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kingfet posted:I just purchased a 2011 15" and am going to list my old MBP 2010 13" on Craigslist. http://www.mac2sell.net/ The above site has seen its share of criticism from people in this thread, but it's a starting point, at least. Man, it is taking all the willpower in the world not to buy a Mac mini right now
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 02:22 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:22 |
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illcendiary posted:http://www.mac2sell.net/ IMO, the best starting point is SA-Mart, Craigslist, and eBay to see what they actually sell for.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 02:40 |
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Crush posted:IMO, the best starting point is SA-Mart, Craigslist, and eBay to see what they actually sell for. Yeah, people buying and selling right now near you are a better source of data than some website attempting to aggregate price data by country over some unknown time interval in the past.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 02:59 |
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withak posted:Yeah, people buying and selling right now near you are a better source of data than some website attempting to aggregate price data by country over some unknown time interval in the past. Mac2Sell is telling me 820, there are people selling them stock on my local CL with 4GB of ram for 1000, so I will go in at 950 with 8GB trying to do a quick sale.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 03:14 |
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I was selling a 2.2C2D 13" Macbook Pro, 4GB of ram + 500gb hard drive for $800 shipped just a little while ago. Most people here and on Craigslist were offering around the Mac2Sell price of about $680, but I got full asking price on another forum I frequent - one less traveled by habitual Mac flippers. So probably start at about $100 above Mac2Sell, and throw it up wherever you can.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 03:32 |
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DEUCE SLUICE posted:I was selling a 2.2C2D 13" Macbook Pro, 4GB of ram + 500gb hard drive for $800 shipped just a little while ago. Most people here and on Craigslist were offering around the Mac2Sell price of about $680, but I got full asking price on another forum I frequent - one less traveled by habitual Mac flippers. Dont suppose you want to share that forum? I am actually not a typical mac flipper, I just really need as much ram as I can due to what I do for a living. 8GB to 16GB was worth the price. My previous (before the 2010) mac lasted me two and a half years.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 03:47 |
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Unless you play bass it won't be much good to you. I just managed to get lucky somewhere I'm already a member of the community.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 04:09 |
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Residency Evil posted:I did, but thanks for your concern!
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 07:00 |
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quote:Imagine using your thin and light laptop PC during the day on the job, at school, or at the local café then arriving home, or dorm room, plugging it into your ViDock and firing up your latest PC game on a large format monitor. Just plug in one cable into your laptop PC and you instantly have a powerful 3D workstation with a big display, a big keyboard and your pointing device of choice. You are ready for gaming, video transcoding, photoshop, 3D design, watching full 1080p HD movies, and more! http://www.macrumors.com/2011/08/01/external-thunderbolt-pci-expansion-chassis-and-hub-in-development/ This could be amazing, external graphics cards for notebooks are inching closer thanks to Thunderbolt.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 10:33 |
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DEUCE SLUICE posted:I was selling a 2.2C2D 13" Macbook Pro, 4GB of ram + 500gb hard drive for $800 shipped just a little while ago. Most people here and on Craigslist were offering around the Mac2Sell price of about $680, but I got full asking price on another forum I frequent - one less traveled by habitual Mac flippers. Mac2Sell recommended $300 less than what I sold mine for (2009 13" MBP). I checked ebay and our local craigslist and the prices were much higher. The lowest offer I got was only $100 less than my asking price, or $200 more than Mac2Sell's price.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 14:21 |
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I will preface this by saying that I am not a mac person. I own an iphone and kind of hate it and before the start of this year, I'd last touched a mac in maybe 2003. My new girlfriend is a mac user. She has a mid-2010 Macbook Pro 15" and it's shiny and nice and easy to use, but she's not a computer person at all and keeps asking me how to do stuff, so I have 3 questions. First, where do I learn to use OSX? I'm very familiar with Windows PCs and somewhat familiar with various Linuxes, but I'm a total mac newbie. I don't need a handholding step by step guide, but something to teach me the basics would be a good idea, I reckon. Second, after some research, I decided that I could just buy a minidisplayport > HDMI cable and attach her laptop to her TV. It worked, BUT at first there was no sound (using VLC Player). I tried Quicktime, which worked, and then VLC Player worked. She's happy, I'm happy, but I need to know what "fixed" VLC Player in case it happens again. Thirdly, she got a weird crackling noise from her speakers when trying to open an XML file associated with blogger.com. It opens fine on my XP machine and my Win7 machine, but not on her Macbook. She was freaking out thinking the loving thing had broken / was breaking, and even though the problem hasn't repeated (although I replicated it twice after reboots using that same file), I'd like to reassure her that her laptop's not hosed. Any good troubleshooting guides or steps I could check out? Edit: Is there any way to buy a magic trackpad or equivalent that will work with full functionality with Windows 7? I love that loving trackpad and would happily replace my Logitech G5 with it except for gaming purposes. Elector_Nerdlingen fucked around with this message at 15:32 on Aug 1, 2011 |
# ? Aug 1, 2011 15:29 |
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AlphaDog posted:I will preface this by saying that I am not a mac person. I own an iphone and kind of hate it and before the start of this year, I'd last touched a mac in maybe 2003. You might find better answers to a lot of your questions in the software thread. As those all look software related. As far as I know, no there is nothing exactly like the magic trackpad for windows. OSX has the gestures baked in, I believe Windows 8 may have some sort of implementation but I wouldnt hold my breath on it being overly useful.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 15:37 |
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AlphaDog posted:First, where do I learn to use OSX? I'm very familiar with Windows PCs and somewhat familiar with various Linuxes, but I'm a total mac newbie. I don't need a handholding step by step guide, but something to teach me the basics would be a good idea, I reckon.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 15:37 |
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eames posted:
(Provided it wouldn't cost more than just building a gaming pc)
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 15:52 |
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Would this memory be ok to throw in my 2011 MBP? http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0363850 Anyone ever try that brand and have any opinions?
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 15:53 |
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Ah, thanks guys, didn't realise there was a software thread, my eyes kind of skip over "mac" automatically since I never really use them. That sucks about the trackpad. It's the one thing I'd really like to have (I won't rant, but not writing Windows drivers for hardware you'd have to buy anyway just seems very petty. I just want the scroll/click/zoom/drag functionality and the nice feeling surface). Edit: I'm not trying to start an OS war or rag out on apple or anything, I'm just always disappointed when cool hardware doesn't work on my current platform. Elector_Nerdlingen fucked around with this message at 16:08 on Aug 1, 2011 |
# ? Aug 1, 2011 16:03 |
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AlphaDog posted:Ah, thanks guys, didn't realise there was a software thread, my eyes kind of skip over "mac" automatically since I never really use them. QuickTime likely installed some components that VLC may have needed to split/decode files properly, but AFAIK, VLC is designed to be pure 100% standalone and not depend on external filters if it can help it. And yeah, the trackpad is pretty , I love the thing.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 16:07 |
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eames posted:
I'm super excited about this for something like an Apogee Symphony64 card instead of video, but I'm super excited about TBolt in general. Would have been super cool for Apple to build a video card into the Thunderbolt Display, though...
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 16:17 |
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AlphaDog posted:Edit: I'm not trying to start an OS war or rag out on apple or anything, I'm just always disappointed when cool hardware doesn't work on my current platform. There are some kind of windows drivers out there; my magic trackpad works fine if I boot into windows on my iMac. I think it doesn't do any gestures but scrolling though. I think you download from Apple and burn that driver to a CD in the first step when you run the boot camp assistant.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 16:32 |
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Thunderbolt doesn't offer PCIe x16 though does it? I thought it was just x1. That would kind of limit the video card performance.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:13 |
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AlphaDog posted:First, where do I learn to use OSX? I'm very familiar with Windows PCs and somewhat familiar with various Linuxes, but I'm a total mac newbie. I don't need a handholding step by step guide, but something to teach me the basics would be a good idea, I reckon.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:17 |
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SupahCoolX posted:Apple has a sort of "intro to mac" page with some videos showing Mac basics, how some things are different from Windows, etc. http://www.apple.com/findouthow/mac/ Oh, hey, thanks! That looks pretty basic, but might be worth my while (I can do stuff with the macbook, like figure out network sharing and stuff, I just don't understand it like I understand Windows or Linux. I need to spend a couple of weeks acquainting myself with it, I reckon, but the barrier to entry's a bit high for me). On the trackpad thing, Lots of people have them working with windows, to the extent that they can control the mouse and click, but that seems to be about it. I found a thing that will do what I want, but it's from Japan and doesn't have any English docs. Guess I'll wait until Logitech or whoever start building cheapy ones.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:25 |
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Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:47 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. Because we will hate you for being able to afford a 10 day vacation and a 13" Air.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:51 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. Can't think of one.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 17:52 |
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So the general consensus is... If getting an 11" Air, get it with the upgraded processor and 4GB of RAM because who the gently caress would get a laptop with 2GB nowadays and If getting a 13" Air, the base model is fine? My old Dell D430 tiny laptop is on its way out, time to look for a new laptop and these look like they'll fit the bill nicely. I'm not even going to consider getting the 11" with 2GB of RAM as that is dumb. I'm heavily leaning towards the 13" as the screen resolution is much nicer than the 1366x768 bullshit on the 11".
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 18:02 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. Because you'd rather have the 11" as a secondary machine? Or so goes my thinking. Besides, you already have that giant-rear end iMac screen.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 18:13 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. iPad 2!
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 18:16 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. I hear the Apple store is surrounded by crocodiles.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 18:26 |
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I assume this would work, but I have to make sure since it's Apple. If I have a Mac Pro can I put something like a GTX480 in it or something unsupported by OSX but be fine under bootcamp?
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 19:39 |
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BlackMK4 posted:I assume this would work, but I have to make sure since it's Apple. Yeah, Windows shouldn't have any trouble. You could potentially have it working under OSX through some Hackintosh work.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 20:38 |
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evensevenone posted:Thunderbolt doesn't offer PCIe x16 though does it? I thought it was just x1. That would kind of limit the video card performance. It's x4, Generation 2 (for now) which is effectively 2GB/s bi-directional (500MB/s per lane). To compare, a x16 Gen 2.0 slot delivers 8GB/s, and a x8 Gen 2 delivers 8GB/s. Now we know that Ivy Bridge will upgrade the CPU PCIe controller to the 3.0 standard. Assuming it can be broken into x8/x4/x4 or something, and the TB controller gets updated and copper can handle the increased speed, you'd see a theoretical 4GB/s in each direction, equivalent to a Gen 1 x16 slot.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 20:38 |
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Space Racist posted:Because you'd rather have the 11" as a secondary machine?
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 20:41 |
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movax posted:It's x4, Generation 2 (for now) which is effectively 2GB/s bi-directional (500MB/s per lane). To compare, a x16 Gen 2.0 slot delivers 8GB/s, and a x8 Gen 2 delivers 8GB/s. Adding this to the debate: http://hardocp.com/article/2010/08/25/gtx_480_sli_pcie_bandwidth_perf_x16x16_vs_x4x4 So if I'm reading this right, which I'm really not sure if I am, x4 should be fine even for high-end cards?
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 20:45 |
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SpoonsForThought posted:So if I'm reading this right, which I'm really not sure if I am, x4 should be fine even for high-end cards? What they proved there was that performance was capping out due to the GPU itself, and not a bottleneck in getting data between the CPU and GPU. This might not always be the case, but those are some fairly interesting results with the cards they tested.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 21:15 |
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vas0line posted:Oh man. I would buy that in a heartbeat. DEUCE SLUICE posted:Would have been super cool for Apple to build a video card into the Thunderbolt Display, though... movax posted:What they proved there was that performance was capping out due to the GPU itself, and not a bottleneck in getting data between the CPU and GPU. This might not always be the case, but those are some fairly interesting results with the cards they tested.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:25 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:Now that I'm back from my 10 day vacation: someone give me a reason not to stop at an Apple Store on the way into work and buy a new 13" Air. Because the nVidia 320M on the 2010 is much better. Of course totally forgetting about the i5/i7 part of the equation.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:39 |
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I'm actually a bit disappointed with the Air's SSD, to be honest. It's fast, but boot time isn't as fast as the 160GB Intel X-25M G2 was in my 2010 i7 MBP. Maybe it's a Lion thing. Luckily I never restart the system so I shouldn't notice it, and the OS performance is still plenty fast.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:43 |
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I've read quite a few reports of the 2011 Airs taking longer to boot up than the 2010 Airs. My 13" certainly seemed to boot slower than 'instant.' Most people seem to think it's a Lion thing like you guessed.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 23:03 |
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# ? Jun 13, 2024 04:22 |
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I've noticed it as well, but I get around it by just never shutting my Air down.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 23:04 |