February 2006
Transcription
February 2006
February 2006 President Hm: (905) 263-4167 Solina Jim Foster Email: jimfoster@mac.com Apple Ambassador Hm: (905) 983-9205 Orono Bruce Cameron Email: rbcameron@rogers.com Treasurer Hm: 905-404-0405 Oshawa John Kettle Email : hjke@pteron.org Publicity Director and Jolly Good Fellow Jim Danabie Logistics Email: cgreaves@i-zoom.net C. Greaves Secretary Email: Halston.Wild@gmail.com Stan Wild Macintosh Users East [MaUsE] eMail: mause@mac.com 208 Winona Avenue, Oshawa, Ontario, L1G 3H5 Submissions from MaUsE Club members, although rarer than living, breathing mastodons, are always welcome. Send them to me either at: <michael_shaw@sympatico.ca> if they are just text messages or at <wazooster@gmail.com> if there are files or pictures attached. I have never refused a submission yet. Thereʼs always room for another piece on ANY Mac-related topic and Iʼll make room if there isnʼt. I would like your submissions. But I wonʼt beg. Apple, Macintosh, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. The MaUsE (Macintosh Users East) is an independent user group and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Apple Computer, Inc. The next meeting will be held at the new Whitby Public Library in Whitby, Ontario, at 7:30 on Feb. 22, 2005 !!!!!!!! Henry Street New Whitby Public Library King Street Free Parking DoubleClick DoubleClick on the web at: www.mause.ca DoubleClick Editor Michael Shaw Hm: (905) 576-2097 Oshawa Email: michael_shaw@sympatico.ca fat_idle_bastard@yahoo.ca wazooster@gmail.com Notice The MaUsE Meeting in February will be held on the 22nd at 7:30 P.M. in Whitby, Ontario, at the New Whitby Public Library on the corner of Henry Street and Dundas Street (Highway #2). Henry Street is four streets west of the four corners in Whitby and FREE parking is available after 6:00 P.M. just south of the nearby Scotia Bank. Be there or be square. (Highway #2) Please feel free to contact any of the following individuals if you have comments or questions relating to Macintosh Users East or Macintosh computing in general. What you are looking at is the February 2006 edition of the DoubleClick monthly newsletter from the Macintosh Users East, (MaUsE), a motley collection of old and new Mac users who reside in Southern Ontario with a motley collection of old and new Macintosh computers. What more do you need to know ? Oh, yes. This newsletter is created more or less single-handed by Michael Shaw, DoubleClick Editor, on his Sonnet-powered personal PCI Macs. He uses mostly a Power Macintosh 9600/800, a PowerTower Pro 500, and a pair of wonderful antique Daystar Genesis MP 800+ Macintosh clones. The rest of the DoubleClick support staff are a white 1 GHz G4 iBook and a 5 megapixel Kodak DX7590, used for all pictures. Back issues of the DoubleClick can be downloaded from the <www.mause.ca> website for a laugh. Scotia Bank Center Street Dundas Street West Executive Contact List Ten Years Ago: 1996 The PowerTower Pro 225 Irma and I bought our first Macintosh computer about ten years ago. It was, unfortunately, nothing like the computer pictured here. It was a 75-MHz Macintosh Performa 6200CD with 8 Megs of RAM and no way to add any expansion cards. If I had known in 1996 what I know now, the Tsunami-based PCI PowerTower Pro 225 MacClone, made by PowerComputing, would have been what I really would have wanted. Back then this PCI Mac clone was the fastest singleprocessor personal computer in the world. (Strangely enough, except for my nearly new G4 iBook, every computer I now own and use was built about ten years ago, in 1996. This newsletter is created on my two antique PCI desktop Macs, the Daystar Genesis MP 800+ and my PPC 9600). Because of my very positive experiences with PCI Macintosh clones, particularly the Daystar Genesis models, I have kept my eyes open for cheap PCI Starmax, UMAX, and PowerComputing clones. Last year I was offered another old PCI MacClone, a 1996 PowerComputing PowerTower Pro 225 for $1.00 by one of the fellows I work with and I jumped on it. It is still performing flawlessly (with a Sonnet 500 MHz G3 processor transplant) and is used every day for surfing the web and doing emails. system to other companies just in time to prevent them from bringing the G3 to market before Apple Computers could. Early in the summer of 1996, Power Computing Corporation, the first vendor of personalized Mac-compatible clone systems and the original Mac OS licensee, announced PowerTower Pro, a new line of high-performance Mac OS systems that outperformed all Intelbased Pentium and Pentium Pro systems running Microsoft’s Windows 95 as well as all existing Mac OS systems. The introduction of the PowerTower Pro line marked the worldwide debut of the new PowerPC 604e microprocessor featuring breakthrough performance and clock speeds of up to 225 (MHz), making the PowerTower Pro the fastest personal computer available. PowerComputing brought out systems powered by the new chips before Apple could and eclipsed the highend Mac professional models. The PowerTower Pro line were the machines that really worried Apple and perhaps sealed the fate of Power Computing and Mac cloning in general. It was just too much of a good thing and Apple was reluctant to share the market with companies capable of building faster Macintosh computers than Apple could. By 1996 Power Computing was consistently beating Apple to market with faster, lower cost machines that garnered rave reviews from the Mac press. The PowerTower Pro line, which joined Power Computing’s then-current family of high-end systems, PowerTower, were available at speeds of 225, 200, 180 MHz and featured increased expandability with six PCI slots, a total of 9 expansion (6 front accessible) bays, 1 MB of Level 2 Cache, an 8X CD-ROM as well as the highest performing PCI graphics accelerator on the market. With these features, the PowerTower Pro offered more options than any other Mac OS system and took better advantage of the new PowerPC 604e processors speed and flexibility. Though nothing special in terms of esthetics, the PowerTower Pro machines were basic, powerful and flexible work horses, aimed right at the high-end market where Apple’s biggest profit margins were. Apple eventually came to the conclusion (or realization) that Power Computing was much more interested in taking market share away from Apple than in expanding the market in general. Apple killed off cloning just as it was about to really take off, putting an end to what it felt was largely an embarassing and parasitic relationship. Apple ended the licensing of its operating The PowerTower Pros were the first models to sport the 604e PPC processor. The 604e was the faster successor to the 604 and had twice as much L1 cache as the 604. To take advantage of the faster processor a 1MB L2 cache was included with the PowerComputing machines. Apple shipped their models at the time with 512k L2 cache, half as much. The PowerTower Pro machines shipped with 16MB of RAM. When users installed memory modules in pairs, the interleaved memory capability increased memory performance by up to 5 percent, thus allowing users to run more applications faster. The PowerTower Pro also included internal fast SCSI at 10MB/second. Moreover, graphics performance was further improved since all PowerTower Pro systems included the IMS Twin Turbo 128-bit graphics card with 8 MB of VRAM and a fast 2 Gigabyte 7200 RPM AV capable hard drive. Many Macintosh models of the time shipped with only two MB of VRAM, upgradable to four, or shipped with the lack-lustre 4 MB Mach64 video cards. Some of the higher end Apple systems shipped with the 8 MB ixMicro Ultimate Rez which turned out to be such a disaster that the ixMicro company went out of business when they failed. Although the 604e-powered PowerTower Pro used the same Tsunami motherboard as the 604-powered 9500 it outperformed the Macintosh PPC 9500 models by a more than hefty margin. (See the graphs at right). With the increased speed and graphics capabilities, the PowerTower Pro was ideal for processor-intensive tasks such as the handling of large files, running graphics applications and performing complex calculations within scientific applications. Power Computing offered options such as Ultra SCSI/RAID solutions and AV capabilities designed with these processor intensive tasks in mind. Many of the other wonderful Macintosh clones from the same era used variants of the PPC 9500 Tsunami motherboard as well but when Apple pulled the plug on clone production they all ceased production so the companies that produced the fastest Macs in the world simply stopped building and selling computers. Looking back on it now its easy to say that Apple made the right call. If the power of clones had gone on much longer Apple Computers would have become simply a software company, like Microsoft, creating operating systems for other companies’ hardware. Enhancements to the PowerPC 604e over its predecessor 604 include: • Size of instruction and data caches have been doubled • Higher clock frequencies with increased bus divider ratios • A new performance enhancing feature which supports misaligned little endian accesses for certain operating environments • A built-in performance monitor. • First page out time as fast as 6 seconds • True Adobe Postscript 3TM • Maximum duty cycle up to 85,000 pages per month • Brilliant Professional Colour • Best printer for the environment - solid ink is virtually waste-free. • 2 print quality options to choose from (Fast and Enhanced) MicroImage Plus Bargains 1676 Heathside Crescent, Pickering, Ontario, Canada L1V 5V6 Tel: (905) 831-0699 Fax: (905) 831-7585 email: miplus@rogers.com Providing Apple computer solutions in Durham and the GTA for over 17 years. January Inventory Clearance For more information on Xerox Solid Ink printers call or email MicroImage Plus or visit the following web site: http://www.office.xerox.com/perl-bin/product. pl?product=8500_8550 •Demo Items •Demo Macally PodFM ...$25.00 (Listen to your iPod or any portable CD player with a mini audio out jack through your car radio system or FM stereo system at home.) •Demo 1GB iPod Shuffle with clip case...$120.00 (In excellent condition with all original packaging, less then 1 year old) •New items – only a limited number of each available at these prices. For more information on these products, quotes on any Apple product or Macally iceCam (USB web camera)...$32.00 hundreds of items to support your Mac send a reply to this email or call Janet Kingston DataTraveler II 512 MB Flash Drive (read up to 11 MB/sec, at (905) 831-0699. write 7 MB/sec) ... $53.00 Griffin EarJams (enhanced comfort and sound for any earbud headThese “January Specials” from Janet phones)...$14.00 Prosoft Picture Rescue for OSX (digital picture rescue, don’t risk losing & Rennie Barlow at MicroImage Plus those special yearbook photos)... $15.00 •Open Box Item Xerox Phaser 8500/N Solid Ink Network ColourPrinter ...$949.00 (Used to print about 100 sheets before being traded in for Phaser 8550 Duplex printer, 11 months onsite warranty left, regular price $1,199 — $250 savings) • Up to 24 ppm print speed for both black & colour • 128 MB of Memory • 600 MHz processor are here in the February issue because they were submitted to the DoubleClick too late to appear in the January issue. Check with Janet for updated specials and availability. JUST A ‘SEC’ Almost every issue of DoubleClick contains a special message addressed to readers of the newsletter who are not yet members of Macintosh Users East inviting them to join the club and share in some of the additional benefits that membership brings. One benefit that I personally have found to be of great value is that the club has a number of members who are technically far better informed on computers (techies) than I am, and who I can call when I need advice on my Mac. Some of the MaUsE techies whom I have found are always willing to offer help and advice are, in first name alphabetical order,’ Aaron Vegh, Bruce Cameron, Chris Greaves, Hugh Amos, and Jim Foster, good friends all. As a MaUsE member you too can tap into their knowledge prior to the start of our regular members meetings (from 6.30-7.30 p.m.) each month when several of our ‘techies’ make their expertise readily available to members; That is just one of the many valuable ‘fringe’ benefits of membership in MaUsE. Are you a member yet? Yes, there are other techies in the club, you know who you are - share your expertise with other members, it’s a great way to contribute to the health and growth of your club. The other day I was talking to a long time friend. A ‘Mac’ man from way back, and he was waxing enthusiastic about ‘pod casts;’ not being an ‘iPoddie’ I have no real knowledge of these, but it occurs to me that some of you probably know all about them. SO! Here’s my suggestion: write a short article about them, tell us what your favorite ‘casts’ are, and send it to Michael Shaw for inclusion in the next DoubleClick,’ Michael will be most pleased to hear from you and you will be doing what club membership is all about, sharing knowledge! Just a ‘sec’ is an occasional short column that will appear in ‘DoubleClick’ from time to time. It is written by MaUsE secretary Stan - The Wild Man of Whitby. FREE STUFF! O.K., Here’s the deal, I have an external 56k modem in working condition, that I will give, free of charge, to the first person who calls me and arranges to come and pick it up from my home in Whitby. The details are: ZOOM 56K USB Fax Modem complete with cables, installation disk and reference guide. Phone Stan at (905) 430-4562 Regards and thanks, Stan WANTED: Your Submissions to the DoubleClick ! As you may have noticed from our MaUsE meetings, it seems that every month its the same people who present the programs. And, likewise, it seems that the same people contribute regularly to the DoubleClick. I’m sure that there are entire areas of Macintosh expertise among our membership that are being neglected because of this. You are all bright, mature, articulate people. Please accept this invitation to submit something of interest to the DoubleClick. PowerMac G4 (QuickSilver) Overclocking On the underside of the Mac’s processor daughter-card is a set of four resistors marked R1, R3, R5 and R7, respectively. Connected to two of them are circuit-making jumpers. According to information published on the internet, un-soldering the jumpers and re-applying them to different resistors changes the clock speed on the processor by adjusting the board’s clock multiplier. Just like old B&W G3, the processor speed of the QuickSilver G4 is a product of the internal bus speed, 133 MHz, and a multiplier established by the chart below. Years ago Irma and I bought a 350 MHz Blue & White G3 tower. One of the nicest features of the Macintosh 350 G3 towers was that the 350 had exactly the same processor as the 400 and 450 MHz models. In fact, the processor speed on all these models could be controlled (within reason) by rearranging the jumpers on a little block located on the motherboard right beside the processor. With As you can see from the chart, in theory adjusting the the internal bus set to run at 100 MHz the jump- jumpers provides for a wide range of clock speeds ers were designed to set the processor to run at from the same processor: 733MHz, 800MHz, 867MHz, a multiple of the bus speed: multiplying the 100 MHz bus speed by 3.5, 4, 4.5 or 5 times produced processor speeds of 350, 400, 450, or 500 MHz. My own 350 MHz B&W has been running at 450 MHz since I got it without any stability problems. I tried to run it at 500 MHz briefly but experienced startup problems and random freezing so I put it back down to 450 MHz. Since then, no problems. Its possible to speed up the processor on just about every Mac ever made. Its best to do this with older models because it does void the warranty. This article describes how to increase the clock speed of a 867 MHz Power Macintosh G4 (Quick Silver). This information is no confirmation of stable operation. Please note that any modifications you make to your Macintosh are made at your own risk. 933MHz, 1.0GHz and 1.067GHz. That said, there’s a degree of diminishing returns here. The more extreme the speedup of the processor, the more likely you are to run into problems with overheating and instability. With the G3 tower I boosted the processor speed from 350 to 450 MHZ by means of a simple and reversible procedure that anyone can perform. Because soldering is involved, the QuickSilver overclocking is a delicate procedure that requires a steady hand or the processor card can be damaged or ruined. It’s in the nature of processors that one part can run at various speeds. No matter how stringently the manufacturing process is controlled there will always be minute variations in “identical” processor chips that will affect their stability at various frequencies. Its reasonable to expect that processor makers test each chip at all speeds and then rate and sell it at the highest speed at which it will run completely without overheating or malfunctions. Thats the idea, anyway. In fact it has been my experience that computer companies routinely downgrade their processors to a speed well below their potential in order to ensure that users will never experience processor problems with instability, crashing and freezing. Maybe I was just lucky to get a B&W tower with a 350 MHz processor that would run without malfunction at 450 MHz. If you are lucky enough to get a G4 QuickSilver with a 867 MHz processor that is completely happy running at 1GHz or more then the speed boost, if it works out for you, is a free performance boost. January MaUsE Meeting Report As you can tell from the pictures, the February meeting was a lot of fun. Jim Foster and Chris Greaves ran the raffle and the prizes included the several copies of NTI Dragon Burn and SWA to FLA Converter reviewed in last month’s DoubleClick. John Kettle gave a very gratifying Treasurers Report and I appealed to the membership to return items borrowed from the MaUsE Lending Library. Jim Foster gave a wonderful report about his visit to San Francisco for Macworld 2006 earlier in the month and demonstrated some of the features of Google Earth. Chris Greaves brought in a very entertaining and informative multimedia presentation he had created that explained and demonstrated how to tint picture transparencies green and red and set them up superimposed so that they could create the illusion of depth when viewed through his “3D” glasses. We all had a lot of fun with viewing his 3D demo in 3D. The main presentation for the evening was a fascinating introduction to web page design presented by Aaron Vegh that turned into much more. It included a presentation on understanding network IP addresses, the mechanics of the internet, blogs and Blogger, and how to use the iWeb program with and without a Dot Mac account to design and publish pages to the internet painlessly. The whole procedure was almost magical in its ease and simplicity because Aaron knew what he was doing and because he was using a Macintosh PowerBook to do the presentation. Hopefully we will be able to induce Aaron to give a more advanced presentation now that we have some basic understanding of the procedures involved. Enhancer from AKVIS This is going to be different. I’m going to write up a review of this AKVIS Enhancer program and Irma will do the presentation at the February Meeting. A copy donated by AKVIS will be offered as one of our raffle prizes. One of the recent software offerings from AKVIS is a plug-in for the Adobe Photoshop application (and others) called AKVIS Enhancer. For this article I have chosen to have the Enhancer installer put the Enhancer plug-in into my Photoshop Elements 3 Plug-ins Folder. AKVIS Enhancer is an image enhancement software for revealing details on a picture. Enhancer allows detecting details from underexposed, overexposed and mid tone areas of a photo. The tool is useful in cases when a photo lacks detail. For example, when a picture has been taken with the background overexposed and consequently the foreground is hardly discernible, which is especially annoying when you take a picture of a person; or when a photo lacks dramatic effect due to vagueness of the scene. If you try to reveal details in highlighted or overshadowed areas using exposure correction (for example, Levels) you run the risk of spoiling the parts of the image that you want to leave unchanged. The idea behind Enhancer is entirely different: AKVIS Enhancer brings out details by intensifying color transition. This means that Enhancer strengthens the difference between adjacent pixels having different color gradations and therefore allows revealing not only details in the shadow but even details in the overexposed and mid tone areas. Earlier it was possible (and such image enhancement programs exist) to achieve the same result by manipulating with 2-4 shots of the same scene. AKVIS Enhancer does it all out of one shot thanks to the advanced algorithm of photo correction. AKVIS Enhancer is not a stand-alone application that you can use all by itself to edit your images. AKVIS Enhancer is just a plug-in for other applications you may already have. The Enhancer installer puts the AKVIS software into your Plugins Folder so it becomes available only when the application is running. It integrates into your image processing programs adding new features. The plug-in is compatible with many programs that rely on plug-ins to expand their capabilities, like Adobe Photoshop, Jasc Paint Shop Pro, Photoshop Elements, Corel Photo-Paint, etc. • Step 1. Open an image in a photo editor. In other words, launch your image editing program and from the File Menu select Open and then select an image from your hard drive. (For this article I have launched Photoshop Elements 3 and elected to demonstrate Enhancer on a fuzzy picture of Chris Greaves as he appeared during a video conference call from last-month’s MaUsE executive meeting). • Step 2. Call on the AKVIS Enhancer plugin. To find this effect select the command line: Filter - AKVIS - Enhancer in Adobe Photoshop; the menu item Effects - Plugins- AKVIS - Enhancer if you work with Jasc Paint Shop Pro; or Effects - AKVIS - Enhancer if you use Corel PHOTOPAINT. The Enhancer plugin works exactly the same in every application it works with. It sits in the Adobe application Plug-ins Folder doing nothing until called upon. • Step 3. You will see the AKVIS Enhancer window like the one to the right. Wait a bit as the program processes the original photo at default parameter values. You can switch between the original photo and the result (Before/After buttons). • Step 4. Adjust the values for Shadows, Highlights, Level of Detail and Lightness. The Shadows parameter allows details to be revealed in the underexposed parts of the image. The values vary between 0 and 100. As the parameter value increases, the dark parts of the image get lighter and the level of detail in these parts increases. But it does not cause loss of details in the light areas. The Highlights parameter allows details to be revealed in the light areas of the image. The values vary between 0 and 100. When you move the slider to the right, the parameter value increases, the light parts of the image get darker and the level of detail in these parts increases. If you set a high value for this parameter it can cause loss of middle tones on some images that result in the loss of their volume. The Level of Detail parameter defines the amount of details detected. It accepts values between 0 and 15 with the default value of 5. The higher the parameter value, the sharper the color transition and the more detail is visible. On underexposed images the high value of this parameter may cause noise. Enhancer, have a look at the images provided in the on-line tutorials to see what this The Lightness parameter allows to change the overall lightness of the image - to make it darker or lighter. It accepts values between 0 and 100. By de- software can do for you, and then download a copy to try out on your own Mac. If you fault it is set to 50. As you move the slider to the right, the image gets lighter; as you download a copy you can try it out for a while for FREE before you decide to buy. move the slider to the left - it gets darker. Step 5. When the correction process is over, press the button to apply the result or the button to close the program window without applying the result. You may not be able to appreciate how well this AKVIS Enhancer software works from the one example I have shown here. The genius of this software is that it does so much to improve your images in just one step. What you are looking at is a series of screenshots imported into a .PDF and then flattened for viewing, but the actual images are more revealing than these copies. If you get out to the February MaUsE Meeting you will get a chance to win a copy of Enhancer in the raffle and you will get a chance to see the plug-in in use. If you can’t wait, then do a search on the internet for AKVIS They Get You “Buy The Ink” One of the first things you learn after you buy a printer is that the printer is relatively inexpensive, but when you start to print a lot of stuff, the printer’s manufacturer gets you ‘BUY THE INK.” Recently I acquired a used printer from another member of MaUsE and he told me that he buys replacement ink cartridges online from a company called ‘77 Colors’ at a lower cost than one would pay at your local office supply or computer store. Depending on the model some of these cartridges are new, (not ones that have been recycled), while others are ‘re-manufactured.’ All are shipped by mail direct to your door. The 77 Colors prices include prepaid mailing. I decided to do comparison pricing on a couple of popular brands and see what the savings are on each type of cartridge. The price sources I have used for comparison are Staples / Business Depot‘s Canadian published prices versus 77 Colors. All prices are in US dollars. For a quick comparison I have given a ‘ball park’ estimate of the 77 Colors price in Canadian dollars (in parentheses) by adding 20% exchange to the US price. The 77 Colors site <www.77colors.com> is easy to use. You select the name of the printer manufacturer and this takes you to a list of that manufacturer’s printer model numbers. When you click on a particular model it will take you to a list of the cartridges for that model and show you the pricing options and whether its is a ‘new’ or a ‘remanufactured’ cartridge. As an alternative, once you have clicked on the manufacturer’s name, if you know the cartridge number you want, you can simply scroll down and click on that cartridge number and again get a list of cartridge types, prices and options. In doing my research I found that 77 colors does not carry 100% of all manufacturers cartridges. In some cases they simply offer a refill kit. There are a number of other companies on the web who offer similar pricing and availability to that offered by 77 Colors.Staples / Business depot does not offer their own brand of equivalent cartridges for all models. For example, above, The HP cartridges quoted above are Hewlett Packard’s own brand. Is it worth buying on line to save a few dollars? If you do a lot of printing it can be. My suggestion to you is to do your own on-line comparison on the particular brand of cartridges that you use and base your decision on that information. (Staples/Business Depot‘s web site is <www.Staples.ca>) I can tell you that I found the lower price of Epson black ink cartridges (44120) purchased from 77 Colours a worthwhile saving. Some of my friends take their used cartridges to a local vendor (in Oshawa Centre) and have them refilled. Is a refilled cartridge as good as a ‘new’ cartridge? Opinions vary! Perhaps I should say ‘caveat emptor’ both about buying cartridges online and having used cartridges refilled; or, as my dear old dad would have said, “you pays your money and you takes your chances“. Final comments. 77 Colors offers a free on-line newsletter that you can sign up to receive; it is sent direct to you twice a month via e-mail and, in almost every issue that I have seen, they have ‘special offers’ and additional discounts. Remember, the printer manufacturers do not get rich on the price of the printer: they get their real profit from you milliliter by milliliter ‘buy the ink’. Stan Wild, Secretary, MaUsE Mac Mini in the Windows World by Jim Foster My daughter and grandchildren live just a short distance up the road from us in the country. Oldest grandson Dallas is a frequent visitor to our home. He recently got a taste of an iChat AV video chat between myself and fellow MaUsEr Chris Greaves, and seemed quite taken by the opportunity to both see and hear the other party as well as seeing his own antics reflected in the little self-portrait that is part of the iChat session window. I thought the kids might enjoy having the ability to carry on iChat sessions between their house and “Granny’s house”, so I bought them a low mileage Mac Mini as a Christmas present, complete with equally low mileage iSight camera. Apple targets this unit at people who already own a Windows PC, so I thought that this might make an excellent real world test of Apple’s strategy. The family computing workstation is located in their kitchen, on a counter just under the microwave oven, with the Dell tower computer located in a cupboard just under that counter. Inspection suggested that there was ample free space left in that cupboard to locate the Mac Mini without having to remove the Dell. The Dell had been equipped with a PS2 keyboard and a USB mouse, for the Dell tower had provisions for both types of connectors. The Mac Mini, of course, comes with USB ports only. The solution to retain the keyboard was a PS/2 to USB adapter, which I got via ebay for $7.38 Cdn., shipping included. The kids use Sympatico as their ISP and had their DSL Modem connected directly to their Windows PC. In switching the DSL Modem over to the Mac Mini, it was therefore necessary to dig out their original PPPoE settings and key those into the Mac’s Network Preferences panel. Once that was done, though, everything was in order and it was just a matter of setting up User Accounts for everyone in the house and we had the Mac equivalent of the original Dell Windows PC up and running. Oh, and the iSight camera was a bit of a problem in that the assortment of camera mounts which came with it did not include anything that worked very well with the Dell monitor. The goal is to locate the camera as close as possible to the centre top edge of the monitor. One of the included mounts was magnetic. Using it to mount the camera to the underside of the microwave over located just above the computer workstation seemed the best alternative except that it caused the camera image to be upside down. Fate smiled on me, though, as it was just about this time that I came across a software utility called iGlasses which has a setting to flip the iSight camera image upside down. Bingo ... the image was right side up again! iGlasses shareware fee: $9.49 Cdn. The USB printer was easy to disconnect from the Dell and attach to the Mac Mini - it did not even need any driver software to work with the Mac Mini. Everyone happy, right?!?! Well, despite the fact that we had verified Apple’s claim that it is a breeze to set up a Mac Mini to replace an existing PC, using the original PC’s monitor and other peripherals, we were not exactly ready for the response ... “Thanks, Jimbo, but how do we now get back to the Windows PC whenever we need to do that?” “Ummm ... hmmm ... I’ll have to get back to you on that.”, says I. So, what the family REALLY seems to need is the ability to run EITHER the Mac Mini OR the Dell Windows PC, but not necessarily both at the same time, and to do so without having to disconnect and reconnect a whole bunch of cables. Well, that shouldn’t be all that hard, should it? Enter a device known as a KVM switch. The “KVM” is an acronym for “Keyboard-Video-Mouse” and it implies that one wants to use a single keyboard, monitor, and mouse but in a way that they can all be switched easily between two or more computer units without having to physically disconnect and reconnect cables. I won’t go into all of the reasons why people might want to do this, but suffice it to say that this seemed to be what was going to be needed in our case. One of the things which made our particular situation interesting was that we wanted to find a KVM switch which could handle both a PC and a Mac, rather than all PC’s or all Mac’s. This has mostly to do with the issue of PS2 versus USB connections for the mouse and keyboard, as luckily both the Dell PC and Mac Mini come with hardware that supports a VGA monitor connector. Yet another issue is the need to be able to print documents from the USB ink-jet printer regardless of the computer being using. So we needed to look for a KVM switch that would redirect the printer signal at the same time as it switched the keyboard, monitor, and mouse. Similarly, it would be nice if things like audio input and audio output could also be switched between the two computers at the same time as everything else. We located a 2-Port KVM switch by a company called TRENDnet, model TK-210K. This tidy little unit not only handles the KVM switch but at the same time can handle both audio in and audio out switching. It also has provisions for up to two USB peripheral devices, such as a printer and a scanner, and takes care of switching those devices between the two computers. The idea is that ALL of these circuit switches can be accomplished by simply pushing a single button on the face of the KVM switch. Button 1 connects to the Mac, button 2 connects to the Windows PC. The KVM switch was a little more expensive than I had hoped. $81.97 Cdn. plus a bill for $13.53 at the Post Office when the item arrived brought this item to $95.50. This price included all the cables needed, which is important since this kind of setup basically triples the number of cables involved and cables are not always included with the basic KVM unit. We found that the cupboard which now housed both the Windows PC and the Mac Mini still had sufficient room left over to also house the KVM switch. This picture at right shows everything in place. The KVM switch we chose is designed for PS/2 keyboard and mouse. I tried using a USB to PS/2 adapter on the original USB mouse, but found that it did not work. I therefore sought out a very simple replacement PS/2 mouse (don’t even bother trying to find one of these at the big box stores - just head to Bestbyte in Whitby!) for under $10 and it worked fine. The last “signal” which needs to be accommodated when dealing with two computers instead of just one is the Internet signal. For our purposes, we felt that the simplest approach was to add a basic 4-port wired Router in-between the DSL Modem and the computers. The PPPoE settings normally set in each computer are instead set in the Router, and then the Router assigns individual IP addresses to each computer using the DHCP scheme. A suitable no-name but new Router was obtained from a Canadian ebay vendor for $35.84 Cdn. The transition from having the Mac Mini simply replace the Windows PC to having it coexist with the Dell therefore involved adding (i) a suitable KVM switch, (ii) a Router, (iii) a lot more cables, which in my case came with the KVM switch but in other cases might have to be purchased separately, and (iv) a PS/2 mouse. The photographs accompanying this article show that the result is not a very pretty installation ... the cables in the cupboard are quite the “bowl of spaghetti” - and I rather think that we may need to bore a few ventilation holes into the side and/or back of the cupboard to keep the two computers from overheating, but they do confirm that the process works and works very well. Here’s what the system looks like with the Mac and Windows operating systems, respectively, booting up. One piece of information which I learned too late to incorporate into this particular scenario is that the Belkin firm makes a KVM device specifically designed for mating a Mac Mini with a Windows PC. Their device is called the Flip, model # F1DM102U, and is designed to fit directly under a Mac Mini. It has a suggested retail price of $99.99 U.S., was a huge hit at Macworld San Francisco in January, ‘06, and is out of stock in most places I looked as part of researching this article. The only unexpected issue I seem to have encountered with the finished setup is that I had thought that it would be possible to have both computers booted up and to then switch back and forth between the two computers just by pressing the appropriate switch on the front of the KVM device. What I have found is that I can sometimes make this kind of “hot” or “live” switch between the Windows PC and the Mac Mini, but I can’t make it go back the other way in a “live” setting. The process which DOES work very well is to only run one computer at a time. If you only boot up the Macintosh, the KVM switch will sense it starting up and will make sure that all of the hardware devices are connected to the Mac as it boots up. When you are finished with the Mac and want to use the Windows PC, you just Shut Down the Mac and THEN you Start Up the Dell. As it boots up, the KVM switch again seems to sense what it is supposed to do and all the hardware devices automatically are connected to the Windows PC as it boots up. This approach has so far not presented a problem to the family, but only time will tell with this group. They are not the kind of family that spends hours and hours at the computer every night, anyway. My guess, though, is that now that we have everybody happy in the knowledge that they can have their Mac and eat their Dell as well, I expect to find in several months that no one uses the Windows PC any more!! Recently, grandson Dallas initiated a text chat with me over iChat AV. I asked him if he would like to do this using a video chat window. His answer, I should probably not have surprised, was along the lines of, “No, Jimbo, I’m playing my massively interactive Internet role-playing game and the iChat video window will block out too much of the playing field, so let’s just use text while I battle my next competitor!” Perhaps I should have invested all the money it took to build this “dual-boot” system into a bigger monitor instead! Jim Foster Notice to DoubleClick Readers Who Are NOT MaUsE Members If you are living in or near the Durham Region of Southern Ontario and using a Macintosh computer and are not yet a member of MaUsE you can use the information found on the second page of this newsletter to get meeting info and to get in touch with a member of our executive to find out how to join. If you just want to attend a few of our monthly meetings please feel free to join us on the fourth Wednesday of the month. Meetings are open to the public and admission is free but eligibility for winning swell raffle prizes and receiving technical assistance are available only to club members. Other privileges of membership include the right to borrow from the MaUsE Club Library and to submit articles for publication in this excellent newsletter. MaUsE Library Books Now Available If you have borrowed from the MaUsE Library please return the items you borrowed so other MaUsErs can have a chance to use them. We have: • Take Control of OSX Tiger • iPod & iTunes Hacks • PDF Hacks • Keynote 2 for Mac • Desktop & Portable Systems • Access by Design • The Non-Designers Webbook • PayPal Hacks • Macintosh Revelations • Mac OS 8.6 Book • Mac OSX 10.4 Tiger • Mac OSX Helpline Email Michael Shaw if you want something brought to the February Meeting. Advertise in the DoubleClick WANTED: Articles written by MaUsE Members about any Macintosh-related hardware or software product. Reviews of programs or personal upgrade experiences appreciated. Rants and opinions welcome. Send them to the DoubleClick at <michael_shaw@sympatico.ca> NOTICE: If you have any service you wish to provide to other MaUsE members you can place a FREE ad in the December 2005 edition of the DoubleClick. February Exec Meeting This month we held the Exec Meeting at the home of John Kettle. Hugh Amos, the Two Jimmies (Foster & Danabie), Bruce “fresh from Cuba” Cameron, Michael Shaw, Aaron Vegh, and Stan Wild attended. We received the Treasurers Report from John and discussed the topics and presenters for the next few meetings. For the February meeting it was decided that Marcel Dufresne would tell us about one of his favourite websites, Irma Shaw would give a demonstration of AKVIS Enhancer, a neat plug-in for Photoshop, and Aaron Vegh would continue on with the presentation on web-page creation he began at the January Meeting. We also discussed topics for later meetings and the possible formation of one or more Special Interest Groups, within the membership, for MaUsE members who share a common interest in some particular aspect of computing. More of that will be explained at the February meeting. Having a software sale at the March Meeting was also discussed and more information will be made available at the February Meeting and in the March DoubleClick. March is Spring Cleaning Month You can have more room on your too cluttered bookshelf and the opportunity to do some good for your fellow MaUsE members and the Club by donating your old software. Because of the rapid release of new Mac operating systems we ALL have software collecting dust on shelves somewhere. Eventually these older versions of programs we have upgraded or replaced will be thrown in the garbage. While many Members have moved on to Jaguar, Panther, Tiger and are eagerly anticipating Puma, Lion or Polecat, other MaUsE members are still using OS8, OS9 or OSX. These members can still make use of your old software. The March 22nd MaUsE Swap Meet will take place during the regular March MaUsE Meeting and be an opportunity for MaUsE Members to bring in older software to sell (or donate to the Club to help us raise money to help cover Club expenses). It will also be an opportunity for other Members to buy older versions of the programs they can still use. Email: << michael_shaw@sympatico.ca >> for more information or just bring your old software to the March Meeting. Remember: Usable Macintosh software should NOT go into landfill sites. Do your part for ecology by donating your old software to the MaUsE Swap Meet on March 22nd.