boomouse Posted February 10, 2010 Share Posted February 10, 2010 thanks! any brand to reco? Online, I have had good experiences with Other World Computing (OWC). They sell the NuPower replacement batteries from Newertech: http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/powerbook/batteries/ $99 is the listed price expect to pay around $25 more for air shipment. Quote Link to comment
jayar Posted February 22, 2010 Share Posted February 22, 2010 Online, I have had good experiences with Other World Computing (OWC). They sell the NuPower replacement batteries from Newertech: http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/powerbook/batteries/ $99 is the listed price expect to pay around $25 more for air shipment. Try Battery King in Cubao, the Plaza Fair building ata yun. Near the MRT station that goes north; from that station you enter the passage that is near the ATM station. You'll see it to your left. I bought one from there a few months ago (most likely four), still works. Cheaper than original, pero OK naman. Japan-made daw. Quote Link to comment
boomouse Posted February 22, 2010 Share Posted February 22, 2010 Try Battery King in Cubao, the Plaza Fair building ata yun. Near the MRT station that goes north; from that station you enter the passage that is near the ATM station. You'll see it to your left. I bought one from there a few months ago (most likely four), still works. Cheaper than original, pero OK naman. Japan-made daw. Thanks. That is very good to know. Snow Leopard users out there who have been scratching their heads about how to turn on internet sharing (the 'sharing system is flaky') or create an ad-hoc network [also called a computer-to-computer network] which essentially turns the Mac into an access point will find relief in the 10.6.2 update. I found it funny that my Macbook Air (older version) could not provide internet sharing via Airport after the SN upgrade, but the 10.6.2 update fixed it. Quote Link to comment
roxysnonie Posted March 1, 2010 Share Posted March 1, 2010 Try Battery King in Cubao, the Plaza Fair building ata yun. Near the MRT station that goes north; from that station you enter the passage that is near the ATM station. You'll see it to your left. I bought one from there a few months ago (most likely four), still works. Cheaper than original, pero OK naman. Japan-made daw. is this the same battery king in market market? if so how much sya? Quote Link to comment
jayar Posted March 4, 2010 Share Posted March 4, 2010 is this the same battery king in market market? if so how much sya? Not sure if it's the same, but chances are, it is. Price depends on the model. I used to have their phone number...but not anymore. Good luck. Quote Link to comment
chocoffee Posted March 30, 2010 Share Posted March 30, 2010 tried using mac mini for a few months, I wasn't impressed... if your a gamer, stick to windows. Quote Link to comment
mick8 Posted April 10, 2010 Share Posted April 10, 2010 (edited) Am planning of buying a desktop and i was thinking of getting a MAC Pro. Now that Macs do run on Intel boards and processors, would i be able to customize the parts as i would in a PC? ie. Boards, Graphics Cards, Hard Disks and Processors. Would I be able to run an Intel board with the new Core 7 processor smoothly? If I would get a Mac, I would have to run windows on it since the Softwares& Plug-ins i use are more for windows and i play games as well. My reason for getting a Mac is for stability and reliability. I've read that for people who likes swapping out hardware to keep the system cutting edge, a PC is the way to go. Also the PC is the clear winner for overclockers and modders. Video card technology is constantly evolving to support the latest standards. Upgrading a PC’s graphic card is easy with plenty of choices available from low-end cards to extremely expensive cards, including dual graphics capability. But what if am getting a dual boot to get the best of both worlds? Any suggestions? Thanks Edited April 10, 2010 by mick8 Quote Link to comment
KobeWanKenobi Posted April 11, 2010 Share Posted April 11, 2010 If you're not going to take advantage of a Mac's software, it would be better for you to get a non Apple product. Part of a Mac's stability and reliability comes not just from its hardware but also its software. Besides, there are just as reliable manufacturers out there. You just have to search which is which. For example, based on a survey of laptops from 2007 to 2009, the most reliable and stable laptops (based on hardware problems) on a three year span are: Asus, Toshiba, Dell and Apple. Asus and Toshiba took the top two spots with Dell and Apple at a virtual tie. Worst laptop on a three year span is that of HP where 25% of HP laptops fail within three years. However, that's for laptops, I haven't seen the reviews yet on desktops. Just to add, in order for you to upgrade a Mac Pro, you have to buy an Apple branded video card which more expensive than a video card of the same specs. So you'll end up paying more for the same part. For example a Radeon 4870 manufactured by HIS costs $156 at newegg.com, an Apple branded 4870 costs $250 from the Apple store as a video card upgrade of the Mac Pro. And Apple still doesn't have the nVidia Fermi or Radeon 5xxx series at their stores. My suggestion? Assemble your own PC using parts from branded and reliable hardware manufacturers. For a fraction of the price, you get the same performance as a Mac Pro. For the same price, you exceed the performance of a Mac Pro. Quote Link to comment
mick8 Posted April 11, 2010 Share Posted April 11, 2010 If you're not going to take advantage of a Mac's software, it would be better for you to get a non Apple product. Part of a Mac's stability and reliability comes not just from its hardware but also its software. Besides, there are just as reliable manufacturers out there. You just have to search which is which. For example, based on a survey of laptops from 2007 to 2009, the most reliable and stable laptops (based on hardware problems) on a three year span are: Asus, Toshiba, Dell and Apple. Asus and Toshiba took the top two spots with Dell and Apple at a virtual tie. Worst laptop on a three year span is that of HP where 25% of HP laptops fail within three years. However, that's for laptops, I haven't seen the reviews yet on desktops. Just to add, in order for you to upgrade a Mac Pro, you have to buy an Apple branded video card which more expensive than a video card of the same specs. So you'll end up paying more for the same part. For example a Radeon 4870 manufactured by HIS costs $156 at newegg.com, an Apple branded 4870 costs $250 from the Apple store as a video card upgrade of the Mac Pro. And Apple still doesn't have the nVidia Fermi or Radeon 5xxx series at their stores. My suggestion? Assemble your own PC using parts from branded and reliable hardware manufacturers. For a fraction of the price, you get the same performance as a Mac Pro. For the same price, you exceed the performance of a Mac Pro. Thanks for the reply. The reason why i would have to run windows on a Mac is because the softwares and plug-ins i use are windows based and I play games too which are windows based. Aside from that am good to go with the OS X. The reason why I would want to try a Mac is because I believe the OS X is more stable than Windows and also its hardware components are less likely to cause problems compared to a windows machine. I might be wrong though. As you've mentioned, it'll definitely be expensive upgrading video cards as Apple has only one vendor compared to windows that has numerous plus hardware upgrades for an Apple are limited. Since Apple uses Intel boards, does that mean running Windows on a Mac is as smooth as running it on a Windows Machine? Also, can an SLI motherboard run on a Mac? Thanks Quote Link to comment
KobeWanKenobi Posted April 12, 2010 Share Posted April 12, 2010 Apple doesn't use Intel boards but they do use Intel processors. Apple uses a proprietary motherboard built only for them. With respect to your question of running it running smoothly as a Windows machine, yes it does. I have a unibody Macbook (late 2009 model) with Core 2 Duo processor at 2.26GHz clock speed and 4GB of DDR3 1066 RAM and an nVidia 9400M video chip. I can dual boot with either OSX and Windows 7. You can also install other operating systems such as Windows XP and Vista, Ubuntu and other *nix type operating systems. When running in native Windows 7, there experience is pretty good. No problems whatsoever. It runs even faster than my desktop (a 5 year old Athlon X2 3800+ with 2GB RAM. I can also run Windows as a virtual machine within OSX using Parallels Desktop (the fastest virtualization software for the Mac but it costs $80 to buy) or the free Sun VirtualBox (but performance is slow). With Parallels desktop, I can even play some older games such as Warcraft III within Windows within OSX without the need for me to reboot in Windows. On your SLI question, a Mac Pro has three available PCIE slots for up to three Video cards. However, in OSX it won't run in CrossfireX (ATI) or SLI (nVidia). You can only do that under Windows but it reportedly needs downloading tweaked drivers and the like. There are forums that will guide you how to do that. Quote Link to comment
KobeWanKenobi Posted April 12, 2010 Share Posted April 12, 2010 Warcraft 3, Frozen Throne, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, Command And Conquer 3, Hidden Expedition Everest, Hidden Relics. Just some examples. Quote Link to comment
murofasarap Posted April 14, 2010 Share Posted April 14, 2010 apple introduced new macbookpro lines, now the price for 15" TOTL and 17" is tempting :-) Quote Link to comment
Vegasboy32 Posted April 28, 2010 Share Posted April 28, 2010 I like the new macbook pro. I'm not impressed at all with the Ipad. I tried it for myself at Best Buy. Quote Link to comment
boomouse Posted May 1, 2010 Share Posted May 1, 2010 I like the new macbook pro. I'm not impressed at all with the Ipad. I tried it for myself at Best Buy. You're not impressed because you should not be. Because you don't get it. Open your mind to consider the possibility that not everything with a processor, video screen, human interface system, and data storage should be a computer as we know it. A iPad was meant to complete a digital lifestyle by helping address activities where using a notebook/netbook would be cumbersome. Some examples: TV Ditches Paper Scripts for iPad, Saves $2,000 a Month A TV station in Albany, Georgia is saving US$2,000 per month in printing costs by using iPads for writing and reading scripts. The station, WFXL, is one of 15 stations owned by Barrington Broadcasting, and it made the switch to both save money and reduce the company’s carbon footprint. According to an article by Poynter Online, the station e-mails new and edited scripts to individual e-mail accounts set up for each iPad. Each iPad is also set up with a $6.99 iPad app called iAnnotate PDF — a PDF reader and annotation tool — for using the scripts in live and recorded situations. In an e-mail interview, the station’s news director, Terry Graham, and interactive managing editor, Vincent Hunt, said the iPad had three distinct advantages over traditional laptops, its price point, size and intuitiveness, and access to the App Store, where the station will be able to tap into future app development when needed. “At a modest $499 to $599 for each unit,” Mr. Hunt said, “you are getting a very dynamic device at a very reasonable price. Though the iPad does not boast the productivity of a laptop, the productivity of a laptop is not needed on the news desk.” Though change is often resented and resisted, the two said that the station’s employees were very happy with the change, with Mr. Graham saying, “My staff members keep saying, ‘We’re not going back to paper scripts!’”------------------- Indy Driver Uses iPad for Real-Time Race Stats Indy driver Tony Kanaan is among the first professional athletes to integrate an iPad into his workflow. Indycar.com blogger Daniel Incandela noticed Mr. Kanaan holding an iPad during a pitstop, posted an image on Flickr, and then followed it up with a video interview posted to YouTube ( ) In the video, Mr. Kanaan explains that his engineering team developed a custom app that displays real-time race information and stats so that he can quickly get updated during his pitstops. As he was speaking, he decided that what he really needed was a pocket in his car so that he can pull the iPad out himself, rather than his team having to take the split second to hand it to him. ----------------------- Your lifestyle may not include situations where fingertip access to information is a major concern. In that case, traditional computing will better serve you but dismissing something off because it doesn't serve your needs tells a whole different story about the situation. Quote Link to comment
serpentor_ph Posted May 4, 2010 Share Posted May 4, 2010 Hi Boom, any idea why windows xp on MBP using bootcamp can't detect the network and wi-fi card ? Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.