Although, WOW! I'm displaying current freeway traffic conditions on my Google maps right now, AIFG!
Watch out for that truck!
'Time Bomb'
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Although, WOW! I'm displaying current freeway traffic conditions on my Google maps right now, AIFG!
Watch out for that truck!
The Apple TV is very nice, but I think I'm going to buy a MacBook Air for most of my work, and set my current MacBook Pro up as a media center in the apartment I get with my sister. We'll drop cable, buy The TubeStick (with its really cool recording software and FrontRow-replacing MediaCentral software) to get any over-the-air TV, and use iTunes to get the rest / rent movies / etc. Not quite as elegant as the Apple TV, maybe, but functional and with DVR capabilities.
I would adore the weight difference, but I think that the MacBook (Pro or not) is going to be a better choice for me at this point.
Not that I'm going to be buying a new laptop anytime soon, especially since my beloved ND bought me a bigger hard drive for Christmas and installed it in my current laptop this past weekend. My computer isn't gasping for space anymore! It's very exciting.
I think of the MacBook Air mostly in terms of the times when I don't need to travel with my full laptop. Lots of my quick meetings and short trips I could carry just the tiny MacBook Air. That would be sooo nice. I wonder if Bootcamp will work on it.
I just answered my own question. Yes it will do Bootcamp, so that tiny little machine can be a portable Mac/Windows box for me. Wow. Once they start shipping I'll have to take a serious look at them.
Once they start shipping I'll have to take a serious look at them.Like there was any doubt!
Can you jump on IM?
Lots of my quick meetings and short trips I could carry just the tiny MacBook Air.
Yes. After the drooling, my more serious thought is that if I had a job with lots more traveling and conferences and whatchamacallits, it would be a great travel machine -- with the assumption of having something heavier that stayed home.
That's actually the thing I find most interesting about it, as I've thought about it more through the day. The whole business of bootstrapping DVD installs off another machine makes it very clear that the assumption is that everyone comes with multiples (and that you'll be ripping your CD library to that other one) -- there's never been a generation of laptops that's done that quite so explicitly before, even though there have been plenty that have come with less power or less stuff or annoying swappable drives or docking stations, all of which are sort of implicit statements that this thing we're selling you isn't quite completely what you want. This is more like, "duh, of course it isn't, but we both know you have those umpty-twelve other machines, and now you don't even need to plug into them." It's really a huge change in assumptions.
I think a lot of the PC ultraportables make that assumption as well with the non-inclusion of optical drives and the like. As someone who's been computer-poly for way too many years I forget that lots of folks only have one machine.
As someone who's been computer-poly for way too many years I forget that lots of folks only have one machine.
I suspect that the target audience for this thing is mostly poly, and has been for a long time -- but the change in marketing to not even doing that bit of wink-wink pretending that it can be a self-sufficient machine is what I find interesting.
Proof that the new gig has some folks with a sense of humour:
Co-worker B: Karl, do you prefer Emacs or vi?
Karl: Actually, I'm pretty much bi-textual. I'll go either way.
Co-worker B: (without missing a beat) San Francisco's a good place for that. (sotto voce) Or so I hear, anyway.
Karl: I have a mild preference for Emacs, but sometimes you just need something different.
Co-worker B: It's genetic, really.
Karl: Is this going to turn into a nature vs. nurture argument?
Co-worker B: Probably. Did you get enough keyboard time as a child?
(Note: I am /not/ out to my co-workers, and I am not aware of any queer folk in the office. Doesn't mean we're not here, just that none of us seem to be loud about it.)