Tuesday, May 12, 2009

OSX 10.5.7 is out!

Go grab it.

So far, so good for me. Haven't really noticed any difference so far. I am looking forward to testing the new iCal improvements. I use iCal a lot and am looking for a little love. But, all I really want is a to-do list on the iPhone version. I mean, come on already!
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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Using Amazon's S3 to back up your Mac (Jungle Disk)


I have been using Amazon's S3 service to back up all my photos and wanted to write a post about it. When it comes to backing up all those hard earned shots, and family memories, I can be a bit paranoid. I back up using Time Machine to a Time Capsule, the Backup application to an external Firewire 800 drive and now I back up to Amazon's S3 using Jungle Disk. :-)
Ok, you probably don't need to do all that, even if you are a pro photog. And, I am backing up to S3 to get comfortable with it so that, perhaps, I can get rid of some of my other backup assets. First, the cost. At the time of this writing Amazon is charging $0.15/GB of storage per month. Not bad really. If you store 50GB, my current photo library size, it will run you $7.50/month. While you can certainly buy an external hard drive for pretty cheap now days, S3 has several advantages. With an external hard drive you need to purchase them, store them, manage them and hopefully you are storing some of them off site. You aren't keeping all your backups the same place you keep your computer are you? With Amazon's S3 you are keeping your data right along side of theirs. It is distributed across countries, highly reliable (up time) and accessible anywhere. Now, there are......

Now, there are also fees they charge for transferring of data and fees for certain requests made. However, I don't mention these because it is the long time storage that really matters. The amount of time you spend putting your data up there and retrieving it is nothing compared to the cost of the data just sitting up there are their servers. But, you will want to go check out those number on Amazon's S3 site. Currently there is a special going on for $0.03/GB transfer in, but the normal price is around $0.10/GB transfer in. Again, once you get your data up there, you don't pay those numbers.

On to how you get your data up there. The big thing about Amazon's S3 that throws most people off is that you can not interact with it directly. Amazon provides developers an API that you can use to store and retrieve data blobs, as I will call them, but they do not provide any user interface or web page (yet) that you can use to look at, store or retrieve data. So, you need to find some 3rd party application that can do that for you. These applications will take that Amazon API interface and present it to you in a way you, and your applications, are familiar with. For example, they might show it as an FTP site, an external mounted disk image, etc. The good news is that there are many such apps. Some are free, some are not. While I have played with several, I happen to be using Jungle Disk, which costs a one time fee of $20. For $20 you get unlimited lifetime upgrades to new versions and you can install it on as many Mac, Windows or Linux boxes as you want.

Jungle Disk itself is very straight forward, so I am not going to get into it really. It acts just like any other backup software. Which is good, it should be as transparent as possible. You should not know or care that the backup is going up to Amazon as opposed to a local USB disk. There are a couple wrinkles though I will point out. First, you need to setup the Amazon account and tie it with Jungle Disk. You can do this through the user interface of Jungle Disk or through Amazon itself. I first made my account with Amazon S3 because I wanted to play with many different applications for Amazon S3 back up before deciding on one.

The next little wrinkle you will run into is the time it takes to do your first back up. Think days here. I have a pretty fast Comcast Cable internet connection with out 2MB uplink speed. My first 67GB upload took 3 days. So, just be ready for that. Your uplink internet connection simply is very slow compared to your downlink speed. But, after your first back up you will only be uploading new files and files that have changed.


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Saturday, May 2, 2009

iMac with ATI 4850 FIX IS OUT!


Run software update and grab the "iMac EFI Firmware Update 1.4". It fixes the freezes on the new 2009 iMacs with the ATI 4850!

Update 1:

Just a quick note. I have played Fallout 3 under bootcamp, World of Warcraft under OSX with no  crashes. Also it seems to run cooler all of the time without any extra noise.

Update 2:

Well, I just put in another 4 hours of Fallout 3 with no problems. The iMac stay quiet under all playing conditions it seems, which is really nice. So, I guess it wasn't a straight heat issue. I also got in another hour with Wow with the graphics setting cranked up to 'ultra'. Not that Wow really pushes anything.

Update 3: 

At 24 hours now and I would normally have had about 3 freezes or more. But I have not had one so far. I really think they got a good fix here. I am very happy with it and am glad I did not take my box in to get it fixed or replaced.

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Monday, April 27, 2009

2009 iMac, ATI 4850 freezing. Is it wireless, not completely.

So, I have been playing with my iMac, trying to figure out why it keeps freezing up on me under OSX and crashing under boot camp. Like many other owners of the new 2009 iMacs with the ATI 4850 graphics card I have been suffering from numerous freezes and crashes. I thought it was heat related since I never hear my fans speed up as things get hot. So, I downloaded a fan control program and cranked it up. However, while trying to do a Jungle Disk back up to Amazon s3, it hung again, twice. So, freezes and no backups. Great. This is with wireless on. So, I book into boot camp and turn off the wireless adaptor, since I don't need it to play games. I still get crashes. I will have to say though, that the crashes don't happen as often. I was able to play for a few hours at a time, before I turned off the wireless adaptor, it was 30 minutes at most.
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Saturday, April 18, 2009

iMac/ATI 4850 lockups, GPU heat problems?


Yup, I am seeing lockups now pretty often on my early 2009 ATI 4850 iMac. It seem to happen when the graphics card, GPU, get up above 65 degrees C. I have never seen it get above 70 degrees yet, but it doesn't seem to take much over 65. I had 2 complete lockups in OS X today( EveOnline and Safari) and 2 crashes under boot camp (fallout 3).

According to AppleInsider: Apple may already be aware of the issue. Some of those calling the company's support line have heard from technicians that there are numerous reports and that a fix is in the works, possibly arriving along with the looming Mac OS X 10.5.7 update. Some are being offered replacement systems after unsuccessful troubleshooting.
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iMac with ATI 4850 Causing lockup in Aperture/corrupt Database


So, I am now regularly getting crashes in Aperture 2. My old iMac has been running Aperture for over a year with no crashes at al. This is new behavior with my new iMac that has the ATI 4850. It starts with strange graphics glitches that look like colored lines running across the screen, see full size photo above. These are usually off green in color and usually run horizontally. The can be from an inch or two long to the width of the whole photo. These will appear only in some photos, not all. After a while of that it is only a matter of time before the whole machine freezes and you have to power off. Doing this while editing photo is causing me Aperture database corruption which, while so far has not caused a loss of photos, does take forever to rebuild the database. Not good for trying to get any work done.




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iMac ATI 4850 Crashes and Graphics Problems (glitches)


So, I am not starting to see problems with, what I think, is the ATI drivers for the ATI 4850 in the new iMacs. Look at the picture upper left in this post here and look at the upper right corner. See that greenish line, it isn't part of the image. That picture is part of a screen shot taken from within Aperture 2. I have seen that with other images, If I exit and come back into Aperture it is gone. The line moves around too and grows and shrinks in size for different pictures. I am also seeing crashes and freezes....

I am also seeing crashes and freezes in OSX now. I was using Aperture and had moved to a new picture when the whole system just froze. No response from anything. I had to power off the iMac and power back on to recover. I, again, am seeing more crashes in boot camp, this time in Fallout 3, had to reboot.
OSX 10.5.7 is due at "any time now(TM)". Lets hope they roll out new ATI drivers for both OSX and boot camp.  Here is a picture of the full aperture session.




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Friday, April 17, 2009

Aperture and ATI 4850 iMacs


So, I have been using my new ATI equipped iMac for a few days now and have done a good amount of photo editing using Aperture 2. I am very happy with the performance. My library, right now, is about seven thousand pictures (all 12.1 MP). On my old iMac I use to have lots of stutters and pauses while I adjusted certain sliders. That has all gone away now. I don't even have to use 'preview' mode while traveling between photos, I just let it go ahead and load the RAW masters for each photo. That is fast. Now, I have never used Aperture on a MacPro. I guess that would be even nicer. But, I don't get paid for taking photos so I can't really justify that. However, unless I start working on video (come on 5D Mark II!) I can't imagine needed a stronger box.

Now, everyone is talking about the glossy screen and....



Now, everyone is talking about the glossy screen and photo editing. Again, I am no pro, and I am just getting into soft-proofing for print labs, but I love the glossy. My old iMac had a matte finish. The glossy screen just looks SO NICE that I can find a way to work around any color problems I might run into. The glossy screen is great for everything else I do like games, photo slideshows (they rock glossy) and everything else OSX related. I don't have problems with reflections like I thought I would. So far that is. At work, I have 3 or 4 19" matte monitors and I sit next to a window. I always have to keep the window closed because of reflections, so I am bothered by them in general.

To sum up, I don't think I will ever go back to a matte screen again, that is how good the glossy makes everything look, even if it is a distorted view of reality. I will reconsider if it ends up getting in the way of photo print lab stuff, but in that case I would probably just run a second monitor with my iMac that is matte.



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