Anyone have a MacBook Air and use TRIM?
How to Enable TRIM on Your Mac’s Solid-State Drive
Enabling TRIM is one of the best ways to maximize the life of your solid-state drive, but OS X doesn't support it out-of-the-box. Here's an easy way to get better performance and longevity out of your Mac's SSD.
TRIM support is coming in OS 10.7 Lion, but that's still a way off, and even then, it'll only work with Apple SSDs. If you have a non-Apple SSD, or you just want to get TRIM support now, previously mentioned TRIM Support Enabler will do it for you. However, it turns out there's a little more to it than just hitting the "Patch" button.
I use my MacBook Air for writing and web-browsing, mostly. Sometimes I'll watch a TV show on the train. So I'm leaning towards just waiting for Lion.
Hi Tom. That was what I was installing. XP mode is one of the things that runs under the Virtual PC. Got it downloaded and installed. All kinds of craziness. I could not get the virtual PC to see the other PCs on the network no matter what I did. Finally configured all the computers with apps that needed XP mode as into static IPs. And created network places as direct ip addresses. And then it was able to see the other PCs. Now one more bit of craziness.
Normally apps installed in the virtual PC are also available directly under the Windows 7 as virtual applications. But one app is a batch file running btrieve files. So as far as XP is concerned it is just a batch file, not "installed". Even when it is copied to the XP Start Menu with "Exploring All Users" still is not visible in 7. So I'm going to have to teach the user to open virtual machine to run that application.
OK, and I think I found the answer:
C:Documents and SettingsAll UsersStart MenuPrograms on the XP VM
I'll test it tomorrow.
So they are getting divorced. He always talks in his columns about how his work is only possible because of his non-working wife; maybe she got sick of that arrangement. (I think he's kind of annoying; I would certainly not want to be married to him!)
He has been working A LOT lately (I've noticed). He is on several tv shows, books, his articles have been coming out less frequently in favor of the other things.
BTW, one article I read says she is a plastic surgeon. Are you sure she stays at home?
No, I just assumed because of the casual mentions in his columns. She is an MD, you're right.
In hi-I'm-a-klutz news:
I spilled coffee on my 1-week-old Macbook Pro. I've had the Ancient iBook for more than 6 years and eaten dinner over it every night (as well as breakfast some days) and NEVER spilled liquid on it (although there are enough crumbs under the keyboard to make an entire loaf of bread).
But I manage to spill coffee on the unibody can't-take-the-battery-out Macbook Pro within 7 days. AWESOME.
It wasn't much coffee (maybe less than 1/4 cup?), and it was more of a splatter on the keys and part of the trackpad, and I immediately shut it down and mopped it up (but not vigorously, because I figured that mopping hard would press on the keys and potentially fuck things up more; so I blotted extensively), and then flipped it over, kept the screen open, and laid the keyboard/trackpad on a layered combo of paper towel/rice/paper towel (so that basically there are paper towels between the keys and the rice, because I really don't need to get rice under the keys).
Is there anything else I should do? I plan to remove the rice in a few hours, and then keep it turned off and flipped over on paper towels for several days. I really don't want to open up the unibody, but then, at this point, having dumped liquid on it already voided the warranty, so I don't really have anything to lose by opening the thing up.