802.11n on a MacBook Pro Core Duo

Apple’s 802.11 wireless update came too late for the MacBook Pro Core Duo I purchased last year, as only the Core 2 Duo machines ship with 802.11n capability. Fortunately, you can upgrade a Core Duo-based MacBook to Support WiFi 802.11n yourself, which works for the MacBook Pro as well, and looks as straightforward as replacing a hard-drive. Now I just need to find one of those new cards.

With an 802.11n notebook, I can take advantage of the new Airport Extreme, which I’d want for a faster connection to the not-yet-purchasd Apple TV. Which would mean I’d have to replace our old TV with an HD monitor with DVI inputs.

I knew it was going to be an expensive year.

Update:
Others report to have performed this upgrade successfully using the Apple part MA688Z/A which can be found here or a local authorized apple repair store, and while this appears to be a G only card, the Airport Extreme updater performs the necessary upgrade.

A Wii Legal Concern

Wii swing
It was only a matter of time.

  1. Nintendo releases an innovative console with motion-sensing controllers
  2. console sales quickly reach more than 400,000 in Japan, 600,000 in the US, continually selling-out shortly after stores open, successfully establishing success
  3. a few people online claim stories of controller straps breaking, flying remotes, and broken items on impact
  4. web-sites appear devoted to humorously highlighting Wii player mishaps, capitalizing on buzz, hoping to catch visitors and ad revenue
  5. “news” stories report on hyped incidents, increasing popular media coverage
  6. Nintendo reminds Wii owners of the safety precautions they provide with each console, game, and controller to protect themselves from lawsuit-happy idiots
  7. consumers declare the devices unsafe and defective, demand reparations
  8. Nintendo considerately responds to public concern, offers free strap replacement in retail stores and online
  9. class action by idiots ensues
  10. class action stirs Nintendo defenders at kotaku and slashdot

There’s nothing particularly surprising in this series of events. As a happy owner of a Wii and four remotes, I can only identify a few reasons you might have explaining why you can’t be trusted with this toy.

  • You deem the wrist-strap too uncool for your Wii Sports: Bowling stance, and skip it before hurling the ball down the lane. But your hands are covered in Dorito-grease, and you’ve been drinking (like you do), and you release that ball with just the right about of spin, curving it in for a strike. But it’s still not a bowling ball, and you’re still in your dorm-room, now quiet with a remote through your TV.
  • Wii Sports: Golf so realistically replicates your golf course experience, you can’t help continuing your bad habits in front of the video-game. Like slightly twisting left on your swing. Or consistently over-shooting the green. Or chipping into the water-hazard and throwing your club after it. But that wasn’t your club.
  • I got nuthin’ else … Just don’t let go of the damn controller, and don’t make up stupid excuses if you do without wearing that strap.

Nintendo Wii

I didn’t expect to add the Wii to our distraction options this year, but one nonetheless sits connected to our TV. I can’t recall having more fun with another video game system. Sony and Microsoft may have superior hardware performance, but they’ve not once innovated with their consoles like Nintendo has with introducing a whole new way to interact with the system. Control through physical motion opens up so many doors for new game types; I look forward to seeing what appears over the next year: this system will attract so many unique games.

We’re currently restricted to single-player gaming as no additional controllers were available when we got the system, but it’s still fun taking turns in Wii Sports (Tennis, Baseball, Golf, Bowling, and Boxing), and I’m many hours into The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess. I’ve encountered some shoulder and wrist soreness from repetitive motion, but that’s not surprising after spending hours punching, swinging, and throwing the wiimote around; I just need to stretch more before playing my video games. I’ve found it’s possible to play with smaller motions, but it’s less fun.

You’re all welcome to visit for a work-out.

Replacing my MacBook Pro

My computer needs to return to the mother-ship because I have a MacBook Pro with noise under the keyboard. Its left speaker also stopped speaking, so a replacement is likely in order. I expected some hassle from a first revision and I should be happy the replacement should have its kinks already worked out, but I’m still reluctant to start the process. It holds all my stuff!

Ideally, I show them the problem, they order a new one, and I show up later to make the swap and they synch what’s important. Hopefully the transition goes smoothly.

Apple Boot Camp for Windows XP and OS X

Apple announced a public beta for a new utility called Boot Camp, allowing users of Intel-based macs (iMac, Mac Mini, MacBook Pro) to easily install and run Windows XP.

Holy Shit

After the contest to hack the EFI of the Intel Macs to run Windows, I didn’t think this was far off, but I certainly did not expect it to come from Apple.

Casey first alerted me to this, and my initial impulse was to reply, “why the hell would I want to dual boot?” The answers are slim, with the highest on the list being “because you can,” shortly followed by “could I play Half-life 2 or Counter-Strike: Source?” That’d be rather impressive… But certainly not productive. One of the reasons I bought the MacBook was to abandon Windows.

Anything requiring me to turn off my current Mac OS where everything pretty much “just works” and switch to Windows without access to running my OS X programs will be disruptive, and running Windows without official support from either Apple or Microsoft promises a rough experience.

the Apple Remote Control (IR), Apple Wireless (Bluetooth) keyboard or mouse, Apple USB Modem, MacBook Pro’s sudden motion sensor, MacBook Pro’s ambient light sensor, and built-in iSight camera will not function correctly when running Windows.

However, if I could just install some Windows libraries and then run programs compiled for windows without the full OS, and do so natively while remaining in OS X, then I’d be happy. Hopefully some day soon we’ll see that instead.

But I’m a glutton for punishment, and will at least try Bootcamp it to see what happens. Apple offers some details on requirements and issues one might expect.

Windows running on a Mac is like Windows running on a PC. That means it’ll be subject to the same attacks that plague the Windows world. So be sure to keep it updated with the latest Microsoft Windows security fixes.

After I backup my Mac.


Update:
So!

Today I ran Boot Camp, which had me burn a CD with hardware drivers, set the partition size for Windows (5GB default), and mere minutes later, I was rebooting to a Windows install CD.

Note: They’re not kidding when they say you need a Windows XP disk with Service Pack 2. I started with an MSDN disk handy containing that, XP Home, and something else accessible via boot-menu. Sadly, that menu was unusable as the laptop keyboard was not even initialized during the emulated boot process. So don’t bother attempting this unless you’ve got the XP CD proper: the one that you’d get at the store, with your PC, burned ISO to a bootable disk, whatever. And your legal XP license key. That you acquired legally. Microsoft is happy you want to deface your Mac, as long as you pay them for the priviledge.

Anyway, I got a “real” XP disk, and let Windows install. It was… a windows install. Nothing special there. So it puts files on the disk, boots off those files, and I’m looking at the default Windows background wallpaper. Without the hardware drivers, the resolution isn’t perfect and the color depth is off, but it’s certainly Windows. I inserted the disk containing the previous mentioned drivers and the auto-run installer kicked in. Approving the driver updates led to another reboot, and finally that damned Windows startup sound and I’m looking at Windows in 1440×900.

Pretty easy, and very creepy.
(In fact, I’m typing this update in Firefox, in Windows. On a Mac.)

Then, the time spent in “Windows Update.” While that ran I installed Gaim so I would feel so disconnected while operating in Windows. After some long downloads and a reboot, the updates were complete.

First fun thing – Half-Life 2 CDs. Pop disk 1 in, auto-runs… and lets me know I’ve got embarassingly little space available to install it’s content. A quick look at my mess reminds me I failed to give the Windows partition anything more than the default 5GB, which might sound like a lot… (have you looked at how much space your new windows install takes up?), but really 5GB isn’t if you want to dump a few modern games on your drive. No obvious way to resize my partition.

So I start over in Boot Camp with a 15GB Windows partition for round 2.

2 hours later…

Half-Life 2 CDs! (I’m still anxious to try Counter-Strike) At this point we’re still just Windows on a computer, nothing exciting while I swap CDs. Since HL2 runs with Valve’s Steam app, I’ve got to wait a while for it to decode/authorize/download updates. So I let that run.

While that’s downloading, I pull out my Doom3 CDs. Again some disc swapping, and Doom’s done! And Steam is still downloading and applying updates. While it does that, let’s just see how Doom runs…

I can’t make Doom 3 slow.

Nice. I’ve not used a machine that ran Doom well until my MacBook.

Looks like Counter-Strike: Source is 99% patched now, so I’ll end this post with this:

  • Boot Camp was simple and quick, and had I allowed for more space the first time, I wouldn’t have had to repeat my steps. Majority of time consumed was basic waiting on the Windows install.
  • I’ve never had a machine that ran Windows this well. It’s almost a shame I’ll only use it to play few games. Most of my time I’ll be back in OS X doing everything else.

Good Mourning Hardware Failure

I ask for a few moments of silence for a hard drive, who’s time with us was all too short. Barracuda Seagate was a generous drive, always accommodating, and fast to respond when you needed anything. Barracuda is survived by Western Digital, Pentium the 3rd, and two clients who will miss Seagate’s music terribly.

I will always wonder what I could have done better to protect Seagate from this harsh world, but regretting mistakes in the past will not bring the music back. All I can do now is take what I’ve learned to prepare for the future, pray, and implement redundancy.

Memorial services will be held on the back porch with the sledgehammer.