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January 28, 2010

Jaime Wong
jgwong
Sueños de Azul
» Hello, iPad

Finalmente Apple anunció ayer su tan especulada tableta, llamada iPad. Toda la web está generando electrones describiendo sus características y haciendo harto buzz. Hay varias cosas a resaltar, dentro de las cuales la más notable es la velocidad, pero hay una cosa que me llamó mucho la atención y creo que es el feature más importante del iPad: el precio.

Estaba seguro que el iPad estaría en el rango de los 1,000 dólares pero — y tuvieron sumo cuidado de enfatizar esto — están empezando desde unos agresivos 500 dólares. Los productos de Apple se han caracterizado por ser caros, pero esta vez el juego es diferente. Un aparato tan revolucionario con este precio va a cambiar muchas cosas.

October 18, 2009

Antonio Ognio
gnrfan
» Creating an Ubuntu LiveUSB from the ISO file in OS X

I’m going to install Ubuntu 9.10 in a couple of machines at home so I needed to create a LiveUSB for that since burning CDs is so old school and mostly wastes the disk. After doing a quick search for a graphic tool for that I ended up resorting to the good old Unix dd command for the task like this:


Click on the image for the full size view.

Steps go like this:

  1. Grab the desired ISO file from the Internet. Verifying integrity with MD5 is a good idea.
  2. Open a Terminal emulator window.
  3. Get the current list of devices by running “diskutil list”.
  4. Insert your USB key
  5. Determine the device node assigned to your USB drive by running “diskutil list” again (e.g. /dev/disk2)
  6. Run “diskutil unmountDisk /dev/diskN”. In my case the device was /dev/disk2.
  7. Use DD like this “dd if=/path/to/ubuntu-9.10-beta-desktop-i386.iso of=/dev/disk2 bs=1m
  8. Finally, eject the media by running “diskutil eject /dev/disk2″ and remove your USB drive when the command completes.
  9. And that’s it. If you have been following this steps, you should have a bootable Live USB with Ubuntu by now.

June 23, 2009

Cesar Villegas
slayer
Slayer_X homepage
» Recuperando un iPhone robado con MobileMe

Encontré la increíble historia de Kevin Miller quien logró recuperar su iPhone luego de que alguien se lo robará mientras asistía a una conferencia de Lego. Kevin decidió probar el servicio MobileMe que ofrece Apple que incluye un programa llamado “FInd my iPhone” (te lo dan gratis por 60 días y luego puedes comprarlo por U$ 99 anuales)

La historia completa la pueden ver aqui:

Next Entry
Find My iPhone works, and it is awesome.

Para Kevin todo tuvo un final feliz, pero tienen que tener cuidado si van a enfrentarse a un ladrón, uno nunca sabe quién esta al frente.

Por otro lado una de las numerosas críticas que ha recibido este servicio es la posiblidad de hacer un “remote wipe” quiere decir podrías borrar todo el contenido del iPhone de forma remota para que el ladrón no pueda acceder a tu información personal. El problema esta en que el sistema de seguridad para esto es un poco frágil y puede significar que un atacante malicioso podría borrar todo el contenido de tu iPhone si consigue las credenciales para explotar el sistema.

Finalmente para los que les gustaria tener ese servicio aquí en Perú les comento que no es posible porque Apple no da ese servicio aquí y por otro lado esta el problema de que solo Lima tiene un nivel de detalle mas o menos apropiado en los mapas como para poder ubicar a alguien. En el resto de ciudades aún falta muchísimo.

Fuente: Gizmodo

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September 8, 2008

Antonio Ognio
gnrfan
» Triple Booting Leopard, Hardy and XP on my MacBook

Since I got a Macbook around six months ago I planned a triple-boot setup but didn’t really do it until recently. One of the first things I did when I got the laptop was using Bootcamp to repartition the hard-drive and install Ubuntu. When I then wanted to add Windows to the mix I found out it wasn’t that easy after struggling a bit with partition schemes and installers that don’t mix so well. The result was I just gave up for some time resorting to run Windows from VMware Fusion.

A few friends that own Macs and do Windows and Linux are happy running the OSes inside virtual machines. I was not. Windows under VMware runs nicely and the Unity integration features are quite cool but since I got the laptop with 1 GB or RAM running heavy enterprisey development tools for Windows among other stuff wasn’t working that well. Besides, OS X is fine and before the triple boot setup I got mostly used to run it all of the time but from time to time I run benchmarks, show demos or give talks and I needed the real Linux running on top of the bare metal. So I went for the real thing :)

Since I’ve switched to this machine as my primary computer I needed more RAM and disk space so I upgraded it from 120 GB to 250 GB and from 1 gigs of RAM to 2 gigs. Since I was going to have Leopard installed in a brand new disk this was the chance to finally go for the triple boot setup.

So the story starts with Boot Camp, Apple’s utility tool for resizing the Leopard’s HFS+ partion and have Windows Vista or XP installed aside of Mac OS using the drivers included in the Leopard installation media. As you might guess, given the propietary nature of Apple, Boot Camp is not the most flexible tool around and demands the hard drive to be formatted as a unique HFS+ partition using the whole disk. The good news is the process of installing Windows with Boot Camp is pretty smooth and works correctly almost every time. My experience was not the exception.

There are quite a few guides all over the Internet proposing different strategies for having OSX coexists with Windows and Linux on the same hard-drive and almost all of them are very emphatic on following the instructions to the letter. I read most of them but given my previous experiences and the information I had gathered I went for my own approach with I’ll briefly describe in this post.

GUID Partition Table (GPT)

GPT is a modern partition scheme that is part of the Extentensive Firmware Interface standard proposed by Intel. This is the scheme Apple uses for all Intel-based Macintoshes and Leopard’s installer only agrees to install the OSX on a GPT-partitioned hard drive so that’s one of the first things you must be aware of. GPT is an alternative to the old and well-know MBR partition scheme most of us are used coming from a PC world. EFI is a replacement of the old PC BIOS. EFI uses GPT where BIOS uses MBR. Nonetheless, Boot Camp uses a mixed GPT-MBR partition scheme under EFI in order to simulate the PC BIOS and have BIOS/MBR-only OSes like Windows XP installed in the new Macs. That’s why you CAN’T use Windows partitioning tools you might be used to like fdisk. They’ll simply ruin the setup and you’ll have to start all over again by partitioning the hard drive under GPT.

The current versions of Ubuntu Linux, like Feisty or Hardy, support GPT-partitioned hard drives in the installer, so they are not a problem. Windows Vista being a new OS only seems to support this in some 64-bits versions. That’s why you’ll want to rely on Boot Camp for the Windows installation and then try to mess the less you can with the arrangements the software has made :)

Installing Windows

There are many guides around for this part. I’ll link here to Apple’s official instructions in the 101: Using Windows via Boot Camp with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard article of their support site. When installing XP don’t even think of creating or deleting the partitions. At most you can switch from NTFS to FAT but I went for NTFS since Linux is already supporting it well and my partition was 60 GBs big. You can opt for the quick formatting option for reformatting the drive C: but don’t try reformating, I repeat, since you’re not installing over an MBR-partitioned standard PC hard drive.

After booting XP you’ll find the look is so lame compared to OSX or Linux with Compiz that you’ll want to make the appearance a little bit more decent so I turned on the ClearType option, the Royale theme, XPize and finally Y’z Shadow for adding extra transparency and drop shadows to the windows.

Since Macs only have one click you’ll find useful the tiny Apple Mouse utility for XP which switches the left and right click options while you’re holding the Ctrl key. Just run it from XP’s start folder adding the /s parameter to the executable path for avoiding the start dialog and you’ll have right-click working the same way as under OSX.

rEFIt

So after Windows install my MacBook was booting straight into Windows. Horrible! :( Yes, I could still choose from which partition to boot by pressing the right Option (Alt) key or setting my choice using the Startup disk dialog under OSX’s System Preferences but I wanted a cool graphical bootleader that soon would be spotting a cute Linux penguin so I went with rEFIT, a superb opensource bootloader for EFI-based hardware that dynamically detects your partitions and even bootable media.

I grabbed rEFIt as a DMG file and run the graphical installer under OSX. When I booted again it wasn’t working so I had to resort to running the manual installation instructions which are a breeze to follow using the OSX terminal app. Rebooted and the nice rEFIT screen was welcoming me featuring both OSX and Windows icons.

Installing Ubuntu

So at this point my Mac was dual-booting Leopard and XP but I need to add Hardy to the mix. Since the biggest partition was Leopard’s I had to shrink it in order to make space for Linux. There are a few options for doing this: I could have used the opensource gParted tool included in the Ubuntu Live CD or OSX’s own diskutil command under the terminal, or even the Disk Utility GUI under Applications/Utilities but I went with iPartition, a commercial product included in a Coriolis Recovery CD a friend had lend me. The partitioning worked nicely and I had 60 gigs for getting Ubuntu installed to the hard drive.

The problem here was the brand new partition for Ubuntu is physically the third one but Boot Camp will only want to boot Windows from the last partition, in this case the third. So the trick comes here: I booted the laptop with Ubuntu’s LiveCD which at disk point is offered as a boot option represented by rEFIT as a Linux penguin with a tiny CD icon and had the new partition formated as NTFS and Boot Camp’s windows installation copied to the third partition. Of course I had to do all of disk manually so I used mkfs.ntfs over /dev/sda4 to create the new partition, then mouted both /dev/sda4 (Boot Camp’s Windows installation) on /bootcamp and /dev/sda4 (new Windows location) on /windows and had all the files copied by simply issuing a “cp -r /bootcamp/* /windows” command and waiting for it to complete before starting the Ubuntu installer.

Then, when perform the actual Ubuntu installation I switched to manually setting the partition in which Ubuntu was to be installed, /dev/sda3 in this case, created no SWAP partition since many guides replaced it by a swapfile inside the main Linux ext3 partition and had GRUB installed not in the MBR but in /dev/sda3 and everything worked nicely.

Due to Ubuntu’s bug #222126 the Ubuntu’s installer clears the MBR and after rebooting you’ll get a “no bootable device” error when selecting the Linux or the Windows icon from rEFIT. I knew about this problem and the fix from my previous attempts so I didn’t panicked :) It only takes to run the eEFIT’s built-in partition tool to resync the GPT and MBR partitions and you’re done. At this point my system had a fully operational triple-boot setup. :)

Configuring Hardy to use the MacBook’s hardware

For this part I mostly followed the instructions at the MacBook Santa Rosa and MacBook Santa Rosa on Hardy pages from the Ubuntu wiki. Sound is working. Wireless is working too. The only thing I’m missing is having the laptop suspend correctly which is currently preventing me from using Ubuntu extensively when relying on the laptop’s battery. I’ll be looking into this issue soon and will be updating the article properly.

Conclusions

Triple-booting Leopard, Hardy and XP wasn’t an easy but a fun journy. Yes, it can take quite a bit of time waiting for the installations to complete and even much more configuring the system so I really helps to know what your’re doing since you risk loosing data or at least a good piece of your precious time. Was the price well worth for my? Definitely, yes. It’s not just all the cool kids who happen to be Linux geeks and own a Mac are doing this but the chance to use all of the system resources running under the proper drivers and being able to forget for the most part what is the hardware platform you’re using what has value to me. Of course, it all depends on your very specific needs. Due to academic reasons I do a lot of team work with other people and at some points we switch laptops or I have mine used by someone else to complete a task. In this situations I’m now booting into Windows and forgetting about any ocassional OSX interferences like switching to a different desktop using OSX’s Expose. It’s also way easier to have Windows run from it’s own partition and not a VM’s disk if you plan to install a ton of software as I’m having to do this days. So for me, it’s working nicely and I can still use Virtual Machines under any of the three OSes to virtualize any of the two others or a different one if that’s what I need. So i’m happy with the end result. :)

I really hope this post is interesting and useful to some of you out there on the internets :) For further reference most links are available from my Delicious account under the tripleboot tag.

August 11, 2008

Oliver Etchebarne
drmad
Melancolía al despertar
» Pantalla azul de la muerte en Olimpiadas 2008

Aviso a los señores que se han dejado seducir por la multi-millonaria campaña de Microsoft que pretende demostrarles que Windows Vista no es tan malo como Windows Vista, los están engañando: Windows sigue igual de inestable que siempre.

Prueba de ello: Windows se colgó en plena presentación de los Juegos Olimpicos 2008.

bsod_nest_main2.jpg (70102 bytes)

La noticia original en http://gizmodo.com/5035456/blue-screen-of-death-strikes-birds-nest-during-opening-ceremonies-torch-lighting

El que una cosa sea visualmente atractiva, no demuestra nada. Como dijo Bertrand Serlet en el Apple WWDC 2006: "Pero ya saben, debajo de todo... aun sigue siendo Windows" :-)

July 20, 2008

Antonio Ognio
gnrfan
» Keyboard freezes on Mac OS X

I got a white Macbook Santa Rosa a few months ago basically because I wanted to have a long-period first-hand experience using OS X on proper hardware. I’m a Linux fan and FLOSS advocate and surely Apple is a gross propietary-minded corporation and yes, I know I should be rejecting their products as the plague but I’m also a curious geek and I came to the point where I was clearly feeling I was missing 1/3 of today’s desktop action if I only used Linux and Windows. So I bought it and can’t regret it, I’ve been quite happy so far.

It’s no news Apple computers just work. When you switch, you learn your way around the new system in the first couple of weeks. Of course you don’t get to know every aspect of the OS but you get to learn all the stuff you really care about and use everyday.

Macbook

So everything was really fine with Leopard until I started to notice this very rare keyboard freezes. Wait! Keyboard freezes? I guess I had never experienced something like that with Windows and Linux before unless it was a bad cable or the keyboard cord got disconnected so at the very first time the concept seemed a bit alien. I’m a geek and the most of the times I know may way around computers and even without the keyboard to perform some basic testing and diagnosis I concluded that most of the running software was doing just fine and you could continue browsing the net and doing anything else that only required the use of the mouse so this was something strange that only compromised the use of the keyboard. But having no keyboard is quite annoying! Specially for a Linux guy that has at least one terminal open under OS X in order to feel sane taking my daily dose of bash, vim, wget and a few other command line utilities I can’t live without.

I realized that the keyboard freeze got fixed when I closed the current session and started a new one. Despite the session fix finding I must admit I was worried the thing was some weird hardware issue and I was somewhat expecting it to be gone by itself because it was happing once every week or two weeks and I could handle that.

Now a couple of weeks ago this freezes started to happen more and more often and the last days almost daily. Sometimes I had too many apps opened or I was using Windows under VMware so I was really a hassle so I searched the web for a solution and quickly found the patches from Apple in the form a small 978K update that requires a bigger 110 MB update that upgrades the system to version 10.5.1.

The upgrade process requires you to reboot your Macbook twice: first after the upgrade to OS X 10.5.1 has been completed then after installing the keyboard freezes fix. I’ve been using the Mac for a while and the problem seems to be gone.

I’m posting this as a reminder to myself because I might be trying a full reinstall of the software in my laptop in a few weeks in order to get a clean triple boot system up and running and because someone else may find the post useful.

May 5, 2008

Rodolfo Pilas
pilas
Rodolfo Pilas
» Computer Choppers: ser re-fashion

Ya había comentado cuando se lanzó la MacBook Air lo fashion que resulta este nuevo notebook para cualquier geek que se precie.

Pero la gente de Computer Choppers es capaz de proyectar esta carrera por ser exclusivo a niveles más allá de lo imaginable: por unos dólares más, tu producto “de la manzanita” puede ser personalizado con baño de oro o cromado.

MacBook Pro Gold MacBook Pro Chrome MacBook Air Gold MacBook Air Gold iPhone Gold

También se le puden poner algunos diamantecitos o rubíes, como para que nadie tenga una igual.
MacBook Air
La galería de fotos te puede dar algunas ideas de como ser re-fashion.

Dale, qué esperás?

November 21, 2007

Oliver Etchebarne
drmad
Melancolía al despertar
» Publicidad de Apple en Página de Windows Vista

Es un poco hilarante ver un anuncio publicitario de Apple en una página de CNet dedicada a Windows Vista. Lo que si es muy hilarante, es el vídeo en flash que está ahi, y en algunas otras páginas más :-)

El vídeo, nuevamente de Mac y PC, ha sido capturado en este flash, de otra página donde está la misma publicidad:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRAUlK8_2VE

» Publicidad de Apple en Página de Windows Vista

Es un poco hilarante ver un anuncio publicitario de Apple en una página de CNet dedicada a Windows Vista. Lo que si es muy hilarante, es el vídeo en flash que está ahi, y en algunas otras páginas más :-)

El vídeo, nuevamente de Mac y PC, ha sido capturado en este flash, de otra página donde está la misma publicidad:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRAUlK8_2VE

October 27, 2007

Jaime Wong
jgwong
Sueños de Azul
» Cuando a Apple se le acaben los gatos

Hace unos momentos, hablando por GTalk con Oliver:

jgwong: Hoy sale MacOSX Leopard
jgwong: Me pregunto qué pasará cuando a Apple se le acaben los gatos :)
DrMad: jajaja :D
jgwong: MacOSX Otorongo
DrMad: MacOSX Otorongo
DrMad: :D
jgwong: JAJAJAJA

December 13, 2006

Gustavo Picón
tabo
Hacking for fun and profit
» A Microsoft Co-President admits it: Microsoft lost its way

James Allchin, co-president of Microsoft’s Platforms & Services Division:

I’m not sure how the company lost sight of what matters to our customers, both business and home, the most, but in my view we lost our way. I think our teams lost sight of what bug-free means, what resilience means, what full scenarios mean, what security means, what performance means, how important current applications are, and really understanding what the most important problems our customers face are.

(source)

We already knew that Mr. Allchin, please continue.

I see lots of random features and some great vision, but that does not translate into great products.

Well at least you have great marketing.

I would buy a Mac today if I was not working at Microsoft.

Why not? Just use the best tool for the job (hint: not Microsoft). After all you are still using Linux servers in portions of your site (via Akamai). And you used Linux for your main site a couple of years ago after worm and virus attacks (Microsoft hides behind Linux for protection). Microsoft just doesn’t get security but hey, you already said that :)

And I’m sure you still remember how your own techies admitted that FreeBSD was superior to Win2k for massive server installs when they migrated the frontend of Hotmail? Oh, and I think the Hotmail backend is still running Solaris?

And of course, since you are responsible of Microsoft’s operating systems, you know that your programmers use Perforce instead of Visual Source Safe?

And of course you know that between your own employees, for every MSN search user there are FOUR Google search users?

I think I get the point Mr. Allchin: If Microsoft doesn’t eat its own dog food anymore because it has lost its way, all your costumers should start doing the exact same thing:

USE THE RIGHT TOOL FOR THE JOB (Hint: NOT Microsoft).