Mar
7
2009
The already well-equipped base model (although I’m loath to call anything this gorgeous and well-built a “base model”) starts with a 2.66-GHz Core 2 Duo processor from Intel, 4GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive, two Nvidia graphics processors and a simply stunning high-resolution, 1920-by-1200-pixel screen.
Comments Off on Review: The 17-in. MacBook Pro Rocks | tags: Intel, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
Users still facing software issues while running the most current version of Mac OS X Leopard may take kindly to word that Mac OS X 10.5.7 is moving swiftly through its development cycle. Apple as early as this weekend is expected to equip its vast developer community with a new build of the maintenance and security release.
Comments Off on Apple ready with second beta of Mac OS X "Juno" | tags: Apple, developer, Mac, security | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, expected this summer, will deliver a variety of advanced text related features across all applications that use Core Text, according to people familiar with Apple’s plans.
Comments Off on Text to get smarter in Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard | tags: Apple, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
7
2009
The release of the new Mac Pro on Tuesday marked the first use of Intel’s Nehalem processor in Apple’s products. As in the past, Intel has allowed Apple to get early access to their newest processors ahead of the competition. These Nehalem Xeon processors used in the high end Mac Pros have not even been officially announced by Intel yet.
Comments Off on Apple Gets Nehalem Early, H.264 and VMWare Performance Boost | tags: Apple, Intel, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
DeviceGuru writes “Boxee has restored support for Hulu, along with several other enhancements, to its free media center platform for PCs and Macs. The modification, a hack to Boxee’s RSS feed functionality, involves having Boxee users enable the support themselves by cutting/pasting URLs from Hulu’s RSS feed page into their account on Boxee’s website. It works, but one can’t help wondering how it’s really different from Boxee’s original — superior — Hulu support. Oh, the games media companies play!”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Boxee Hack Restores Hulu Support (Sort Of) | tags: games, google, Mac, web | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
There’s not much that can be said about the 17-inch version of the MacBook Pro that hasn’t already been said about the 15-incher (and to some extent, the MacBook). Still, the big, big brother of the family has a few key differences that make it stand out from the rest of the gang. The first being its non-removable battery, built out of tech which
Comments Off on MacBook Pro 17-Inch Unibody Review | tags: Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
KentuckyFC writes “Place two conducting parallel plates a few nanometres apart and the well-known but difficult-to-measure Casimir force will push them together. The force depends crucially on the shape of the plates but nobody is exactly sure how. That’s because calculations with anything other than flat plates are fiendishly difficult and measurements are even harder. Now a group at MIT has come up with an ingenious new way to investigate Casimir forces. What the team has noticed is a mathematical analogy between the Casimir force acting on microscopic bodies in a vacuum and the electromagnetic behavior of macroscopic bodies floating in a conducting fluid. Their idea is to build a centimeter-scale metal model of the system they want to investigate, place it in salt water, and bombard it with microwaves and see what happens. The team says the experiment does not measure the force on the scale model but instead a quantity that is mathematically related to the force. So the experiment is not a simulator but actually an analog computer that calculates the force (abstract). What’s exciting is that the method should for the first time give researchers a way of testing nano-machines designed to exploit the Casimir force.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Scale Models Can "Compute" Casimir Forces | tags: google, Mac | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
Security researcher Charlie Miller, who last year won ,000 for hacking into a MacBook Air via Safari in just two minutes, says he thinks Safari will be the first browser to fall at this year’s Pwn2Own contest.
Comments Off on Top hacker says Safari is "easiest browser to hack" | tags: Mac, security | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
The news vacuum that’s followed Apple’s Mac desktop refresh offers space for some updates on the company’s software-related efforts, which should soon produce new builds of Snow Leopard. Meanwhile, minor updates to iWeb, Remote Desktop, and other OS X components are also reportedly in the works.
Comments Off on Apple Prepping New Snow Leopard, iWeb, ARD Updates | tags: Apple, desktop, Mac, news, web | posted in technical news
Mar
6
2009
You know that Apple computers are overpriced, don’t you? The latest Mac desktop refresh brought the hardware inside new Mac desktops in line with the rest of the industry but the same cannot be said for their price points. While iMac can compete with Dell and HP all-in-ones on both specs and price, Mac mini and Mac Pro carry a hefty 40% premium.
Comments Off on Apple tax on the latest Mac gear: 40 percent | tags: Apple, computers, desktop, Mac | posted in technical news