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What the gently caress I think this guy needs more RAM (from another forum)
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 17:02 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:18 |
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Ouch, that's a shitload of pageouts.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 17:53 |
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Can you buy the Apple OEM SSD anywhere?
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 18:22 |
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Not sure if this is a hardware (decoder) or software (player) problem, but the DVD Player app on my 13" MBA has stopped playing sound from both physical discs (using MBA external Superdrive) and ISOs. Other apps play sound just fine, and the discs can be ripped by Handbrake including the audio. Is there some hidden mute setting I'm overlooking, or a preference file I can delete? Relevant info: Version of DVD Player: Files I've deleted and let be recreated, to no avail:
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 18:35 |
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DEUCE SLUICE posted:Can you buy the Apple OEM SSD anywhere? http://www.amazon.com/Apple-Solid-State-Drive-MC731ZM/dp/B003YXYENY/ It's a terrible buy though. Price/performance ratio is awful compared to other SSDs.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 18:40 |
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I'm looking for the 256GB one and I know the price is ridiculous, but I'm at the end of my rope with my OWC and don't hold out much hope that anything outside of an Apple SSD will be more stable.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 19:04 |
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DEUCE SLUICE posted:I'm looking for the 256GB one and I know the price is ridiculous, but I'm at the end of my rope with my OWC and don't hold out much hope that anything outside of an Apple SSD will be more stable. pipebomb is/was selling a 512GB Apple SSD
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 19:52 |
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Bob Morales posted:pipebomb is/was selling a 512GB Apple SSD
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 19:53 |
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Star War Sex Parrot posted:At a horrible price. It's priced about the same as they are on eBay (for an Apple SSD), but price/performance wise you are far better off getting something from another manufacturer.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 20:02 |
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What third-parties are people using? I did a ton of research before going with the OWC but I guess I hosed up. I'm so tempted to sell my Mini and the SSD and get one with SSD from Apple, or also sell my ACD and get a 21" iMac. I deal with enough broken poo poo at work, I can't handle it at home.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 20:44 |
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I had horrible luck with OCZ but the Corsair Force I have no has been flawless.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 20:57 |
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Intel/Crucial/Samsung are known for reliability. Intel is #1 and they come with 5 year warranties. Also I'm looking at configuring a 15" MBP and I can't believe they still come with 2x2gigs of RAM. Pay the extra few cents and give us a single 4gig stick, come on! I guess it doesn't really matter since you can get 2x4 gigs nowadays for under $40.
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# ? Nov 27, 2011 23:00 |
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How is Apple when it comes to returns? I know they have a 14-day return policy for computers. I bought a 27" iMac this last week and I'm not really feeling it. It works fine, but I just don't know if I really need it. I wanted it for school but I am finding that I am having difficulty in being as productive as I am on a PC.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 01:04 |
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Uh, you return it and get your money back if it's within the 14 day window...
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 01:05 |
hunter x az posted:How is Apple when it comes to returns? I know they have a 14-day return policy for computers. I bought a 27" iMac this last week and I'm not really feeling it. It works fine, but I just don't know if I really need it. I wanted it for school but I am finding that I am having difficulty in being as productive as I am on a PC. As long as it's within the 14-day window, full refund with no questions asked.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 01:05 |
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Thanks guys. Do I have to uninstall stuff from it or just pack it up in the box and take it back?
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 01:13 |
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They wipe the drive before selling it again but I'd do it anyway just in case.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 01:18 |
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DEUCE SLUICE posted:I'm looking for the 256GB one and I know the price is ridiculous, but I'm at the end of my rope with my OWC and don't hold out much hope that anything outside of an Apple SSD will be more stable. The Samsung 470 in mine (2.5ghz i5 w/Radeon) has been fine, 830 is the newer faster version of that, although with any new stuff you might want to wait a bit to see if there's anything up with it. It seems fine from what I've heard, barring some goon's problem, but that might be the computer's fault in that case. The OEM ones for a while have been a version of the 470 or some slower Toshiba one used in the cheaper Kingston drives...either way the retail ones don't get TRIM support without the hack, but they seem fine without it at least.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 11:53 |
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My ssd is still for sale, and I've cut my asking price to be on par with non-Apple products (800) - helluva loss for me, but I have no use for it currently.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 17:33 |
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I'm worried that my MBP (first unibody Fall 2008) is overheating a bit. When I open it up from sleep it's very hot in the area below the keyboard, next to the trackpad. Does the surface you have your computer on affect it's ability to dissipate heat at all? I have it on the floor (carpet) quite often, or on a wood table. Also is there some kind of temperature diagnostic that I can run to see if there's really a problem?
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 18:14 |
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actionjackson posted:I'm worried that my MBP (first unibody Fall 2008) is overheating a bit. When I open it up from sleep it's very hot in the area below the keyboard, next to the trackpad. Are you sure it's actually going to sleep? The fans should shut down and the sleep LED should be pulsing. If it's hot immediately upon opening it (and you're not sleeping it for extremely short periods of time), it probably isn't going to sleep.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 18:25 |
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If that area of heat is to the right of the trackpad, the source could be the hard drive. If it's to the left, then it's the battery. Neither one should really be doing that. You could try this: http://www.bresink.com/osx/0TemperatureMonitor/download.php5 It's a free app that reports temps from whatever sensors it can find.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 18:25 |
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I went out for a few hours and left the display up and it wasn't as warm. I assume it was going to sleep when I closed it because that white light was flashing on and off slowly. Right now it feels okay. Is there a reason that the left speaker area (by the inputs) is always warmer than the right speaker? Maybe I should try using the "Sleep" menu option next time I want to do that instead of just closing the lid. actionjackson fucked around with this message at 22:01 on Nov 28, 2011 |
# ? Nov 28, 2011 21:47 |
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actionjackson posted:I went out for a few hours and left the display up and it wasn't as warm. I assume it was going to sleep when I closed it because that white light was flashing on and off slowly. Right now it feels okay. Is there a reason that the left speaker area (by the inputs) is always warmer than the right speaker? The left side is where most of the heat-generating components are (right side is dominated by the optical drive). When the machine is sleeping it should be generating very, very little heat. Had yours been actively charging the battery when you noticed this?
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 22:45 |
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Oneiros posted:The left side is where most of the heat-generating components are (right side is dominated by the optical drive). I don't think so, I only have it unplugged if I move it from one room to another. Last night I had it closed under my bed on the carpet and it was quite warm upon opening. I was just wondering if having it lying in certain places could allow it to not ventilate heat as well.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 23:02 |
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Sooo what's the trick to getting my new 13" MBA to sleep while I have a monitor connected? I close the lid and it just sits there laughing at me. The sleep menu option works fine, though.
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 23:03 |
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Is the MagSafe plugged in? Try pulling that out. Anyway, there is a Terminal command to get the display to work like it did before Lion, just enter this (I think it was discussed a few pages back): sudo nvram boot-args="iog=0x0" then, reboot. This will make the display behave as it did in Snow Leopard (with external monitor connected, close lid, wake with external keyboard, lift lid later and built-in display remains off unless you do a 'Detect Displays') If you want to revert to default Lion behavior, type in: sudo nvram -d boot-args (with external monitor connected, close lid, wake with ext. keyboard, lift lid and built-in display comes back on) Binary Badger fucked around with this message at 23:35 on Nov 28, 2011 |
# ? Nov 28, 2011 23:23 |
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I'm in the market for a new laptop and I've been looking at macs, specifically the macbook air. I want something that is lightweight and that will last for a long period of time. I also do a lot of number crunching (running simulations) and I check: the software is available for macs which leads me to my first question: Is the macbook air powerful enough to run through simulation type work. I need some help though: I'm trying to justify the price of the macbook air. What makes them so much better then other portable laptops that are generally a fraction of the price? I've never owned a mac before for this reason. If someone can come up with a justification other than OSX that would be great (and not one that says "it just works").
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# ? Nov 28, 2011 23:33 |
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oxy posted:I'm in the market for a new laptop and I've been looking at macs, specifically the macbook air. An Air is actually competitively priced. I can't find many laptops with ~7 hr. battery life, 128-256gb SSD, and i5-i7 processor for a "fraction" of the Air's price. $100-200 less, maybe, but then you're losing on build quality and features like trackpads, backlit keyboard, etc. Refurbished Airs have shown up recently in the Apple Store (refurbished Macs are as good as new and come with the same warranty) that cuts the price even lower. If you can show me some laptops with similar specs/build quality that are much cheaper, I can go into more differences, but the only thing I know that's really close are the Ultrabooks, and those are around $1k from what I've seen. Edit: I should also say, a lot of the things you don't necessarily see on a spreadsheet, like the trackpad, the weight, the thinness, etc, are some of the best parts of an Air, and make it one of those "joy to use" scenarios. That and the fact I can leave mine sitting around for a few weeks without using it and know it'll pretty much instantly turn on with plenty of battery when I open the lid. El Duke Silver fucked around with this message at 23:56 on Nov 28, 2011 |
# ? Nov 28, 2011 23:50 |
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El Duke posted:Edit: I should also say, a lot of the things you don't necessarily see on a spreadsheet, like the trackpad, the weight, the thinness, etc, are some of the best parts of an Air, and make it one of those "joy to use" scenarios. That and the fact I can leave mine sitting around for a few weeks without using it and know it'll pretty much instantly turn on with plenty of battery when I open the lid. If it's a joy to use, why would you leave it sitting around for a few weeks without using it!?!?
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 00:00 |
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rearadmiral.rowboat posted:If it's a joy to use, why would you leave it sitting around for a few weeks without using it!?!? between iMac, only being able to use the work laptop for actual work, and doing stuff after I get home, sometimes it just doesn't see a ton of use for a stretch.
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 00:05 |
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oxy posted:Is the macbook air powerful enough to run through simulation type work. Yes and no. The CPU is plenty fast but if you want a quad-core (or with hyperthreading, an 8 (virtual) core) machine, you're going to have get a 15" Macbook Pro. The i5/i7 in the Air (and the 13" Pro) are the only dual-core.
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 00:46 |
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Bob Morales posted:Sooo what's the trick to getting my new 13" MBA to sleep while I have a monitor connected? I close the lid and it just sits there laughing at me. The sleep menu option works fine, though. I just press CMD+OPT+Eject. They changed the lid close behavior in Lion to only shut off the internal display.
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 01:25 |
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carry on then posted:I just press CMD+OPT+Eject. They changed the lid close behavior in Lion to only shut off the internal display. Stupid. They could at least put a checkbox for 'go to sleep when I close the lid' in Energy Saver.
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 03:24 |
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I think Apple changed this in Lion to make closed clamshell mode a more seamless transition. http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3131
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 03:36 |
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What's with these craigslist ads?
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 03:40 |
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Quick question about Macbook Air 11 inch. My wife is going to be running Windows VM almost every day, so will the i7 upgrade be worth it? Mostly basic stuff on both OS X and Windows, but coming from a Core2Duo running similar, I definitely would like more speed. She's coming from a hilariously old laptop (7 years old), though,so maybe it won't matter much.
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 03:58 |
It's probably not worth all that money. As it stands the i5 + SSD is going to be like loving magic lightning compared to that old of a laptop. EDIT - I would recommend the 4GB upgrade though. Gonna be necessary if you're doing VM work. Baller Witness Bro fucked around with this message at 04:10 on Nov 29, 2011 |
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 04:06 |
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oxy posted:will last for a long period of time. I also do a lot of number crunching (running simulations) If you're just talking about the laptop holding up for a few years they should be fine though. quote:I need some help though: I'm trying to justify the price of the macbook air. What makes them so much better then other portable laptops that are generally a fraction of the price? I've never owned a mac before for this reason. If someone can come up with a justification other than OSX that would be great (and not one that says "it just works").
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 12:18 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:18 |
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http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...-20233217-L015A $189 (today at 12PM EST) for 2x8GB RAM Now it begins with everyone sticking 16GB in their Macbook Pros...
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# ? Nov 29, 2011 16:34 |