Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Carbon Copy Cloner
Today posting Carbon Copy Cloner, this FREE piece of software will create an exact clone of your drive to another drive in the even you want to upgrade/back up.
Good alternative to Apple's Time Machine.
Go check it out!
www.bombich.com/index.html
Thursday, January 7, 2010
TV for your PC

Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Windows 7 Upgrade Tips

So a Friend of mine emails me and says the following:
Hey Rich,
I was in costco today and saw windows 7 home premium upgrade for $109. Then I saw something interesting. They had something called windows 7 home premium family for $129 that I didn't see online for download, and from what I can tell, it allows you to upgrade 3 PCs in your home. Given that I want to upgrade Jessica's laptop, as well, am I reading the packaging right and can I upgrade both computers for only $20 more?
I know you would prefer I switch to Mac OS Super Leopard Tiger XII, or whatever name Steve Jobs came up with to call it during a gay orgy, but since that isn't a possibilty, I would appreciate your advice.
Sent from my iPhone
This was my response:
Hey man, yes you can upgrade to Win 7 Home premium for $109 and yes they do have a family pack that allows you to install up to 3 computers. First a couple of questions, what OS is Jessica running? If she is still rocking Window XP upgrading to Windows 7 is basically a format and reinstall. So you'll have to back up all her data to an external drive and then re-install all her programs too no other way around this, so be prepared for at least a few hours dedicated to backing up, installing and restoring.For you since you are already running Vista and going to the same version then your upgrade is easy you can just in an in place upgrade and retain all your docs and programs, however it is still highly recommended to back up all your data prior to doing so.Another tip, once you are done upgrading you computer and Jess's computer, I'd highly recommend making a repair disk, it's a new feature built into Windows 7. Go to start/run and type "System Repair" then choose "Create a System Repair Disk", pop in a blank DVD and let Windows 7 do it's magic. This way if you ever get a system melt down or get a particularly nasty virus/malware you can always restore your system with this disk without having to reinstall everything.Now see if you were using OSX then upgrades are a snap no matter what version you're upgrading from : ) and you don't lose your data or applications.A follow up email:Sounds like a snap to me!Jessica is running Vista on her laptop, as well, so should have the sane upgradeability.You said I should back up everything anyway, just in case. What is the best way to do that other than folder by folder, file by file copying to a USB drive or DVD?A follow up Answer:Awesome glad she is already running Vista makes things way easier, one other quick thing to check, is to make sure both of you are running the same version of Windows Vista. I think you guys are both running Win Vista Home Premium 32 bit edition, that way you'll be able to buy the one corresponding Win 7 Family Pack.There are really only a few options to back up your data, the hard quick and dirty way, is to find all the files that you know you'll need or couldn't live without if your HD was pwned and then copy them to an external HD or CD/DVD. I would recommend backing up to an external HD, it's much faster and there is less headache in the burning process.The more elegant & complete way, is to use a piece of software called Macrium Reflect, this is actually a free download here:Don't worry it's free of spyware and malware it's from CNET's download.com, this software is cool because it takes a complete image of your old HD and you'll be able to restore it as if nothing has happened. The down side is that it will require a fairly large external HD to be able to image both yours and Jess's Drive. But this is the most complete and fail safe way of ensuring you don't lose any data just incase.Otherwise you can go renegade and not back up anything and just upgrade and pray nothing goes wrong.
Friday, October 9, 2009
Mac OSX Snow Leopard Neat Trick
Most of you know by know that Mac OSX Snow Leopard has a new Quicktime X with a very cool new video capture feature, audio capture feature AND screen capture feature.
Requirements:
- Mac running Snow Leopard
- Snowflower add-on (download here )
1. Download and install the Snowflower add-on. The actual download link is a google code page. Once you install the add-on, i would recommend rebooting.
2. After rebooting, you will need to set your audio preferences to output to the new Soundflower audio outputs. Go to System Preferences > Sound > Output and select the Soundflower outputs
3. Now, launch Quicktime Player ( Applications > Quicktime Player or via Spotlight, command+spacebar)
Go to File >New Screen Recording
Then on the recording window, click the drop down arrow and choose the same Soundflower output we setup in our previous step. (ie Soundflower 2CH).
4. Finally, now go to your website and get the video ready to play. Hit the Record button in Quicktime Player and then start your movie/video in your browser. Once your done, stop the recording and voila! You have an instant video capture.
HOWEVER, remember to change your output audio back to your speakers once your done capturing. ( System Preferences > Sound > Output ) or else you may wonder where your audio went. :)
TIPS/TRICKS:
- REMEMBER, your mouse is captured when your recording, so try not to put it over the video your capturing.
- You can easily capture web audio by just doing a File > New Audio Recording and again choosing the Soundflower input as source.
- If you want, you can even import the captured video into iMovie and then crop to the video frame itself. Makes it a cleaner video.
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
New cheaper iPods & some other cool stuff

So in case you didn't know Apple held an event today to talk about new iPods sort of. Some things were new and they definitely got cheaper but the only thing that is new is the new iPod nano, it got a very nice improvement most notably a video camera, mic, speaker, FM tuner and Nike Plus built in! So very nice.
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Mac OSX Snow Leopard
So Apple released Snow Leopard on August 28th, their newest version of OSX. It has come with mixed reviews because a lot of the nerds out there were saying it really wasn't an upgrade it was more of a service pack. In my opinion it was kind of in between, it isn't exactly an entirely new system but it also isn't just at a level of a service pack.
There aren't any real huge improvements from a graphical user look all of the significant changes have been in the underlying code. Primarily because most of the key apps in OSX are written in 64 bit now. Like the Finder, Mail, Address Book etc. I've noticed these apps are a notch faster and snappier, in fact overall the entire system feels faster and more nimble. But let me start at the beginning.
I purchased my Snow Leopard DVD at the Apple Store, naturally I got the family pack with 5 licences for the bargain price of $49 ($29 for single license). Actually I got it for only $40 due to my Fox/PwC discount. But either way it was a steal.
I got home and I popped in the disk and let it work it's magic, on my Macbook Pro the entire install took about an hour. First it loads a lot of data onto your local drive, then it will reboot and this is where a lot of the actual install takes place. It's replacing a lot of the old 32 bit code with 64 bit code also installing Grand Central and Open CL, which are two of the main new "under the hood" features of Snow Leopard. I'll get into those a little later.
Once the system fully installed I got the familiar welcome video with the nice happy music and "Welcome" in a lot of various languages and I was ready to play around in my new system.
Like I mentioned previously everything felt quicker and snappier this could just be a placebo effect and a desire for me to want to think that it's faster because I just spent $40 on it but it really did feel faster.
I mean loading Safari, iTunes, Calendar, Address book everything seemed to be faster. Spotlight searches appeared to be quicker as well.
One big thing that Snow Leopard advertised to do was that it was lighter about 6 gigs lighter than Leopard, well I give Snow Leopard an A+++ because it actually saved me about 20 gigs of space. Very very impressive.
It also advertised 50% quicker sleep and shut down time, in my experience I noticed a marginal speed increase but it wasn't dramatically faster.
Then I started to check to see if all my apps worked, which they should have because I checked in my system profile that all my apps were intel or universal so no surprises there. Although on my iMac I still had Office 2004 and that was a power PC app and that no longer worked, it required Rosetta to be installed which is not a standard install of Snow Leopard, partially why you save HD space. But no big deal I'm waiting for the new Office of Mac to come out so I should be good.
The other cool improvement is Quicktime X, it has a slick new interface and you can crop videos on the fly. Also you can do audio and video capturing without having to pay for Quicktime Pro. I tried this and it was quite easy to use. Also it has easy buttons for exporting to iPod, iPhone, Moblie me or Youtube. So it's convenient. I did hear that they excluded some of the features from the previous Quicktime 7 Pro that some people who are power users have complained about but for the normal user Quicktime X is a vast improvement. But you still have the option for Quicktime Pro if you want it's included on the install disk as a separate install.
Also big in this release is full Exchange support so you can use your Mac on corporate enviorments running Windows Server 2007, not really applicable to a lot of us but it is nice to have.
Other smaller improvements are improved stacks, cover flow with page preview built in, and an enhanced expose that allows you to "expose" groups of Windows of similar apps vs all of your windows a very nice touch.
The bigger improvements are native 64 bit support as well as legacy 32 bit support. So now with 64 bit you can potentially use up to 16 exabytes of RAM. You're probably wondering what the hell is a exabyte, well one exabyte is one billion gigabytes so 16 exabytes is 16 billion gigabytes, that's a shit load of RAM : )
Now to the more techie stuff, first there is Grand Central, this new piece of software built in OSX Snow Leopard will enable programs to more efficiently use the multiple cores that most newer Macs have from the dual core Macs to the 8 core Mac Pros. Grand Central Dispatch (GCD) in Mac OS X Snow Leopard addresses this pressing need. It’s a set of first-of-their-kind technologies that makes it much easier for developers to squeeze every last drop of power from multi core systems. With GCD, threads are handled by the operating system, not by individual applications. GCD-enabled programs can automatically distribute their work across all available cores, resulting in the best possible performance.
Now a new technology in Mac OS X Snow Leopard called OpenCL takes the power of graphics processors and makes it available for general-purpose computing. No longer will graphics processors be limited to graphics-intensive applications such as games and 3D modeling. Instead, once developers begin to use OpenCL in their applications, you’ll experience greatly improved speed in a wide spectrum of applications.
Recommendation:
For $29 bucks it's definitely worth the upgrade the snappier performance plus the future built in support of GC and Open CL will be awesome once more software is written to take advantage of this.
That's about it, got any questions email me: richmlee@gmail.com

