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20090323

Hackintosh!

As promised, here's my kinda dell mini 9 hackintosh howto and my experiences with it.
It's ALIVE

Howto
Pretty simply, I followed the instructions here:
MyDellMini - How-To: Install Mac OS X - DellEFI Method

It is a LOT easier if you have the retail disc for 10.5.6. Apparently if you have anything prior to that you have to do a lot of patching. You need 2 flash drives, one for the disk image, and one to boot off of. The disk image usb drive needs to be large (I used 8GB) and the boot one needs to be 1GB I think.

In addition to the guide there, there is a really active forum there, and I think the community is one of the biggest assets of the dell mini 9 hackintosh setup.

Other than some oddness right after I did the initial install (where I basically had to reboot one more time than the guide said), the whole thing took about 4 hours, which isn't so bad for a format and fresh OS install.

Review
macbook spooning the dell mini 9
So if I didn't say it before, the hardware is awesome. It's just this tiny light machine that I feel like I can take anywhere pretty comfortably. I really can't envision a trip where I can't find a way to squeeze this into my bag or backpack.

Once I had macosx on there, the machine ran great. The write speed of the SSD drive is a little slow sometimes, and a lot of the forum denizens recommend upgrading it, but I'm actually fine with it as is.

Video Chat works!
I was surprised that the webcam worked pretty much right after the install. Same with the sound, wi-fi, and bluetooth. The main developer occasionally posts patches on the site which improve battery life or something else, but for the most part, I just leave it as is.

Software Update works!
I was surprised that core OS functions like the software update work seamlessly.

The two big downsides of the device of course stem from the very small form factor.
1024 x 600
The first is the low resolution. The screen only does 1280x600, and as apple doesn't officially support any display under 800 px, there are some prefpanes and screens that just can't fit on the screen. Similarly, some web sites just look wrong at the resolution given, namely, embedded video in a google reader frame will often not fit.

The keyboard is retarded.
The keyboard is the second big downside, and that's just cause they had to remove so much to fit it in. First of all the keys are very small, so like any notebook, it's just not as comfortable as typing on a real keyboard, and I make a lot of mistakes when I try to type fast. Second, they have gone crazy optimizing and removing keys, to a ridiculous extent. The quote button is next to the spacebar, making it unusable. There is no backtick key or tilde key, but rather a Fn-combo for those characters. Same thing for the square and squigly brackets. I would hate to attempt to write code on this. But of course that's not what it's for. For e-mail, browsing the web, and IM, it's pretty great. Except that quote thing. I really don't know what they were thinking there.

Anyway, for a cheap hobby hackintosh, you can't beat the value, form factor, hardware compatibility, and ease of a Dell Mini 9. I highly recommend it.

20090320

Desktop Linux

So i finally got my Dell Mini 9, and hackintoshed it the first night I got it pretty much. I'm gonna write up a post on that later, because there were some really helpful resources I found for it and I might as well write it all down in case I ever need to do it again. However, I thought I'd rant about the state of desktop linux for a sec first.

So I bought the Ubuntu Dell Mini 9 because it's cheaper than the windows one, and I was going to flash the hard drive for Mac OSX anyway. I did get to play around with the Ubuntu build for a while, and here were my impressions.

I used to run desktop linux about 5 years ago, before I decided to just put my life in the hands of the Apple Store. I liked the flexibility of the operating system and the power to customize it, but eventually the hardware incompatibility and my burning desire to have an iPod finally made me give up.

1) First of all, the interface is much nicer than it used to be. I'm not up on the latest linux things, but from what I could tell this desktop was basically a streamlined GNOME ui, with basic tasks grouped into different activity windows, and a windows style taskbar on the top to manage multiple windows.

2) Even though the UI was better, it still looks like crap compared to mac or windows. I can't even describe it, but the actual window bezels themselves bother me.

3) The hardware compatibility is still an issue. This is of course not really a linux flaw, but it does limit its usefulness.

4) Dell makes potemkin software for this build too apparently. I tried their knockoff version of photo-booth, which is called "F-Spot" or something horrible, and it was really choppy. I thought it might be the hardware, but now that I'm running OSX, iChat's video chat and photo booth apps run fine with no noticeable choppiness.

5) The core linux software that linux people are used to now is just not user friendly.

Basically, I was thinking if my sister or someone not very computer saavy would be able to use the Ubuntu build, and it pretty much fails for the hardware compatibility and basic software offerings. My sister would not be able to sync her iPod, manage a music collection, or video chat with her friends.

Right now I think the linux desktop is just not there yet, but it has made progress. At this time though, I feel like Dell is shipping this Ubuntu book as an open invitation to hackintosh it.

Why is it so hard to find out which fucking flights have wifi?

Virgin America, you're cool and tell me what flights have Wi-Fi, but unfortunately none of your NYC->SFO flights have it.

Delta, American - your website doesn't even say which planes have it. I actually called up Delta Customer Service, asked a CS rep there if my flight would have wi-fi, she said "hm, that's a good question", escalated me to a super, who then told me "maybe check seatguru.com?" Wow.