September 10, 2010

Replacing Optical Drive with Second Hard Drive on MacBook Pro

Previously I had blogged about replacing my 7200 RPM SATA drive in my MBP with an Intel X25M-G2 80GB SSD.  So far it’s been great and I have no doubt it’s extended the lifespan of my laptop (MacBook Pro 2,2).  Being a digital pack-rat the hardest thing has been going from a 500GB drive to 80GB, I can no longer keep my virtual machines, Music, Pictures etc on my internal drive.  My solution at the time was to use my 500GB drive in an external FW800 enclosure, it works ok but the FW800 cable is pretty large and also needs a USB connection for additional power.  Considering I only have 2 USB ports and one is in use by my Logitech receiver this was a pain as well.  Basically I was sick of doing this all the time:

OptiBay from MCEtech, it was $99 which at first I thought was a bit high for just a piece of metal to fit another drive in there.  However it also comes with a case/cables to turn the SuperDrive into an external DVD drive.

The adapter is the size of the DVD drive and has the same back end connector:

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How I’ve Used My iPad

I’ve had my iPad now since April 30th, and I have to say – I’m using it a lot more then I thought I would be.  It’s hardly out of my hands when I’m at home.  I had both a Kindle 2 and a Kindle DX but returned both as I wasn’t satisfied with the PDF support.  When I saw iAnnotate PDF for iPad I knew I’d be buying one.  I knew when I got it I’d be using it to read a lot (Instapaper, GoodReader etc, all things I do now with my iPhone) but I didn’t realize how much I’d use it for other things.

Apps I Use

  • Evernote: synchronize notes/recordings/screenshots with iPad/iPhone/Mac
  • iSSH: Allows me to SSH into my home lab, I like iSSH because it’s for both iPhone and iPad.  This is one app where not having arrow keys is a PITA.  I haven’t tried connecting an external keyboard yet (I have the older Apple Bluetooth keyboard which apparently is not supported) to see if the arrow keys work then.
  • Instapaper: LOVE this app, install a bookmarklet in your browser and it will convert it to a nice and easy to read version.  Also works on both iPhone/iPad
  • Wyse PocketCloud: Lets me connect to VMware View environments (as well as RDP).  Works much better then a lot of the other RDP apps I had tried, but it still takes 10x longer to do things then just using an actual computer
  • iAnnotate PDF: This was one of the apps I was most looking forward to, being able to highlight and make notes in PDF and them send them back to myself.  Unfortunately the interface isn’t really the best and I find myself just using GoodReader instead
  • GoodReader: Great PDF reader and supports connecting to Dropbox
  • NewsRack: RSS Reader that syncs with Google Reader.  I use Reeder on my iPhone which I love but unfortunately they don’t have an iPad version.  NewsRack is a good alternative (and has an iPhone version as well).
  • 1Password: Great for securely storing logins (work, personal, home lab), WIFI connection info, etc.  iPhone and iPad versions
  • Wolfram Alpha: I end up using this a lot as a calculator but it’s also nice to be able to do quick conversions with – downside of course is it requires internet access to use.  I wouldn’t consider this a must have but it’s a nice app.
  • SharePlus: I’m only using the free version but it works really nice for connecting to our corporate SharePoint site, I can view MS Office docs with it (although it was a little tricky to figure out how to do this!).  v2 Should have editing support as well.  Viewing SharePoint calendars does not work well at all, it just displays them in a large list and seems to be sorted by when the event was added to SharePoint, not when it actually occurs.
  • PaperDesk: I looked at quite a few note taking apps and kind of settled on this one, I wanted one that can do more then just write (eg Penultimate) and the latest update has the ability to use the VGA adapter and display the whiteboard on a projector.  I don’t like that you can’t just make text boxes wherever you want, you are stuck in a word processing mode (Sundry Notes can do this) which can be a pain if you use text notes and diagrams together.  Note:  I just started using Notetaker HD which deals with handwriting a little better in my opinion (there is an entry box at the bottom instead of writing directly on the page).
  • Videos: This is just the default app that comes with the iPad but I love that I can have all of my TrainSignal, VMworld, NetApp Insight etc videos on here.  I tried this with my iPhone but the screen is just too small for a lot of the presentations.

Apps I’d Like

  • Tweetie: Love this app on my iPhone but I personally don’t like any of the current native iPad Twitter clients.
  • Delicious: I use delicious.com quite a bit for my bookmarking and it’d be nice to see a native app for this too, for now I’ve just been using the web interface which can get the job done.
  • Skype: I use the iPhone version of it now but I’d love a native Skype (especially one that supports push notifications).  The microphone on the iPhone headphones works with the iPad (and it obviously has Bluetooth) which could make for a great VoIP solution – and just think if iPad v2 has a front facing camera
  • OmniOutliner: This app is on its way from what I read on their blog but I still can’t wait.  I use this app all the time on my MBP.
  • OmniFocus: Currently using the iPhone version of it but I’d love to get a more desktop like iPad version, I use OF pretty heavily with my GTD setup

Features I’d Like

  • Better support for getting data between apps, example:  GoodReader can tie into mail so I can open attachments in GoodReader which is great, however I wish I could then save it to Dropbox without needing to use my laptop.  I’d love to be able to save from iAnnotate PDF directly to my Dropbox account (and really this could be solved if Dropbox had an email address associated with your account similar to Evernote).

Accessories I Use

I had a hard time finding a case I liked, I purchased the Apple case but I personally am not a fan.  The edges are a little “odd” and I wanted something that could hold a few business cards, business receipts etc.  I finally found this case on Amazon and though I haven’t received it yet I think it will be what I’m looking for:

  • Zippered case so I don’t lose anything
  • Pockets for receipts and business cards
  • Spot to keep a Pogo Stylus

I didn’t go for any type of iPad specific dock or stand, instead I went with a study stand which seems to work just fine and cost around $5.

Popularity: 23% [?]

Adding SSD to MacBook Pro – before and after

I have an older MacBook Pro (Model 2,2 or about 3 years old now, I had upgraded the hard drive awhile back from the stock 120gb drive to a Samsung 500gb drive.  The drive was nice for being able to keep my iTunes library as well as my pictures (I have a SLR camera so lots and lots of RAW images) with me but I would get the “spinning beach ball” a lot and having VMware Fusion open would almost make the whole computer unusable.

I started looking at replacing the Samsung with a solid state drive, Chad Sakac had a really good blog post including some performance numbers on various SSD drives, I was originally leaning towards the 128gb Kingston SSDnow drive as it seemed to be one of the better price/gb SSD’s on the market.

I ended up going with an Intel one however, I really think Intel makes some of the best consumer SSD’s on the market right now.  I picked up the 80gb X25-M G2 and had it installed in no time.

One thing to be aware of:  My MBP is pretty old as I mentioned, and only supports SATA I.

I did a few before and after tests, one using Xbench for disk performance, and a few others simply documenting the boot up time as well as time to open Safari.  Here were my results:

This is Xbench with my old hard drive, you can see random small block reads/writes were awful – both well below 1MB/sec

And now the Xbench results after installing the SSD

Pretty impressive improvement for the random reads/writes I would say but this was more impressive to me:

I ran 3 tests booting up my computer with my old hard drive, each time stopping it once the dock/system menu/desktop icons were loaded.  During the 3 tests I recorded results of 58, 53 and 48 seconds for an average of about 53 seconds from pressing the power button to being fully booted.

I also ran a few tests with Safari, rebooting/clearing cache each time and seeing how long before it opened and was loaded on google.  My results were 7, 17 and 12 seconds for an average of 12 seconds.

I ran the same tests after installing the SSD, for booting up I now was at 22, 21 and 21 seconds for an average of 21.3 seconds, almost 2.5 times faster!

The Safari test was quite a bit harder, basically I would say it started in 1 second each of the 3 times which would be 12 times faster then before.

And perhaps the most important thing, I can now easily run Fusion and all my Mac apps at the same time and still have a responsive system, just need to figure out how to store less junk on the drive now!

Popularity: 30% [?]

Error opening NZB files in Snow Leopard

For some reason in Snow Leopard when you open a .nzb file in Safari it is marked as a quarantined file and gives the error “<filename>.nzb is an application downloaded from the Internet.  Are you sure you want to open it?”

Annoying, I searched a bit for how to get rid of it – I assumed it would be easy, an option to allow *.nzb but it is not.  The two main options I found were to run an Automator script on the Downloads folder (this didn’t work for me) or edit a .plist file which also didn’t work.

Since I already use Hazel (great app btw) I made a script that can handle this for me, it marks the file as safe, opens it automatically with the default application, moves the .nzb file to the trash and makes a growl notification for me.

Screen shot 2009-11-08 at 1.12.21 PM

Popularity: 5% [?]

Must have Mac Software

A friend of mine was asking me what software I am using on my Mac as he is looking to switch from Windows as well, so here is my list:

  • 1Password – Password management app
  • Adium – Trillian like IM client
  • AppZapper – Coming from Windows I was used to having to use a program to uninstall things
  • Blogo – Best blog editor I have found so far
  • ChronoSync – Keep files/folders in sync across computers
  • Dropbox – Sync folders across computers/platforms
  • Evernote – Sync notes across platforms (Mac/Windows/iPhone)
  • Hex Fiend – Hex editor
  • Isolator – Allows me to “dim” all screens but the one I am working in, helps for concentration
  • Jungle Disk – Backing up data to Amazon S3 service
  • Little Snitch – Control incoming/outgoing network connections
  • OmniFocus – GTD app
  • OmniGraffle – Visio alternative for OSX
  • OmniOutliner – Note taking
  • Skim – PDF viewer that lets you take notes within PDF
  • TextMate – Textpad/Ultraedit type text editor
  • Transmit – FTP/sFTP client
  • VMware Fusion
  • Yep – PDF manager, like iPhoto for PDF files


Popularity: 3% [?]