Posted on 31st December 2008, 1:17pm
About a year ago I bought myself a cute little Mac mini to replace my Blue&White G3 that had died. Around six months later I ditched the Mac Mini in favour of a more powerful and capable G5 tower which now acts as my primary computer. Since then I’ve been at a loss to know what to do with my Mac Mini; I tried selling it to people I know, but no one was interested – I had bought it second hand and it just wasn’t new enough or powerful enough to be of interest to anyone. So it sat in a bag on the floor in the study, feeling sorry for itself. Until yesterday.
Having bought my wife a new mobile phone I found myself thinking about technical things (to try to quash the feelings of jealousy at her having a nicer phone than me), and after much research I found I could actually make use of the Mac Mini for very little additional cost. We don’t watch much TV, so it wouldn’t actually be of any benefit to us for me to install a funky internet TV system, but watching iPlayer and YouTube on the telly sounded like a cool idea – much more comfortable than several people trying to cram into the study to watch stuff on my computer.
This, then, is not a detailed tutorial on how to create a media centre, but rather an explanation of what I have done to create my particular system. It might not be what you need, and I don’t pretend to have all the answers to every question you could possibly have on media centres. But I will be including screenshots to explain stuff, and hopefully someone will find at least some of this useful, or vaguely interesting.
Tags
eBay, Firefox, iPlayer, keyboard, Mac Mini, Mac OS X, media centre, mouse, phono, s-video, scart, TV & Film, wireless, youtube
Posted on 27th December 2008, 10:35am
Now, I’m not the sort of person who encourages violent arguments about who is ‘right’ and who is ‘wrong’, especially when it comes to your choice of computer. What is right for one person may well be wrong for another, and the term ‘better’ is only really quantifiable within certain constraints; my Mac is better at surfing the web, but my toaster is still better at making toast. I’ve read (and heard) arguments on all sides about which operating system is superior, some of them quite heated.
My own conclusions seem to run along the following lines: PCs are cheap and familiar and make good home computers, but tend to get easily overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of software available and it susceptibility to viruses; Macs are beautiful and easy to use once you get the hang of them, but the insistence on top-quality hardware pushes the prices up; Linux is great for getting down and dirty with networking and programming and suchlike, but lacks the intuitive user interface for most normal people.
I was slightly dubious, therefore, when I came across this video entitled “Mac vs. PC”, inwardly groaning at the thought of yet another OS-bashing video. However, this one takes the idea a step further, drawing inspiration from a cartoon/toy/movie franchise that claims to be “more than meets the eye”. This video is definitely worth a peek!
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Posted on 23rd December 2008, 4:53pm
A while back I discovered the delights of free VOIP calls and instant messaging courtesy of the revolutionary Skype. I bought me a nice Skype phone for my Mac, installed the Skype program, and purchased some credit so I could call landline numbers from my computer. It was fantastic. Until I got frustrated at the poor quality I was getting when connecting to conventional telephone numbers. I would call clients on business and the call would fall apart and I would have to call them back on my mobile and apologise profusely for the dodgy phone connection. Not very professional. And as such I stopped using Skype altogether and let my credit expire.
So why am I now considering it again? Is it just the Christmas merriment making me more receptive to trying something in the hope it’ll be better this time round? Or have I left things long enough to allow for technology to catch up, enabling me to take full advantage of the services on offer to transform the way I do business?
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Posted on 17th December 2008, 4:41pm
Yesterday I felt like listening to some Christmas music, and had a hazy memory of having a CD of the All Souls Orchestra somewhere. I had a flick through my CD folder but couldn’t find it, and then remembered that I’d looked for it last year and found it to be broken – CDs, it appears, are not 100% bullet-proof after all, and this one had decided that the silvery backing wanted to peel off, rendering it well and truly dead. So, that CD had ended up in the bin about this time last year. So long All Souls Orchestra.
At least, that was until I noticed I had a backup CD in my folder that I had created way back in 2002, on which I had crammed 9 music albums, some of them 2-disc albums, in MP3 format. Lo and behold, there was the All Souls Orchestra album! So I got to listen to the Christmas music after all.
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Posted on 16th December 2008, 12:18am
Just a quick note to say that my new blog design is finally live and kicking, with just a few technical bugs to sort out, most notably that comments aren’t working at the moment. I’m trying to find a solution to that one, and then everything should be fine. I also realise that the three latest comments have also been lost; I am aware of that, it’s because I’ve moved this site to a new server. Hopefully I’ll figure out a way to reinstate those comments too. So, sorry for the inconvenience of not being able to litter my blog with your own thoughts, but I’m working to resolve that!
In the meantime, please do enjoy the new look for the blog, in particular the header image which changes depending on the time of day, and time of year, so check back at different times during the day to see different images. I’m also quite pleased with the comments post-it notes too, which work quite well. The only caveat with that is that I have had to put a cap on the length of comments, otherwise it all started to look silly.
Once comments are up and running again, please feel free to let me know what you think. In the meantime, twiddle your fingers, or if you really do want to tell me something send me a postcard, or a homing pigeon, or smoke signals, or something.
Posted on 11th December 2008, 6:11pm
Some of you may have seen (or at least heard of) the film The Transporter, featuring Jason Statham as an executive delivery boy for the rich and infamous. The first film in the trilogy (the third of which is in cinemas soon, apparently) starts with a hooter of a car chase, with a rather sporty and well kitted-out Beamer. Unfortunately I’ve not actually seen more than the first 15 minutes of the film, so that puts an end to my review.
The reason for that introduction stems from my experience in the last half an hour, where I had to pick Sarah up from work and deliver her to the university campus where she was catching a coach, as fast as possible. Not because Sarah was late, but because I forgot. She had organised this with me several days ago, and yesterday evening I went round to her house so she could put a bag in my boot to save her worrying about it today. And yet, somehow, I completely forgot about it until 10 minutes after I was supposed to have picked her up. Grrr.
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