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Posted May 7, 2007 10:46 by Karl B.
Listed in:
News,
MacBook,
MacBook Pro
Tags:
backlight
,
Optoelectronics
,
Digitimes
2 QJ
Ó
In accordance with Apple's "cleaner and greener" drive, reports have surfaced that the Cupertino-based company might be including its consumer line of 13-inch MacBooks as one of the products that will be receiving the LED-backlit display treatment this year.The 15-inch MacBook Pro was the first notebook slated to undergo the LED-backlit display treatment. The 17-inch MacBook and MacBook Pro models are also being considered for the same upgrade. According to AppleInsider, DigiTimes reports that Apple is currently studying samples of 13.3-and 15.4-inch panels from AU Optronics and Chi Mei Optoelectronics. Backlight unit makers Coretronic and Kenmos are also sending samples to be incorporated in the panels. Shipments for these components are expected to officially commence in Q2 or Q3 of this year. |
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Posted Apr 29, 2007 07:59 by Chris L.
Listed in:
News,
MacBook,
Hardware,
Laptops,
MacBook Pro
Tags:
Intel
,
Core Duo
3 QJ
Ó
Last month's Puff the Flammable MacBook might have been an extreme case, maybe not even related. Still, Reuters reports that Apple recently acknowledged that some of the notebook PC batteries in their MacBook/Pros "may have performance problems," but "the issues are not a safety risk," they insist.Said issues include not charging when the computer's plugged into an outlet. Strangely enough, that had been a common complaint about laptop batteries - Apple mobile PCs and otherwise - over the past year. So enough with the bellyaching, solutions, solutions. Apple has released Battery Update 1.2, specified for Intel laptops. It should hopefully improve battery life and "reduce swelling." Swelling batteries: that's always a bad sign. In addition, Reuters notes that the battery replacement program continues and also applies to out-of-warranty MacBook/Pros as well, if and only if:
Of course, if your MacBook/Pro has suffered the fate of Puff, then it's definitely too late for an Update or Replacement. Just hope the house didn't go up with the battery. |
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Posted Mar 28, 2007 01:17 by Dia A.
Listed in:
MacBook,
Video,
Apple TV
Tags:
YouTube
,
Apple TV
3 QJ
Ó
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The Apple TV is a set-top box selling for US$ 299. Dubbed as "the next-gen of home entertainment",
the Apple TV lets you play any media content like music, podcasts,
movies, TV shows stored in your computer onto your TV. You can get
digital content from the internet and play it on your TV, instead of
getting DVDs from a store. With the help of the Apple TV, you can even
watch a part of your movie in the living room and finish it in your
iPod.
A set-top box like the Apple TV plays your computer content on your widescreen TV. What if the tables were turned and the computer - specifically a MacBook - plays the Apple TV instead of the other way around? This sort of scenario happens in this vid we have here. Too bad we didn't get a tutorial about how to perform this; it'll be nice to do it just to see it could be done. Check out this YouTube vid of an Apple TV running on a MacBook. |
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Posted Mar 12, 2007 10:11 by Chris L.
Listed in:
Accessories,
Off Topic,
MacBook
Tags:
Apple Australia
6 QJ
Ó
We thought we were done with this story, because it's so 2006. Down Under, an Australian MacBook owner by the name of mattyb posted on the MacTalk (AU) forums the story of his close brush with Dell death. The short version of this story is that his MacBook battery seemed to have problems and finally went up in smoke (and flames) one early morning one day ago. Unabridged version of his story is at the Read link, but the gist is that he's been having odd battery problems the past couple of weeks. The real weird part of the story is that he bought his MacBook end of June of last year - so this thing occurred within the 12-month warranty. Based on the evidence (not to mention the damage pattern), the battery is suspect - but that will depend on whatever Apple Australia finds if and when mattyb sends his damaged unit in for repair autopsy. Guess we're going to have to repeat the PSA we've aired last year. Don't overcharge the battery, if that MacBook gets abnormally hot, start worrying, if at any point those batteries are swelling up to the point of bursting out of their MacBooks, really start worrying, and don't wait for the smoke to start pouring. You know how hot the MacBook can sometimes get, right? Oh, and mattyb also suggests on checking your smoke alarm detectors. You don't want them malfunctioning when a fire starts while you're sleeping. |
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Posted Feb 19, 2007 05:11 by Ceasar S.
Listed in:
News,
MacBook
Tags:
CompUSA
2 QJ
Ó
In this digital age, most people entrust their personal computer with personal data, including those for credit card information and account passwords among others. But when you send in your computer for repair, is it worth the risk entrusting such sensitive information?One MacBook owner sent in his laptop to Apple, by way of CompUSA, because it won't start. He received his laptop back, with serial numbers matching, but he found out that the hard drive it now had was not his. It sported all software, files, and information of someone else. What's more is that despite the fact that his original hard drive was an 80 GB one, the returned one was now only a 60 GB version. If this is what they meant by recycling your older hardware, they've got it the other way around. If that wasn't aggravating enough, then listen up because there's more: he contacted CompUSA and they suggested he just wipe the hard drive and use it. What type of support is that? Yes, it's understood that one should always back up their data to avoid personal data loss (and because the techs will wipe the drive anyway), but we're talking about someone else's hard drive that doesn't have an apparent problem. And why wipe someone else's hard drive and use it when your hard drive was far larger? He had then contacted Apple to sort things out, but the technicians have been no more helpful than CompUSA about the matter. One thing has been cleared with them, though: it was an official Apple technician who worked on his PC. After a few more calls and e-mails, he discovered that the hard drive belongs to a woman and she happens to also have his hard drive. This he found out from an Apple representative who contacted him after his fruitless pursuit on the phone at Apple's repair division. Pretty soon, everything just sorted out, and the details of the whole matter are now clear. Just as the MacBook owner recounted:
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Posted Jan 25, 2007 06:45 by Ceasar S.
Listed in:
Rumors,
MacBook
Tags:
Core 2 Duo
,
superdrive
,
DVI
,
FireWire
,
Ethernet
10 QJ
Ó
Shedding some light into this mysterious device Apple's been cooking up in the Mac kitchen is AppleRecon. Now they've been seriously investigating into the rumors surrounding a 12-inch Macintosh puppy that is so elusive, that it even has lots of names: MacBook Pro 12", MacBook Mini, or MacBook Duo. Whatever you can call it, however, it's been getting some renewed hype and a whole lot of claimed features. It's sure to hold Duos now, since Apple's move to the Intel side.But AppleRecon screened the truths from the rumors, and came up with the specifications that surround the little monster.
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Posted Jan 21, 2007 07:02 by Ian C.
Listed in:
MacBook
Tags:
CRT
20 QJ
Ó
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Since Tech-centric people are really sensitive about how hot their technological box of choice can get, here's something that can help them feel a bit less insecure.
Despite the fact that this page over at the URL http://granulator.gg.utk.edu/~web/thermalcam is entitled "Fun with a thermal camera", their geeky endeavors into the actual temperatures of a MacBook, an Xbox 360, and a 38-inch CRT HDTV is presented in a very academic fashion. The short of the long story? They took several pieces of essential tech-gear, and put each under a thermal camera. They found out that the appliances can get hot, really, really hot. Here are their images of the MacBook. And here's the 38-inch HDTV CRT, followed by the Xbox 360. The author of the site would like to note that he is not making any claims about the safety of the above products. He's just simply showing the images he took, and he is taking the time to report the results. Also, the author of the site claims that the above images were taken in conjunction his current PhD research, as test cases for calibration of their camera for future field work. We now wonder what the PS3 looks like under a thermal camera. We also wonder how the Xbox 360 would look under a thermal cam if one of those spangly third-party cooling devices were attached to it. |
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Posted Dec 14, 2006 08:59 by Chris L.
Listed in:
Rumors,
MacBook
Tags:
FireWire
,
Airport Extreme
,
SATA
,
iPhone
,
iTV
,
Macworld Expo
32 QJ
Ó
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You gotta love rumors confirmed. Mac OS Rumors started combing the grapevine and all their sources clean of whatever juice they could squeeze out, until they were able to confirm that the "MacBook Thin" (a) exists, and (b) has specs that (c) would probably make the "Thin" "the fastest, most feature-rich ultraportable laptop on the market". Probably because it's a Pro in a smaller package. Here are the specs that Mac OS Rumors were, so far, able to confirm from American and Southeast Asian sources. Start drooling.
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Posted Dec 4, 2006 11:50 by Chris L.
Listed in:
Rumors,
MacBook
Tags:
dual core
5 QJ
Ó
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If MacScoop's "reliable sources" are right, they can get smaller and thinner still. Although it seems that Cupertino's scaling the MacBooks up and larger, there seem to be plans for Apple to develop and release a smaller, thinner, form-factored MacBook sometime in early 2007. Part of the reason why the MacBook has upscaled in screen size as well as processor power is because of its potential use as a multimedia platform - the wide screen certainly made sense for on-the-go video editing. But we think that going back to the 12-inch - and getting it slimmer - should appeal to another class of consumer, who want the power of a MacBook but can't lug around the entry-level 13-inchers. This would also hearken back to the 12-inch PowerBook, and perhaps even serve the same purposes as a regular office laptop. Albeit with beefed-up specs, as this smaller, sexier beast should still keep its larger siblings' dual core heart (bless their dual-core heart) and optical drive. Beyond that, no other specs could be revealed by MacScoop or their reliable sources. Well, they're expecting a US$ 1,700-US$ 1,800 price range for the sexy beast so that's something to be revealed (and something that could change, too). |
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Posted Nov 23, 2006 06:06 by Remi M.
Listed in:
MacBook,
iLife
Tags:
Photoshop
,
iPhoto
,
iweb
,
NeoOffice
,
iMovie
8 QJ
Ó
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A lot of great things has been said about Mac products: they're innovative, great, and all that. But a great product is useless if the user doesn't live up to his end of the bargain (such as not installing a decent anti-virus or cluttering your RAM with useless apps). Anyhow, we're deviating from the topic here, someone over at MadMac did a little investigative report on the top 10 Mac memory hoggers. Here are the apps that made that list:
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