- A blogger installed a SSD hard drive in his 2009 13″ MacBook Pro. This is exactly what I did (replacing the optical drive so that I now have a 100GB SSD for the OS and a 1TB regular hard drive for my files), and it’s easily the best computer upgrade I have ever done, well worth the money. My computer is so much more responsive, it’s almost unbelievable. Moving to an SSD really opens your eyes to how much the storage system serves as a bottleneck in today’s computers. I went with an OWC SSD, as the reviews were all glowing.
- This week’s NY Times Magazine has a long article on Oregon’s high-speed football offense.
- Burrito Justice is up to his usual cool work in San Francisco, putting together some resources on the Cone of Invisibility for Mission/Bernal residents, in which the BoA building blocks the Transamerica Pyramid. One note from the end of the post: there used to be a quarry on top of Bernal, evident in one of the photos.
- The NY Times has an article about increasing use of rabbit ears to get HDTV. I’ve actually been using a $40 HDTV antenna (complete with rabbit ears for VHF frequences, as well as quasi-futuristic ray gun part for UHF frequencies–or perhaps it is the other way around) for a month now, and it works quite well, especially since I can connect it to my TiVo for DVR usage. There is some susceptibility to interference if you move the antenna or sit by it when watching, but it’s tough to complain given the monthly price ($0). We’ve also been using Netflix streaming and Hulu Plus to get our TV fill, and have purchased some shows via iTunes (e.g., Mad Men). The only thing missing is live sports, which would be covered if Cablevision was an ESPN3 partner–then I could watch live sports on my Xbox 360.
- Road trains in Europe? Sounds pretty good to me, as it means more efficient utilization of roads without road infrastructure investments. I expect that automated driving will involve a mesh network between cars, not communication with the roads, given the cost of building out a smart road infrastructure combined with challenges of keeping it current.
Hopp links for Monday, December 6
December 6th, 2010 § 0 comments § permalink
Slick iPad app for Mac users
July 5th, 2010 § 0 comments § permalink
If you’d like to add an extra display to your laptop while you’re on the road, there haven’t been any options available other than carrying an actual monitor around with you. Not too practical, of course.
But if you’re an Apple laptop user and have an iPad, you’re now in luck. A company called Avatron has released Air Display, a $10 iPad app that, combined with a utility and driver for the Mac’s OS X, lets you use your iPad as an external display.
The screen is refreshing over WiFi, so it cannot handle video or other fast-moving windows (too slow a refresh rate), but it works great for an occasional second screen to hold your calendar, task manager, IM window, etc.
Note that the Avatron web page says that a Windows version of the accompanying utility software is on the way.
Hat tip to Wired’s Gadget Lab blog for alerting me to this app.
