Macbook Pro 13″ MB (MB991LL/A) — The Unboxing
Over the last month, I’ve been using the Dell Vostro A90 (Mini 9) almost exclusively. Unfortunately, what I discovered is that while it’s a great little box for checking e-mail and the occasional e-Bay browsing, its little 1.6 Ghz Atom processor (even with 2gb of RAM and a fast SSD) simply isn’t enough to do the type of tasks that I do just to keep sane.
For example, while I can fire up iMovie or Garageband, there simply isn’t enough power behind the Atom processor to actually DO anything beyond what a netbook’s good for. No podcasting, no Photoshop, no WarCraft, no Call of Duty 4.
So.. That being said, and the histrionic issues caused by the sincerely apathetic speed of the Best Buy trade-in program behind me, I set out today with my $469 gift card, along with $30 in Best Buy member gift cards in hand, with the intent to purchase a new base-model MacBook Pro, 13″ laptop. Let me just state, out-front that most of you simply cannot imagine the amount of thought that went into the decision.
Should I buy a base laptop? Should I buy the bigger badder 15″ laptop? Should I just buy a Mac Mini and a 20″ monitor and make plans to sell it back later? Should I just tough it out and not get anything at all? (in which case, what would I have done with $500 in gift certificates???) ARGGhhh.
It was actually the local Best Buy in Huntsville that talked me out of anything but the base setup.
Having decided at least on a laptop — to keep from having to haul a monitor around — I couldn’t decide on either a 13″ or base 15″ model. Being most unhelpful and disinterested in helping a customer, after much frustration, I discovered the local store DIDN’T EVEN STOCK the model I wanted.
This of course called for the obligatory 200 mile road trip to the nearest Mac-selling Best Buy, which happened to be in Murphreesboro, TN. It was a beautiful day, I had a moral imperative and I was “on a mission from God” (which for the cretins out there is a big tip of the hat to the Blues Brothers).
To cut a long and presumably boring story short, the people in the alien Best Buy in Murphreesboro were the exact opposite of my local shop. They were helpful, attentive, and even had an honest-to-god Apple rep on hand to answer questions…
Now I just need to sell the Dell Hackintosh and the new baby will be a fairly inexpensive upgrade.
Here is the unboxing of what I ended up with;
loading...
Dell Mini 9 / Vostro A90 memory cleared up
Dell’s Web site specifies the Dell Mini 9 and the Vostro A90 as having a 533 mhz bus. The build sheet however specifies that they include 1 Gigabyte of 800 mhz RAM (200-pin DDR2 DIMM). When ordering a new 2 Gigabyte stick for my newly acquired A90 netbook, I couldn’t find, or get a clear answer on what speed memory I needed. Here’s what I found out..
The bus on both machines is, indeed, 533 mhz. The RAM that comes with your Dell is (usually) an 800 mhz chip. When you look at either Kingston, or Crucial for memory, they each offer three versions. 533, 667, and 800 mhz. Giddy with excitement as I unwrapped my new Dell from it’s cardboard prison, I ordered one stick of 667 mhz memory before I even realized that the discrepancy between 533 and 800 existed.
THEN, I spent about a week upset because I KNEW I should have bought the faster 800 mhz chip.
As of this afternoon and a LONG delay in receiving said RAM, I’m very happy to report that if you buy a Dell Vostro A90 or it’s more colorful counterpart, the Dell Mini 9, rest assured that both the original 800 megahertz and the new 667 megahertz RAM chips are both seen and supported the same as if they were 533 mhz parts.
In short, don’t worry. It’s all good no matter which speed you choose. Until someone figures out a way to overclock this little beasty, the $5.00 difference between 533 and 800 megahertz chips doesn’t seem to make a bit of difference.
segwayne.com
loading...
My honest ups and downs of loading Mac OS X on a Dell Inspiron Mini 9 netbook
Ok, as promised, I spent almost a week with my new Dell Mini 9 netbook computer. What I wasn’t quite fully honest about was that it was loaded down with Mac OS X 10.5.6. I’m not here to give pictures, and promote how to do it. There are plenty of articles out there for that (see below).
Also, before everyone — and hopefully Apple execs — get upset, somewhere between my youth and today, I’ve become pretty much a staunch supporter of buying and using legitimate software, rather than pirating it like I did rampantly in the 80′s.
For the record, I’m not here to promote doing this, as I agree that the legality of following the articles on the Web for doing so is questionable.
The reason for this article isn’t promotion of “hacking your Dell Mini” but — while admitting it’s certainly possible – unlike most of hackintosh crowd out there, I wanted to share, as well as address some of my great positives, along with my sincere concerns over putting Mac OS X on this thing to make it usable (which I don’t consider Windows to be).
On February 17th, when I decided to buy a Dell Mini 9, I had exactly ZERO idea that it could be loaded down with MacOS X. No idea of its real capabilities, and little idea of how very useful it would really turn out to be. I bought it simply to walk from room to room with while occasionally checking IMDB and using ICQ.
It wasn’t until SamsClub.com and their truly screwed up “4 to 6 week wait for delivery” crap that I started investigating my purchase, found the 2 different articles on installing MacOS (see ZDNet and Gizmodo) and I truly became enthusiastic about my purchase.
So, with a looming road trip, and having received the device at 9pm on a Friday night (thanks UPS), I sat up all night installing my ligitimately purchased retail copy of MacOS X 10.5.6, 2Gb RAM module, and 32Gb SSD from Crucial. I accomplished the install using an 8Gb flash stick, some printed instructions, and a USB CD Rom drive. The whole install from power on to power off took about 3 hours.. Somewhere along the lines however, I must have missed a step.
I played with it that Friday night until about 4am Saturday morning. Happy as a proverbial clam, I turned it off, sat it aside, and — since my weekend was firmly screwed for sleep — collapsed into a heap of snoring mass.
Enter Monday morning. Proudly, I packed the device and its power supply into a Kinko’s paper bag, and took it to work hoping to show it off to my fellow Mac buddies. I get to work. Tap the power button on.. “Operating System Not found”…. Crap..
I left work mid day last Monday to prepare for the road trip Tuesday morning. Went home, did about 20,000 loads of clothes while reloading Mac OSX. This time, making sure to disable the sleep and hibernation features which seemed to have caused the previous failure.
All seems well, good, yes, thank you. Power down, pack it, the PS, and a Logitech BT mouse in a leather “Padfolio” which serves the purpose well enough for the moment.
Tuesday morning, wheels up for DC.
So. After a week of on-the-road travel, I have found sincere concerns along with a lot of good things to be said about my experiences (and I presume the experiences of those going the same route) so I thought I’d share you the trouble, or at least point you in the right direction:
The Good:
- Once the netbook boots and does all its caching of sorts, it’s REALLY, REALLY fun, and infinitely more usable than Windows XP for the average user. Peppy as all heck, but again, that’s AFTER it does its thing of fully booting.
- The 9″ size and being 2.5 pounds makes it wonderfully transportable, and the Air Nazis (the TSA) had a lot less bullshit hassle with the netbook in a padfolio than they ever had with the 15″ mac laptop in a thin sleeve.
- The 32 gigabyte SSD seems to be around the right size. You could buy 64gb SSD and load Office (maybe) but you really need to examine what the laptop itself is for. It’s NOT a work replacement, so much as a really convenient way to get small tasks like e-mail and web surfing (and even high-level programming) done on the road. You can however load OpenOffice and be just as happy.
- I thought for sure the tiny keyboard would be an issue, but I guess that over the last 8/9 months or so of getting used to the iPhone, using a condensed kb on a netbook wasn’t THAT big of a deal.
- This little beasty has all of the ports you’ll need for everything EXCEPT firewire video. 3 USB ports (1 more than my mac pro laptop), SD/HDSD capability.. check. It’s even got an external plug to drive a monitor, but I haven’t yet been that brave..
- Everything works. 3 hours to install, mostly because of the USB CDROM, but thanks to the Type11 install (see the aforementioned articles) everything from the webcam to audio, to photo booth to Macromedia Fireworks works on it. As a matter of fact, the only thing I’ve found which doesn’t work is Boot Camp Assistant, but trying to install Mac OS on a PC to run a PC emulator seems kinda moronic doesn’t it?
The Bad:
- This is *not* a Macintosh computer. I know a lot of people will disagree with me out of principle, but there are lots of little noticable things, like bootup and overall speed, that simply don’t convey the “Mac feel”. A Dell hacked to try to make it run Mac OSX does not an Apple make. I find it difficult to believe that anyone who disagrees with the ideal of this statement has ever truly owned and/or loved their Mac as I do both my iMac and Macbook Pro.
- Speaking of the bootup times the problem is that start up times can reach 5 minutes or better, and starting programs up can be lethargic. Reminds me of the old G3 laptop days. – That being said, part of this may be my fault, as I bought a slower 32gb SSD from Crucial.com because the reportedly “much faster” “Runcore SSD” is not currently available for purchase. According to tests by other peeps out there, the stock SSD as well as the Crucial.com one is 70MB/sec read, 15MB/sec write speed. The Runcore SSD is supposedly 80MB/sec read, 40MB/sec write speed. For the record, I really have zero idea how this compares to standard notebook hard drives.
- What troubles me about the “Crucial/stock versus Runcore issue” however is that there is apparently only one single dealer in the world for said chips, and all the positive reviews about the Runcore seem to be put out by either relatives, or owners of the same Chinese company that makes them. Don’t know, but when/if they ever become available, I may have to invest a little bit to find out. I can always sell either the Crucial or the Runcore on eBay.
In the end, my feelings are this… If you go the route I did, you’ll end up with a fun, usable little computer that’s good for small tasks provided you’re willing to let it boot up and have patience to let it shut down on it’s own. In my experience, it’s just about as fast whether you’re running XP (which comes loaded), or Mac OSX 10.5.6 so the operating system you choose is purely a matter of preference.
The resultant machine however is NOT a Macintosh computer, so don’t try and fool yourself into believing somehow or another that it is.
I am pleasantly surprised by the speed and peppyness of the machine once it gets past the limitations of the current, “slower” SSD card, but I don’t know that I’d be all that jazzed about trying to get all my friends to buy one just to put OSX on it.
If I’d had the money to spend (me being cheap is what started this, remember?) I would have just bought one of the refurb 13″ Macbook Airs from apple.com for $999. I don’t however have that kind of money in this economy and if I did, I might have gone the more well established, non-pro 13.3″ macbook route.
Meanwhile I still had the need for a netbook sized device that I could literally take with me anywhere, which — for all intents and purposes — is exactly what I got.
Rumors have been circulating about the idea of Apple coming out with a netbook in Q3/2009, but that remains to be seen. Unfortunately I suspect that even if they do (and I sincerely hope they do), it’ll be more in the range of $800 (just like Sony tries to charge for the same features as my Dell), or something equally unobtainable for us broke-ass mortals just trying to get by.
Your call on hackintoshing the Dell Mini 9. I’ve given you all I know, and even admitted where I might have done things better. Just don’t go into it thinking you’re “sticking it to Apple”, because the inevitable truth remains, you get what you pay for.
loading...









![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_a.png?x-id=b71179b7-2253-43e7-b1e0-1ef7db99f25d)
