver Office- Simon Whittaker to give a demo using Crossover Office on the mac to get outlook/project 2000 etc in a Windows office. He has been a Mac user for about 5 years and uses a MacBook Pro for work and a G4 PowerBook for home. He works as the Infrastructure & Hosting Manager for a local company where they use predominantly Windows XP workstations and Windows 2003 servers. He says he loves “the ease of use, stability & security of my mac and have found ways over the years to make my experience of working in a windows environment much easier which I would like to share with others. I am also a strong believer in using open source software where possible and practical.”
  • Troubleshooting and Housekeeping – keeping your Mac running during the Credit Crunch!

Hopefully see some of you there…

1984

I’m a little early with this but that’s no bad thing. It’s time to think – to reminisce – and maybe even to plan. Next Monday night, NiMUG will be holding another meeting but this Saturday is much more auspicious. On January 24th Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be … Continue reading “1984”

I’m a little early with this but that’s no bad thing. It’s time to think – to reminisce – and maybe even to plan. Next Monday night, NiMUG will be holding another meeting but this Saturday is much more auspicious.

On January 24th
Apple Computer will introduce
Macintosh
And you’ll see why 1984
won’t be like “1984”

This Saturday is the 25th Anniversary of the Apple Macintosh, heralded by this advert shown during the Superbowl, which has since attained cult status and still wins awards even now. For this advert, Apple hired award-winning director Ridley Scott (best known perhaps for Alien, Blade Runner, Thelma & Louise, Gladiator, Black Hawk Down) and the result was a a masterpiece.

Like them or love them, you can’t ignore the Macintosh. While I was exposed to the Mac in university, my first own Mac was a second hand LCII. With the under-clocked anaemic processor and a 10MB RAM ceiling, it wasn’t fast (though as I was used to a Mac Classic, it was no slouch). As soon as I could afford it, I upgraded to a Performa 5400, a 180MHz Black monstrosity that provided me with TV as well as the ability to mess with video clips. It also provided me with my first taste of internet at home with it’s 33600 baud softmodem. I remember buying a 64 MB RAM chip for it and it costing over £100 – bringing me to a whopping 80MB. My next machine was the original Bondi iMac – the machine that arguably saved Apple. This was joined a short while later by Pismo, a 400 MHz svelte black PowerBook with a fantastic batter life and it was on this machine that I took my first tentative steps into Mac OS X – Apple twinning a much improved version of their famous GUI with UNIX was a master step – even if some didn’t believe it was ready for prime time – and those guys probably still aren’t happy. I picked up the Public Beta at Apple Expo and never looked back. I migrated later to a 1 GHz Titanium and then to a 1.25 GHz Aluminium PowerBook. Then to a 1.67 GHz Aluminium model before making the jump to a MacBook Pro. The rest is just recent history. I’ve played around with other “Apple” products such as a Quicktake 150, a Newton MessagePad 120 and 2000, umpteen Stylewriters over the years and there was never any doubt that the next machine would be a Mac. And it’s not for lack of choice – I’ve always, since starting my first professional job, had access to the latest Windows, Solaris and Linux – but none of them held the same shine.

While we might be all ga-ga about the iPhone or concerned about our stocks and shares if Apple’s CEO trips and stubs his toe, it’s about time that we considered how the world would be like without the iPhone, the iPod and the Mac.

Apple finishes their press releases with:

Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh. Today, Apple continues to lead the industry in innovation with its award-winning computers, OS X operating system and iLife and professional applications. Apple is also spearheading the digital media revolution with its iPod portable music and video players and iTunes online store, and has entered the mobile phone market with its revolutionary iPhone.

Look at your screen with your windows and buttons, with the rounded corners and overlapping windows. Consider how far we’ve come based on the hard graft of that little company in Cupertino. There’s barely a computer in the world which doesn’t bear the mark of those pioneers in Apple. Others have done admirable work – but they were standing on the shoulders of giants.

It seems fitting that this quarter end, Apple celebrated their best quarter ever.

“Even in these economically challenging times, we are incredibly pleased to report our best quarterly revenue and earnings in Apple history—surpassing $10 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time ever,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO.

Thanks, Apple. I’ve enjoyed the last few years – here’s to many more.

XCake.org is now back up.

Comment spam is a pain in the butt – to the point that XCake.org ended up with over eight thousand lines of spammer links and crap because I allowed open comments. This overhead caused a huge load on my MySQL server and it affected performance elsewhere so, in the end, it had to go and … Continue reading “XCake.org is now back up.”

Comment spam is a pain in the butt – to the point that XCake.org ended up with over eight thousand lines of spammer links and crap because I allowed open comments. This overhead caused a huge load on my MySQL server and it affected performance elsewhere so, in the end, it had to go and for just under a month, xcake.org has been sitting idle, dead.

Until tonight.

Tonight I trimmed the Comment spam and removed every single comment. I also required a user to be logged in before they can comment. Smart, huh?

So what is XCake?

Well, I’ve covered it before so go have a look.

The Office iPhone

Rob from SMSTextNews writes about the iPhone: I used to work for an agency that believed that Macs were better at everything. It would spend a fortune on a Mac and then only use it to do MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint and the interweb. It did seem like a waste of money, especially as the … Continue reading “The Office iPhone”

Rob from SMSTextNews writes about the iPhone:

I used to work for an agency that believed that Macs were better at everything. It would spend a fortune on a Mac and then only use it to do MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint and the interweb. It did seem like a waste of money, especially as the company in question wasn’t the best payer out there.

Oh man, when you read this, you know that the article is going to be more fluff than content. Obviously you don’t need a Mac if you’re just using email, a web browser and office productivity applications. I mean why would you want a Mac – aren’t they just the same thing?

No, Rob, they’re not. Even if all I did was use Word and Powerpoint and Excel and Interweb, I’d still want to be doing it on a Mac. Inability to fathom the difference this would make just means that the rest of your post can be easily categorised into “He just doesn’t get it”.

You see, apparently the iPhone is now being adopted by more companies as an all-purpose communications device.

I’m not that surprised that it’s being adopted. Having tried both I think I’d still rather have the CrackBerry 8120 especially as it has WiFi on it. It’s not pretending to be something else.
I have an iPod (two in fact) and so never listen to music on the phone. I have a camera. I have a phone. I don’t really check the web on my phone because it’s rarely that urgent. So, that leaves me with the need for email and, quite simply, Blackberry is perfect for this. Especially as it has keys to easily type one.

Having used both BlackBerry and iPhone within the last two years, I see little evidence to suggest that having keys makes it easier to type. In fact, the presence of keys just seemed to eat up real estate on the device. For someone who wants to carry two iPods, one camera and a phone and who has no need to web browse on the phone, a BlackBerry might make some sense. For me, the availability of my media, the ease of use of email and the web, the flexibility of the App Store, the sheer screen real estate and even the fact it has a camera, albeit a poor one, make the iPhone the convergence device for me. I don’t carry other devices out and about (and when I do, it’s the full gamut of 17″ laptop, solar chargers, maybe even the N800).

I guess “He just doesn’t get it”.

Mobile Me ‘me.com’ addresses working for some…

Return-path: (mattj@quayperformance.com) Received: from smtpin138.mac.com ([10.150.68.138]) by ms233.mac.com (Sun Java(tm) System Messaging Server 6.3-6.03 (built Mar 14 2008; 64bit)) with ESMTP id for pelorus@me.com; Mon, 30 Jun 2008 09:47:04 -0700 (PDT) Original-recipient: rfc822;pelorus@me.com .. Received: from unknown (HELO ?192.168.1.4?) (unknown) by unknown with SMTP; Mon, 30 Jun 2008 16:47:03 +0000 X-pair-Authenticated: 90.211.129.23 Message-id: From: Matt … Continue reading “Mobile Me ‘me.com’ addresses working for some…”

Return-path: (mattj@quayperformance.com)
Received: from smtpin138.mac.com ([10.150.68.138])
by ms233.mac.com (Sun Java(tm) System Messaging Server 6.3-6.03 (built Mar 14
2008; 64bit)) with ESMTP id <0K3A00HX8BYG9BH0@ms233.mac.com> for
pelorus@me.com; Mon, 30 Jun 2008 09:47:04 -0700 (PDT)
Original-recipient: rfc822;pelorus@me.com
..
Received: from unknown (HELO ?192.168.1.4?) (unknown)
by unknown with SMTP; Mon, 30 Jun 2008 16:47:03 +0000
X-pair-Authenticated: 90.211.129.23
Message-id:<30A4E3D8-341E-430F-86B0-F32D43BA095B@quayperformance.com>
From: Matt Johnston (mattj@quayperformance.com)
To: pelorus@me.com
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
MIME-version: 1.0 (Apple Message framework v924)
Subject: Test message
Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 17:47:03 +0100
X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.924)

Mine works. 🙂 So long suckers! Note that the servers are still called mac.com servers in the email headers…

Apple’s me.com service does make a lot of sense considering that it’s aimed at iPhone users. Think about that – they just took Mac.com (previously iTools) which was a completely Mac centric subscription service providing email, web galleries and online storage…

…and turned it into a iPhone-centric tool.

Previously everything like Web galleries were only accessible via iPhoto and iWeb and that left a lot of people out in the cold (you know, everyone still on Windows). By doing this they’ve vastly increased the potential for customers for their subscription services perhaps even by an order of magnitude.

It looks kick-ass in the browser (except in Internet Explorer, but then pretty much everything looks awful in IE6) and should provide all sorts of neat improvements. My interest in it really is in how the iDisk part of it ties into the iPhone – it seems like the only parts which really apply to the iPhone are photo galleries and the groupware (email/address book/calendar) integration.

And isn’t that an interesting question. Is there groupware built into this? The only person who can update my mac.com calendar is me. Therefore over the air updates are pretty much worthless to me. This feature only makes sense if you can delegate someone else control over your calendar or address book. That necessary step doesn’t seem to be part of the MobileMe suite however. I’d like to have read and write access to other calendars on a permission basis but there’s no UI visible in Apple’s MobileMe pages.

Now…you could get everyone in an organisation to use the same MobileMe account but this has two issues.

  1. They can’t use their own MobileMe account. Pretty much a non-starter for Mac diehards.
  2. There’s no granular permissions. Anyone can see and change everything.

Those of you with good memories will remember this is why Infurious started working on SyncBridge. It wasn’t to make it so that Google Calendar would work with the Mac properly, it was designed to help you share calendars and also allow or deny permissions to those calendars to other people. Apple subsequently changed how they did everything with calendaring which pretty much killed SyncBridge. There was no way SyncBridge could compete directly with Apple. The best solution for workgroups will still be Leopard Server with the tight integration with authentication and use of the CalDAV standard.

It may return, but there’s a few wounds to lick first.

Command Line History meme

From the biscuit, the command-line meme: On my Mac: MacBook-Pro:~ mjohnstn$ history | awk ‘{a[$2]++} END {for(i in a)print a[i] ” ” i}’ | sort -rn | head -10 69 cd 55 ssh 42 ls 38 ping 37 say 31 top 23 ifconfig 23 curl 19 sftp 15 whois I must say, Steve is a … Continue reading “Command Line History meme”

From the biscuit, the command-line meme:

On my Mac:
MacBook-Pro:~ mjohnstn$ history | awk '{a[$2]++} END {for(i in a)print a[i] " " i}' | sort -rn | head -10
69 cd
55 ssh
42 ls
38 ping
37 say
31 top
23 ifconfig
23 curl
19 sftp
15 whois

I must say, Steve is a ‘ls’ freak.

MacBook Air for the Traveller?

Publicspace.net I took my MBA on holiday to Spain over the Easter break and it’s just awesome as a light travel companion. It worked flawlessly, was no hassle lugging around the airport, worked fine on the Hotel’s free wireless network and best of all: it fits into a normal size room safe. No more chaining … Continue reading “MacBook Air for the Traveller?”

Publicspace.net

I took my MBA on holiday to Spain over the Easter break and it’s just awesome as a light travel companion.

It worked flawlessly, was no hassle lugging around the airport, worked fine on the Hotel’s free wireless network and best of all: it fits into a normal size room safe. No more chaining up your notebook to the radiators (of which they were of course none) or just worrying about it getting stolen.

The MacBook Air: the only way to travel.

As I lug my 17″ MacBook Pro around the house, I do notice how bulky and heavy it is but then it’s a desktop replacement. That said, even the 17″ screen cannot adequately serve my needs for screen space as an hour working with XCode today proved. I need maybe 2x the amount of space which would be ably served by an external screen. But, I hear you say, external screens are not particularly portable and that’s very true.

I have been spoiled though. Would you believe that I actually enjoy fetching the MacBook Air owned by my SO from another room? It allows me a couple of minutes to hold the unit, appreciate the thin-ness of the unit, how light it is and how easy it is to carry along with other things. I can definitely see a MacBook Air in my future. Just not before the wedding.

If I do go down that road, however, I’ll have to re-jig some of the hardware we have lying around. I’ll need a capacious file server more than ever. And somewhere to work with a massive screen. I’m tired of fiddling about with only 1680×1050 on screen (I missed out on the high res screens and I would now love to have one of the 1920×1200 screens on this baby).

The MacBook Air, with only 1280×800 is a significant decrease in screen space but makes up for it with simple portability. Attach an external screen to it and you’ve got one really useful workstation. A laptop that is actually portable for once. And when you’re at a desk, a huge amount of real estate to play with – which is why I intend to leave a large screen or two at the local co-working place, should it progress.

A light went on somewhere…

After each section of the name, there is a colon, which is actually considered part of the name itself and then a parameter. The type of the parameter is given in parentheses, followed by the parameter name. After reading this short section, seriously I felt a light switch on in my brain. I’ve seriously started … Continue reading “A light went on somewhere…”

After each section of the name, there is a colon, which is actually considered part of the name itself and then a parameter. The type of the parameter is given in parentheses, followed by the parameter name.

After reading this short section, seriously I felt a light switch on in my brain.

I’ve seriously started reading about programming on the Mac and like in previous centuries I’ve had issues with trying to jump in and do things because I don’t know head from tail.

It’s like being instructed how to extract DNA
from a tissue sample by being told:
“Here’s a tissue sample, extract the DNA”

My experience with writing code started in about 1982 when I got a Sinclair ZX Spectrum for Christmas. I didn’t know anyone else with a computer and struggled along with Sinclair BASIC in isolation for about a year until I decided (at the tender age of 11 or so) that computers were crap and it would be a few years until they got “good”. (Even then I was prescient). The Spectrums had issues with dust or heat or something and the recommendation we got from Sinclair was to blow a hairdryer on ‘cool’ in the port at the back to prevent the . It didn’t help that half of the sample code examples were printed incorrectly (in manuals and magazines) and I had insufficient understanding of what was going on to even guess what might be wrong with the code I’d painstakingly typed in (and with no persistent storage, turning off the machine meant starting again). It brought many tears to my eyes at the time and even playing The Hobbit ‘adventure’ game didn’t help because I’d not read the book and had no idea what to do when I met the trolls other than get eaten. I let computers pass me by for a few years, dallying only with playing a few head-to-head games of Falcon at a friends house (two friends, one had an Amiga, the other an Atari ST and using a cable you could hook them up for dogfights). I knew then that multiplayer games were a hundred times more fun than playing solo and a million times better than being constantly eaten by trolls. But there wasn’t a medium for ‘playing’ over at the time and I was soon working towards my A-levels planning for a career in Biology and, for the most part, forgetting all about computers.

Back when CD-ROM was an acronym used
with “inverted commas” when speaking.

Mac Plus SE from the Psychology Department. We would sit up playing with stuff like fonts, games and clip-art until dawn broke, fueled by coffee and we’d grab a couple of hours sleep before I had to go to grueling 9 am – 5 pm lectures and lab practicals. Throughout university I had no exposure to Windows – just UNIX and Macintosh. And I didn’t think for a second about writing any code to take better advantage of them. I was more interested in talking using a computer, even just sending text between machines.

After graduation, the market for genetic engineers was pretty poor and though I had a placement guaranteed in the City Hospital labs (I’m not just a pretty face), I gave it up for a lesser job which paid better and would give me time to go back to college to study something about computers.

What the hell is this crap?


At the University of Ulster, we were introduced to Modula-2 and, to be honest, I foundered. I couldn’t see anything exciting about it and we were interacting with it using Windows, which interfaced with the VAX using some sort of terminal application. I am not kidding that when presented with Windows and VAX/VMS after coming from UNIX and Macintosh, I was less than enthralled. I did my best with Modula-2 and even stayed up all night one evening i the labs trying to get the main assignment to compile. I’d have gone mad if the guy next to me hadn’t left a copy of Lemmings running. I passed that course but I hated it. And because I didn’t seem to be a star in Modula-2, I didn’t get onto the C-course in the second semester and instead had to learn all about COBOL. Needless to say, code didn’t seem very attractive. Mainly because I was apparently shit at it.

Code is sexy. So are boobs


It did help cement my interest in networked environments and through a series of trials and tribulations I managed to wangle myself onto another course (AVTIT), which allowed me to piss about with ethernet and TCP/IP. This actual ‘practical’ knowledge of TCP/IP served me well, as did my Mac background, in getting me a placement with Nortel which really served as my introduction to I.T. as a career. My job was mostly looking after the Mac people there so I devoured a copy of the Mac Bible and learned quickly (and eventually didn’t need to call my girlfriend as often to Mac advice). From there I went on to just networking as a career and to be honest have not looked back. I did have to touch C code once while there – and that was because we used an in-house ‘clocking’ system called flexi which had been hardcoded with s 250 person limit. As NITEC grew, we hit 250 and the system fell over. Changing the limit to 499 worked but required me trawling through the code, figuring out what needed changed and then getting a student to help me compile it and get it running. I developed a little crush on her it has to be said (well, she was smart, good-looking and had a great rack…)

Liars, thieves and businessmen


After that it was more networking work, then headhunted to run the technical side of Macinni by their Commercial Director (Gerry) and when that failed due to horrendous mismanagement of the sales/retail side. A startup losing half a million pounds in six months is something unheard of these days – but what can I say – Caveat Emptor. It was a humbling experience being made redundant by a couple of crooks but I came out of the experience with some new friends, my savings and a lot of righteous anger about how a Apple Authorised Service Provider should be run. And decided to do it myself, pulling in every favour I could ever have made and dragging the technical guys from Macinni with me (I kinda figured the Admin and Sales guys could fend for themselves). We applied to Apple and it took a long phone call to the UK MD to get them to give us a chance as an AASP considering the disaster that was Macinni.

I will learn to code.
If it kills me


This year Mac-Sys is five years old (it seems like ten) and it has had ups and downs to be honest. People come and people go. And I still can’t write more than a few lines of code because, frankly, it was never the day job. I’m trying to change that and maybe at the same start to bring some value other than my boyish good looks (which have long faded) and charm (which I never had). Writing Cocoa code is hard but realistically no harder than PHP or any other code I’ve touched and not been able to get the hang of.

To this end I’ve started working though a book of code which is getting me started. Philip and Aidan have pledged some time to help me through some examples and I’m trying to get some guys in $BIG_COMPANY who are interested in Mac/iPhone development to come out at lunchtime to NISP and talk Cocoa for a bit. We also mooted the idea of reviving Cocoaheads but I’m not sure how this would pan out considering I’m out in the evenings a lot as it is (with gaming once a week and OpenCoffee and NiMUG once a month. Add in Cocoaheads….)

I’ll keep y’all informed.

Content Theft, alive and well. (One for the Cocoa fans)

Cool, I didn’t know you could just grab entire articles from the IntarWeb and publish them wholesale without even giving an attribution link! That’s what Rixstep has done? Scott Anguish, one of the nicest guys on the Intarweb is more than a little upset because Rixstep has repeatedly refused to remove his content which has … Continue reading “Content Theft, alive and well. (One for the Cocoa fans)”

Cool, I didn’t know you could just grab entire articles from the IntarWeb and publish them wholesale without even giving an attribution link!

That’s what Rixstep has done?

Scott Anguish, one of the nicest guys on the Intarweb is more than a little upset because Rixstep has repeatedly refused to remove his content which has been ripped of wholesale. What’s worse…

Scott writes

My copyright has been violated by his reproduction. Yes, the DMCA would allow me to get it taken down, and I am exploring that route. But given his track record, I see no way to stop him from doing this. He’s published incorrect and horrible stuff about me, Aaron Hillegass, and others, before.

It is imperative (and the reason I temporarily pulled things down) that long-time readers of Stepwise know RIX stole this.. I do not approve of his doing so. His use does not fall under fair-use, or commentary. He’s simple theft.

I’ve worked 13+ years on supporting developers by maintaining Stepwise (which truly is a labor of love) and I don’t want this theft and misrepresentation to damage that effort.

Rixstep gets traffic by stealing content, misrepresenting the opinions of the authors and doing the whole “keeping it real” thing in the face of millions of new Apple converts.

I must say it’s an interesting marketing step, calling Apple’s customers idiot fanboys while trying to flog them a replacement file manager. It really motivates me to buy it.

Scott Anguish is a pillar of the NeXTStep community. Anything that offends him and, in his own words “makes him sick” should motivate everyone interested in the Mac and especially Cocoa.