Saturday, August 05, 2006

Limping Along

Lots of non-mainframe personal computer news to report. A couple days ago I managed to drop my ThinkPad about two feet onto a carpeted floor. The machine is over four years old now, and that drop was one too many for the hard disk.

I pulled the hard drive this morning so that I'm not tempted to work on it any more. I need a specialist to see what data he can pull off. Right now I'm using a bootable Linux CD to get online, yet another reason to like Linux. If there's nothing to save then I'll lose about 11 months of ancillary data. Most of what's important is protected in Lotus Notes replicated databases, though. Notable losses might include recent photos, many iTunes downloads (but they were all the free ones), and a couple spreadsheets I'll miss somewhat.

A more recent backup would have been nice, but I'll live.

I decided to purchase an Apple MacBook, and hopefully the new machine will arrive in about a week. Perhaps it's silly buying one's own machine mostly for office use, but I figure I'll splurge and meet new people who will want to know why there's a Macintosh in the office. Like the newer ThinkPads, the MacBook has a motion sensor which will park the hard disk heads before they crash. Unlike the newer ThinkPads the MacBook has a magnetic power cord attachment, so it is not possible to trip over the cord and send the machine tumbling.

If anyone has MacBook advice, feel free to share. I ordered the basic 1.8 GHz model with a 100 GB hard disk, VGA adapter (for presentations), and a free (after rebate) printer/scanner/copier. Is NeoOffice any good?

UPDATE: Apple shipped the printer but not the computer yet. So I called asking them to upgrade to two-day shipping to Chicago. "I'm sorry, we can't do that." The computer hasn't left, and it may not leave for days, but Apple can't seem to slap a two-day sticker on the box. All of which means I'll need a minor miracle to receive the computer before my flight back to Japan. There's still a chance, but I'm nervous.

LATER UPDATE: Like this consumer, I see that Apple is shipping my MacBook directly from China to Chicago. The good news is that Fedex thinks the MacBook will arrive on August 9, the day I arrive in Chicago. I hope Fedex is correct. Too bad Apple cannot parachute the MacBook into Tokyo before I leave.

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