Mar 4 2009

50 Things Every Mac Geek Should Know

Like a champion cyclist knows bike parts,a car buff knows model years, and a sports fan knows win-loss records, all Mac geeks worth the title must know these things.

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Mar 4 2009

Parallels Desktop For Mac vs. VMware

neilticktin writes “MacTech performed an exhaustive set of benchmarks comparing Parallels Desktop 4 to VMWare Fusion 2 to run Windows on a Mac. To tackle this problem, MacTech undertook a huge benchmarking project starting in December — over 2500 tests by stopwatch. The goal was to see how the recent versions of VMWare Fusion and Parallels Desktop performed on different levels of Mac hardware, using XP, Vista, 64-bit, multi-procs, games, etc. … As usual, results vary by what’s important to you.”

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Mar 4 2009

Apple introduces compact wired keyboard with new iMacs

Accompanying updates to Apple’s line of desktops Tuesday is a new compact, wired keyboard with no numeric keypad. It’s included with each new iMacs by default, but can be swapped out for one that does include a numeric keypad at no additional cost (when ordering online).

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Mar 4 2009

Apple’s Jobs-less Mac Rollout

The latest Apple release has to go down in history as the quietest. Apple just released new products, and the earth didn’t move on its axis, and satellites in space pretty much stayed their course.

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Mar 3 2009

Apple quietly intros 2.66GHz MacBook Pro, offers larger SSDs

Flying under the radar of Tuesday’s broad desktop overhaul were quiet updates to Apple’s MacBook Pro notebook line, which now includes a faster 15-inch model, new high-end chip options, and larger solid-state drive (SSD) choices that are also offered alongside the company’s 13-inch MacBooks.

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Mar 3 2009

Apple refreshes Mac mini lineup with GeForce 9400M graphics

After all that excitement in the run-up, Apple’s done just about the bare minimum that was expected in a Mac mini update. The new SKUs both run 2.0GHz Core 2 Duo processors and are backed up by the same NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics that’ve done wonders for the MacBook. For 0 you get 1GB of RAM and a 120GB hard drive, 0 nabs 2GB of RAM and a

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Mar 3 2009

German Court Bans E-Voting As Currently Employed

Kleiba writes “The highest German Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht, Federal Constitutional Court) ruled that electronic voting machines like Nedap ESD1 and ESD2 are not permissible in Germany. Der Spiegel, a well-known German newspaper, is featuring article on today’s decision (in German; Babelfish translation here) which was the result of a lawsuit by physicist Ulrich Wiesner and his father Joachim Wiesner, a professor emeritus of political science. The main argument against the voting machines in the eyes of the Court is that they conflict with the principle of transparency. 2009 is a major election year for Germany, with parliamentary elections in the fall.” Reader Dr. Hok writes “Voting machines are not illegal per se, but with these machines it wasn’t possible to verify the results after the votes were cast. The verification procedure by the German authorities was flawed, too: only specimens were tested, not the machines actually used in the elections, and the detailed results (including the source code) were not made public. The results of the election remain legally valid, though.”

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Mar 3 2009

Open Source Usability — Joomla! Vs. WordPress

An anonymous reader writes “PlayingWithWire profiles two open source tools for Web development, comparing Joomla! and WordPress through the lens of usability. The article has apparently upset a few people at the Joomla! forum, but it does bring up a good point. Many open source projects are developed by engineers for engineers — should they focus more on usability? PlayingWithWire makes a bold analogy: ‘If Joomla! is Linux, then WordPress is Mac OS X. WordPress might offer only 90% of the features of Joomla!, but in most cases WordPress is both easier to use and faster to get up and running.'” The article repeatedly stresses that blogging platform WordPress and CMS harness Joomla! occupy different levels of the content hierarchy. How fair is it to twit Joomla! on usability?

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Mar 2 2009

Photo may show next-gen Mac mini retail box

A new photo claiming to show the retail packaging for Apple’s long-awaited Mac mini refresh has surfaced online, adding to speculation that March will serve as launch pad for several new desktop Macs.

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Mar 2 2009

Google NativeClient Security Contest

An anonymous reader writes “You may remember Google’s NativeClient project, discussed here last December. Don’t be fooled into calling this ActiveX 2.0 — rather than a model of trust and authentication, NaCl is designed to make dangerous code impossible by enforcing a set of a rules at load time that guarantee hostile code simply cannot execute (PDF). NaCl is still in heavy development, but the developers want to encourage low-level security experts to take a look at their design and code. To this end Google has opened the NativeClient Security Contest, and will award prizes topping out at ^13 to top bug submitters. If you’re familiar with low level security, memory segmentation, accurate disassembly of hostile code, code alignment, and related topics, do take a look. Mac, Linux, and Windows are all supported.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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