Posts Tagged ‘mac’

The Magic Mouse

Well, I finally did it. After going back and forth to the Apple Store for a few days, I decided to buy the newly released Magic Mouse, and a better name could not have been given to this technological wonder…

Right out the box (following the near 70mb software update required for it) it was working like a charm. Having used slim Kensington mice of late, most recently the slim-blade media mouse, I found that the Magic Mouse felt very comfortable in the hand and natural to use.

The scrolling is very smooth and intuitive, much more so than a conventional scroll wheel, and the buttons feel very positive. The mouse is a good weight, and feels comfortable and sturdy.

I read a lot of reviews before buying the mouse, and many people have had problems with it. To an extent, I can understand why, and I thought long and hard about making the purchase, but for me personally, this is what the mouse should have been years ago, and I could not be happier with it.

There is no shortcut on the mouse for expose and dashboard, but I only have one hand on the mouse, and find the other very useful for pressing the dedicated keys on my aluminium keyboard on the rare occasion that I need either (those with classic keyboards may struggle, but if you have the full sized alum model, you have no excuse)

My rating for the mouse.. for me a no brainer.. 12/10 but some it seems, a waste of money.

Each to his/her own :)

Snow Leopard and 3 Mobile Broadband…

Being a 3 mobile broadband user for some time, I love the convenience of plugging in a dongle and getting online with my MacBook Pro just about anywhere I go… But upgrading to Snow Leopard fast put the brakes on that, as you will likely have seen in my previous post.

I spent a long time hunting for solutions on Apple’s site, and various third party sites, and found nothing at all that I could find to work (and I tried them all)!

Completely frustrated by what seemed like hours of “tinkering” I picked up the phone and called three. Initially I was connected to the first line tech support, that I assume was in Delhi, and was eventually passed over to a supervisor as I refused to go through all the “first line” bog standard “stab in the dark” fixes (no disrespect to tech support helplines, I have been there, done that). I was told by the initial tech before being passed to the supervisor that the only solution left was to wait for a fix that they had no ETA for.

I had the ZTE MF627 USB Modem. This worked brilliantly under Leo, (despite the fact that the 3 connect software was not terribly pleasant to use) but refused full stop to work under Snow Leopard.

The options I was offered by three was to get one of their Huawei dongle modems, and the supervisor seemed quite confident that it “might” work.

To cut a long story short, I had been browsing the three site, and seen advertised the newly released “MiFi” modem, which is essentially a small wireless hotspot in your pocket. You turn it on, then connect to it with any wireless enabled device that you want in the same way you would connect to any other wireless network. Quick, painless, and completely platform independent. It also allows you to connect multiple devices simultaneously, unlike the dongle.

3mifi

Now, while the device was actually quite expensive (£69.00 on contract, £99.00 on PAYG) I have to say it is probably the best 100 quid I have spent in a long time. It just works. No faffing about, turn it on, drop it in your pocket, then connect your laptop. Flawless ! If you find your internet connection is not strong enough where you are sitting, unlike the dongle you can take this and place it on a windowsill.

Before I purchased the MiFi, I did check more than once that I could buy the PAYG modem, and insert my current contract sim in it, and was assured that I could.

For those of you that have upgraded your MacBook to Snow Leopard, and need easy access to 3 Mobile Broadband, I would not hesitate to recommend this device to you if you have the cash to spare.

so much for progress…

The last week has been little more than a nightmare.. I seem to take one step forward, then three back..

Run off my feet, working with my pet hate (windows!) and to wrap it all up I spend nearly an hour on the phone to my mobile broadband supplier.. the modem will not work with Snow Leopard. Expecting them to say they are working on it, instead I am told that it does not work, and that they recommend I downgrade to Leopard if I want it to work.. well of course I threw open my drawer of CD’s and dug out the Leo disk to get started… NOT !

After nearly an hour on the phone, being taken through the long list of “dongle” modems that they have, being told that “this one might work, but only in rosetta mode” I gave up, and spent a fortune on a new device that is platform independant.. I am told it will work with my current sim and contract, but my dealings with the Delhi helpdesk this evening leaves me feeling less than confident!

Delivery should be Tuesday with any luck, so we shall see what happens.. hopefully I will be back up and operational, but time will tell.

To keep me going until then, I am working with an old friend on a new project (more details soon!), so that has my attention at the moment, but here’s hoping that I will not need mobile broadband until then.. ? o.O

irssi for the Mac

I had to take a moment to post for those that are interested on a little gem i happened upon last night.

www.sysctl.co.uk have an irssi client beautifully wrapped up for Mac users. Despite my preference for simplicity when it comes to IRC, I have never bothered with irssi in the past as I was more interested in “low maintenance” software.. well now I have the best of both worlds!

macirssi

I have this running on a Snow Leopard build, and despite one single crash shortly after launching it for the first time, it ran like a charm. If you are running Snow Leopard, and use IRC, I strongly recommend you give this puppy a test drive..