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Mike Grushin’s thoughts on everything tech-related and more…

Archive for the ‘Mac’ Category

may cause a kernel panic…

Posted by mikeg on December 8, 2008

Hilarious language in Apple Knowledge Base article

7. Connecting to (mounting) two or more SMB volumes simultaneously may cause a kernel panic.

http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1568

The reason I found this is that I was looking how to transfer some files from my Mac to Windows XP. XP had a share that allowed Everyone Change rights (configured both in Sharing and in NTFS). OSX gave me an option to connect as Guest or provide username/password. Connecting as Guest did NOT work. I spent a few minutes looking online, but then decided to save time and just created a user and gave that user Change permissions on the share. Then OSX was able to connect.

Unrelated, but every time I see this it cracks me up: pay attention to Blue Screen of Depth that is used as a preview of PCs. I like developers with sense of humor.


200812080054.jpg

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Microsoft Remote Desktop Connection for Mac is reporting strange system specs

Posted by mikeg on November 17, 2008

I am pretty impressed with Microsoft Remote Desktop client, but it still crashes (not very often). When looking through the error report I noticed strange values.

Specifically RAM looks very much off.

200811170547.jpg

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Switching to Mac: Entourage 2008

Posted by mikeg on November 17, 2008

Outlook is (was) an essential tool for communication and one of the core requirements of moving to Mac is to find a suitable email client. My requirement is around connecting to Microsoft Exchange and the only option available is Microsoft Entourage.

I’ve been using it for a few days and while it is no Outlook, it is “workable”. A few things that made i found very useful to help with migration:

  • My Outlook was setup in such a way that I had 2 PST files: Archive and Personal. Archive was populated automatically by Outlook Archive functionality to make sure that I do not exceed my quota. Personal was where I kept all the emails that I needed/wanted to keep
  • Entourage does not provide built-in functionality for importing PST files (I guess it’s a way for Microsoft to discourage migrating to Mac). There are a number of ways you can find on the internet to achieve this. I decided to pay and it worked out great: Emailchemy offers a tool that imports PST files into RGE (Entourage supported archive format)
  • You point to Emailchemy to PST files (multiple if you need to) and it creates RGE file that Entourage is able ti import. Once you import it into Entourage it looks something like this:
Picture 3.png

From here you just drag the folders where you want them. I moved messages from Deleted Items/Sent Items into appropriate folders to enable Searching.

Note: I saw a mention that Entourage 2008 doesn’t have a size limit, but has a limit on a number of records in the internal database: 1,000,000. Developer explained that most emails generate 2 records, so you are looking at a limit of 500K emails. He also promised that Entourage will worn before you reach that limit.

Other things:

  • There is no Archive functionality in Entourage so I am planning to use the following product: ???
  • Under Preferences : Mail & News Preferences : Reply & Forward — choose “Place reply at top of message…” under Mail Attribution. This is more inline with how Outlook works
  • There is no built-in functionality for “permanent delete” (useful for spam or emails you don’t want to keep), but there is a script that you can add to enable this functionality. Steps are below

How to add “permanent delete” functionality:

http://nik.me/node/90

Keyboard Shortcuts

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Switching to Mac: Strategy

Posted by mikeg on October 29, 2008

As I alluded to in my previous post: my goal for this migration is to minimize the downtime in my productivity. I am responsible for a number of projects and cannot afford to be “exploring/learning” for 2 weeks.

My plan is the following: use VMWare Fusion to run Windows XP with all my current software/utilities and then slowly find alternatives on Mac and leave Fusion only for Visual Studio related projects.

VMware Converter Starter Edition, available as a free download, lets you migrate existing Windows machines into virtual machines for your Mac. Will probably use that to bring my current Windows XP into MBP

I’ll let you know how this works out :)

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Taking the plunge: got a MacBook Pro

Posted by mikeg on October 29, 2008

This has been long time in the making: a number of friends/colleagues I respect have been suggesting (rather strongly :) ) that I move over to Mac. These friends come from a long history of Windows background so their experience is very relevant. I’ve hesitated for quite a bit – I am very, very productive on Windows. It took me years to perfect my software/hardware setup and it works very well for me. At the same time I am pretty sure it will be a good experience to learn OS X due to its Unix internals.

I was reluctant for a number of reasons:

Hardware: I am currently using Del D830, have a docking station at home and in the office. Dual-monitor setup in both location. At home I share my dual monitors with a home PC (pictures, videos, etc). Same keyboard (Microsoft Natural 4000), same mouse in both places. All I have to do when I get to the office/home is plug in my laptop into the docking station and (90% of the time :) ) I am up and running.

It took me a long time to get this setup working the way I like and after doing a bit of research it looks like reproducing the same with MacBook Pro (MBP from here on) will either be a challenge or impossible.

The other “hardware” issue is related to the keyboard: I rely a lot on keyboard shortcuts and I am somewhat “scared” of the time it will take me to be as productive as I am on Windows. The big issue with the keyboard is also the fact that Fn key is in the bottom left corner, where I expect Ctrl key to be. Mac users tell me is it less of an issue because Ctlr key is used a lot less often on Mac. (Btw, this issue with Fn key is specifically why I never purchase a ThinkPad)

From my limited research it doesn’t look like there a lot of options for ergonomic keyboards/mice and that might be an issue as I’ve been having issues with my right wrist for some time now.

Software: It took me years to collect/setup my utilities and I am very productive with them. Probably the biggest concern right now is either finding an alternative to Outlook/X1 setup or find a way to run those on Mac (I’ll post separately about this). There are a number of online discussions around Mac email clients and it looks like Entourage is the only one that supports Exchange. At the same time people are complaining about Entourage’s stability.

As you can see I gave it quite a bit of thought but at the end it was a friend/colleague that gave it the final push: we needed to get a Mac for the office anyway, so he got me an MBP for my birthday. It arrived 2 days ago, but my project load is pretty heavy these days so it will take me some time to migrate. For the time being I am just doing research online, which also takes up quite a bit of time.

My other friend keeps reminding me that I will most likely hate it for 3-4 weeks, but then will not be able to go back. We’ll see.

Posted in Mac, Switching to Mac | 2 Comments »

Switching to Mac: Tips and Tricks

Posted by mikeg on October 29, 2008

The following links are from Alvin:

  • The Ultimate Guide for switching from a PC to a Mac only has one chapter so far, but it looks like it will be great source of basic and essential info for anyone switching to Mac from PC.
  • Another even more comprehensive switcher web site is My First Mac. The name sounds rudimentary and pre-school, but don’t let that put you off. This site has tons of useful information for switchers and Mac lovers alike. Their tag line is: “Help Buying and Getting Started With Your New Mac”, but this site has so much more. Everything from basics to tweaks, tips to testimonials, even an analysis of the newest Mac news in very everyday language makes this a comfortable site for the not-so-technical. It’s also full of pictures and has an eye-catching style that makes it a fun site to check out. (If you know how, you can even subscribe to its RSS feed).
  • lifehacker.com

Use Dictionary to see the definition for a word in an application

Move the cursor over the word and press ⌘-Control-D

Quick Look, or press Command-Y

Two-finger rotating lets you rotate photos, pages, and more.

 Three-finger swiping lets you rapidly page through documents, move to the previous

or next photo, and more.

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