rickshangle.com

July 12, 2008

Exclusive!: Apple enjoys making it impossible for their biggest fans to buy their products

Filed under: Apple, Tech, ignoble ranting — rshangle @ 9:14 pm

picture-3.pngDespite e-mail warnings from my boss to wait for iPhone 2.0/3G to stabilize, and then perhaps buy one through our work i.t. (so I can transfer my blackberry’s phone number, and align through our corporate AT&T cellular plan), I went out today to buy an iPhone 3G to help ease the pain of not having an apple product to buy a month ago after WWDC. It didn’t go well.

This is my story, which was mostly written via email into my blackberry, hence the thumb-esque conan-speak, thumb-spelling and general lack of definite articles. Liberties were taken, but not many. thank you to juan for inspiring me to get back in the game. See you next year!

2:54pm

Sitting outside (not on line; on bench) apple store in clarendon va. Appx 50-60 people in line to buy the iPhone 3G. Looks to be the feel-good hit of the Summer.

Riot about to break out; Apple citizens in line shouting at hired line security thugs re: ‘line not moving in over two hours’. Wish blackberry world edition had camera / video, because I think I could get famous. I think it’s about to be set off, football hooligan-style. People are baking in the sun and not happy. Boiling heat, summer stench. Plus every third person that walks by starts laughing / taking camera phone pictures of people in line, taunting, irritating. this is what happens when an apple store is between a williams sonoma and some boutique clothery. like most apple stores aren’t. i assume this is happening everywhere. a happening.

Family of filthy rednecks (what are they doing in Clarendon; I hope they’re reading this over their dialup connections) just walked by line and loudly proclaimed ‘hick hick why don’t those idiots just buy it from ameeezon dot com hick?’. iPhoneists in line, so angry, shouted epithets at family of inbreeds, which included small children (both in the family, and doing the shouting from the line). The apple user backlash is full steam, bi-directional. This fun / comedy almost makes up for not having an iphone. Although these people on the ready line are my brothers, I am slightly removed… watching the game, not in the line. Too lazy. So lazy. Glad apple makes it hard to buy their products.

I’m supppoed to be at friend Steve’s birthday party in a few hours, but I don’t think I can leave this scene; previously unknown journalistic impulses surfacing. Plus, if the line trickles to zero, I’m in there to win.

surly Line-dwellers just yelled at secuirity ‘get us some cokes or something!!!’. Security: ‘you get back in line! You get back in line!’. I couldn’t make this up. Keep an eye on cnn — I swear there is going to be a riot. Let’s kick it off. I can’t report the truth[1].

3:30pm

Just saw 20-something 9 month pregnant woman on line. Should she be there? Does she have to be there? Is the iphone for the fetus? What if she calves right here? My god, as if the situation wasn’t bad enough, we could have a mucus plug, amniotic fluid, and a new life (undoubtedly apple-supporting, as it should be) to deal with in realtime. Maybe that would help her get forward in the line, which is not moving.

This apple store is in a fake ‘fancy towne‘ that is retail below, apartments directly above. People are sitting on balconies, drinking sangria and cold beer, spectating, taunting. That’s the way to do it.

Line is _not_ moving. Has not moved in the 46 minutes I’ve been sitting here. Sun was behind a cloud for a few minutes, but now bacl with a vengence. They’re burning, burning! Ow! - a goddamn bird bit me on the ankle! What the fuck? The woman next to me is throwing bread to the birds, and also watching the Apple iPhone people. My ankle is not bread, budgie, although it may be pastey and doughy! I should stamp you down like a pigeon, yet I am merciful.

3:50pm

Amusement: person walks up to iGoons claiming to want to purchase a mac book pro (ie something apple isn’t losing money on today, like the iPhone). igoon points legitimate man to end of the line. “But I’m not buying an iphone!’. Pointed to end of the line. Then, other line security guy seems to understand ramification and runs inside, presumable to get orders from manager / Jon Ives and Steve Jobs personally. If those guys don’t have the 60’s style red Batphone set up today, I don’t know when they do. Which means: they never do.

Ok… There are now two lines, coming from opposite directions, one short, one long. Maybe there is a batphone! Maybe short one is for non-iphone purchases (goons maybe snapped out of it). Maybe I should buy a macbook too so I can get in the short line…seems reasonable. Don’t need a macbook. still seems reasonable. Tiring of this scene.


4:00pm

Got sick of that scene, now walking back to my car, evaluating plan B. Need to be at steve’s in about two hours. Two girls walking through garage, overhear them: “I can’t believe those idiots are standing in line to give Apple their $300, then AT&T their $130 a month.” I want to tell these wenches to shut their watering holes, because we’re talking about the iPhone. Show respect. But it would do no good. They don’t understand. A Plan is formulating. I could still have justice today.


4:30pm

Now driving in concentric circles (ever-widening) around northern virginia hitting “legitimate” at&t retail stores (since the resellers don’t have them), hoping to score, licking my lips, ready to win.

First one I hit was in fairfax at the corner of 29 and 50. There was iphone 3g material and banners in the windows. It was packed, and there was a guy at the door with a clipboard of names and a pen. I figured these were good omens, but the feeling didn’t last.

‘Hello dere!’ Handing me pen. ‘Are you here for non-iphone-related-blah-blah-woof-woof-promotion-for-some-crappy-non-iphone?’. This was bad, but I’m not an asshole. ‘Hi! No! I’m here for an iphone. Do you have any?’ Confused look. ‘No, we don’t have those..’

Yes, of course. After all, why would you? Its not like you work for one of the only two retail outlets selling them, and its not like its the biggest retail event of the year. My bad for asking. I hand him his pen back without stabbing him in the eye with it.

Now in chantilly va at a mega strip-mall. Did you know that best buy (this one, anyway) now sells apple computers and musical instruments? Huh. No iPhones. Hungry like the wolf.

Have learned that if you send a text to googl (no e), with a search string, it sms’s you back with data. Thanks, Mike. 2% safer than googling on blackberry while driving on route 66…

5:30pm

Hit AT&T stores all over hell and gone (Chantilly, Centreville, Fairfax, etc etc etc), no joy. Consider going to Apple Store at Fair Oaks mall, but am now 30 minutes away from steve’s, and need to be there in 30 or so. Fair Oaks is probably a mess anyway.

Get email from my boss, who is begging me to hold off / buy a unit through our i.t. when we’re ready. He’s a good man. He’s trying to do the right thing. unfortunately his message has a legitimacy issue due to the fact he already owns a first gen iphone. But he’s still full of ideas:

omg. how about if you buy an ipod touch to hold you over? 97.946% of all iphone time is consumed by things that don’t involve a phone (these stats are conservative). the app store, omg, is the sigle-most dangerous thing to have at your fingertips. btw, mobileme/push functions are just now starting to work occasionally. IPOD TOUCH!!

response:

My issue with the touch is the distinct lack of phone.

I don’t have disposable income for hold-overs. I need the real thing. Kelley (ed. my wife) has cleared me for iphone purchase.

But thanks for trying to help.

after which i’m mocked for my married-ish behavior.

6:00pm

Arrive at Steve’s. He has downloaded iPhone 2.0 for his first gen, and shows me Super Monkey Ball (irritating), Pandora (awesome XM-radio killer), and an app that makes lightsaber sounds when you whip your phone around (like a lightsaber). I almost leave immediately (five minutes after arrival) to go back to clarendon and get online. But unfortunately Boss Tom has called me again and asked me firmly to promise not to get an iPhone until I can get it through i.t. / switch my cell number over. I cave. I feel so worthless.

Another apple nerd at Steve’s party, “Dan”, tells me that he and his wife were are Fair Oaks earlier in the day to check out the Apple Store scene / potentially breathe on an iphone 3g. He indicated that line was over 200 idiots long (how quickly I turn to eat my own when failure is complete), and ran from the store itself into the center part of the mall, where disney-style rope line-controllers had been set up. Awesome. Guess it’s good I held off on fair oaks.

Bitter Afterword — stop reading now

Thank you, Apple, for making it impossible to buy your product. In this case, it wound being for the better. Still, I hate you for it, since I could, at this moment, be using an iPhone I paid $300-out-of-pocket for, as opposed to the hypothetical one I’ll be getting (maybe for less, who knows what I can negotiate) in the future. Too tired to be filled with rage. Beer will help ease the pain.

But I want to make sure, not that anyone at apple (or anyone at all) is actually reading this, that I make something clear. This experience, no matter how negative, is not going to keep me from buying an iphone. It’s not like there’s another option I’m interested in. It was easy to hold off on the gen one due the price, lack of Exchange integration, and the certainty of apple gen-1-technology-itis. I’m not going to be childish and go buy a zune or some other piece of shit just because apple decided the iphone had to be activated in-store, then didn’t remotely have the infrastructure ready to handle it. I’m going to get an iphone, just like I’m going to keep buying macs, because I am a nerd and I like the way apple products make me feel about myself. I’ve owned a current mac since my dad bought me a mac 512k when i was a young punk playing Deja Vu and Falcon. Clearly there’s no illusion re: what I’m writing this on. say my name, bleyotch.

I’m just going to bitch about it, as I have here, and leave off with an open question to whoever at apple, in some parallel universe, reads this: does it make you feel good to irritate your loyal customers, or even your first time ones? I’m also a shareholder (2002 was a good year to buy apple stock), so if there is some secret sauce in the formula that directly/positively impacts shareholder value, I’d love to hear about it.

If I wanted to wait in lines, I’d go back to russia… which I’ve never been to. Get it?

[1] While this somewhat orbits the truth, it’s not quote so. But still somewhat. I want to avoid slander-lawsuits. Oh no:

a) People in line asking if the store would stay open after scheduled closing hours if there were people in line and stock in store. ie, would people just be sent home arbitrarily at 9PM?

“We’re not going to answer that.”

b) “Will you at least tell us and keep us updated on what stock levels are, so we, standing in line, can estimate if there’s any point of us standing out here?”

“No. We would never do that.”

July 11, 2008

MobileMe aka me.com aka Formerly mac.com is like gmail/gcal, except not working

Filed under: Apple — rshangle @ 2:21 pm

Awesome.

picture-2.png

April 4, 2007

I don’t know what I’m getting into…

Filed under: Apple, Data Control — rshangle @ 10:12 pm

… but I have no choice in the matter.

picture-2.png

I’m hoping the heart-stopping screech my computer just emitted at the end of this install process was a result of some unrelated situation (ex. the 150 deg F internal temperature) as opposed to a feature of Google Desktop for OS X.

April 2, 2007

Hot Rack

Filed under: Apple — rshangle @ 10:38 pm

Made you look.

bat-tron

No, this is not the severed head of a techno-bauhaus muppet, and this object and I do not belong to a secret, bare-knuckle boxing ‘fight club’. You are looking at me holding a battery that was once in my Mac Book Pro 17″.

One afternoon, after a particularly scorching Parallels session, I was moving my MBP to another room when I noticed that the aluminum battery cover was sort of, uh, visibily warped. More accurately, I noticed that the MBP’s underside was hot enough to fry a proverbial egg, but there’s really nothing new about that. Then I noticed the bulge.

Deciding it was time to ‘cool it down’ (or was it cool it now, per New Edition?), I ejected the battery, checked it out, thought ‘huh, that’s funny’ and put it on my desk for later inpection/action.

Some time later, I came back to my office to find the battery as you see it in this picture. I guess as it cooled from ~150 deg f to room temp, it expanded or contracted (or whatever things do when they cool off), and the battery pack sort of popped like a kernel of popcorn. Or something.

Well, better this than a spray of molten battery material to the face. Not that I’m saying that has ever happened with this sort of Apple battery, because that would be slander.

This is probably similar (or identical) to the 15″ MacBook Pro battery bulge/warp issue that Apple has an automated recall page for. AppleCare replaced it with zero argument (thanks Jason).

The moral of the story is: Don’t… um, well. I’m not sure what to tell you not to do. Perhaps: as with breast and testicular cancer, pro-active scanning of odd lumps or bulges in your Apple battery is perhaps the best method to head off any long-term difficulties or mutilating explosions. An ounce of prevention…

September 13, 2006

New iTunes 7 Features, #1

Filed under: Apple — rshangle @ 9:37 pm

This certainly is a long-awaited feature that will undoubtedly get me one step closer to _total_ audio data control without 3rd party tools or endless amazon-scraping…

artwork

If only it worked worth a GD… after trying it on about twenty tracks, with a success rate of 0/20, I’ve determined that right click -> “download album artwork” won’t even attempt to run for tracks that already have some crap (i.e. already downloaded by Synergy) embedded.

This article from the Mac Observer shows how to remove album artwork for a bunch of tracks so you can let iTunes 7 re-load them… clean!

go-2
the extensive library on my mac book pro… looking to keep things clean for as long as possible…

August 7, 2006

WWDC: Time Machine

Filed under: Apple, Uncategorized — rshangle @ 12:56 pm

I’m about to jump on a plane, but quickly re: Top 10 big things in Tiger (10.5):

(from live coverage at tuaw.com)

#2: Time Machine - “Everyone says ‘Back it up’, but people don’t” Only 26% of people back up their data, and they mostly do it manually. Only 4% back up automatically. All of this changes with Time Machine. Automatically back up your Mac. Backs up EVERYTHING. Restores EVERYTHING. You can buy a new HD and restore on to it. You can restore all data or pick and choose. Back up to local HD or remote server. “Whole new way of backing up and restoring.” (Windows has had something like this at least since ME) Steve does a demo. A file is missing from a folder. (Finder looks the same.) Click on Time Machine in the Dock. “Time is a dimension that receeds back into your desktop”. Windows in time are stacked behind each other. Looks damn sexy. Fly through time till you see a difference. (I assume he means in what files are there and what arent) Double click files to get previews, click to restore and it re-appears in the present (TRIPPY!) Works with applications other than Finder as well. Demo’s with AddressBook. “Search the past.” Demo’s with iPhoto, but something goes wrong. Steve elegantly force-quits.

Apple hasn’t done so well on the data protection front since… ever, so this could be significant… had the demo not crashed. Trash can
.

July 26, 2006

I have acquired a Wireless Mighty Mouse. It’s a slow night.

Filed under: Apple, Tech — rshangle @ 8:57 pm

Hot news, to be sure.

My initial impressions:

1. I don’t know how I will ever be able to travel with all this additional weight. I may need to jettison something from my laptop bag to compensate, like the two AA batteries I keep in there for whatever reason may arise.
1. Scrollball is as responsive as the original. That is a good thing. I expect that, as with the original, I will need to harshly clean this one with baby wipes every two weeks to keep it functioning. That, or stop picking my nose and then immediately using the mouse/scrollball.
1. Side-buttons are much tighter than the original. I’ve read (and a friend has mentioned) that the side-buttons on their wired MM were so tight as to essentially be unusable[1], but mine were actually so responsive they tended to go off at times I didn’t want them to. Maybe this is what they’ve been referring to, or maybe it’s just newness.[2] Or maybe they’re jerks.
1. The tracking in general was, until a few minutes ago, awful. Not when compared to Mighty Mouse v.Wired, but in general… as in, to the point of near-unusability. I went into photoshop in order to draw a “straight” line I could paste in here (expecting it to turn out as a sawtooth sine wave), but… then everything started working. Stay tuned, I guess.
1. Urgh - the retuuuuuuurrrrrrnnnn of blluuuuuuuuuetoooooooth keeeeeeyyboaaaarrrddd goingggggg ouuuuut toooo lunnnnnnnch occasionallyyyyyyyyyyy. I guess one wireless mighty mouse is, indeed, one wireless device too many in the pan.

[1] Unless willing to crush/destroy the mouse in the process, which is a funny, sort of corner case of “use”, I guess.
[2] Or maybe said friend, who will be nameless here as to avoid shaming, has the hands of a four year old girl-child

July 24, 2006

[tuaw] “Bluetooth Mighty Mouse coming to a Mac near you”

Filed under: Apple, Tech — rshangle @ 7:10 pm

Geeze, finally.

I was a late jumper re: the Mighty Mouse bandwagon, but since locking in I’ve never looked back. The scrollerball is OOTT[1].

And on the topic[3] - re: said Mighty Mouse scrollerball, and the inevitability of it getting dirty and no longer working:

1. Acquire electronics-friendly moist towelette (ex. monitor-cleaning cloth)
1. Use it to firmly and repeatedly wipe across the scrollerball again… and again… and again…
1. … and again…
1. … until function resumes.

You’ll know (good) things are happening when crud starts to come off of the ball and get picked up by the towelette. Trust me[2].

[1] One of those things.
[2] Caveat emptor.
[3] And this is discussed a lot in the comments for the TUAW article

July 21, 2006

They always know

Filed under: Apple, Data Control — rshangle @ 5:32 pm

They being hard drives, the thing to know being when to fail in order to cause maximal TFDL[1].

I don’t mean to assign hard drives some unwarranted malevolent intelligence — it’s always a bad time.

expd dell

Depending on the level of rigor involved in a data backup process, a lost drive is (for most home users; I’m talking about for human beings, not companies - that’s another story) a time-consumer as you replace the drive and recover the data.

If you’re not so on top of the data protection thing, then the impact can range from inconvenient (time lost reloading everything / recreating lost data that is re-creatable) to expensive (lost music from iTunes music store) to catastrophic (lost pictures from honeymoon that existed only on that drive; just a random example).

Given that I spend half of my professional life thinking about data protection (and the other half thinking about storing/managing data before it gets lost, then recovered; hooray!), it would be a cobbler’s-kid-foot-bare-thing if I didn’t have nominally effective practices in place for protecting critical data. Since my office is my home, this really applies to everything. 2x.

And trust me, I do have policies, and procedures. They’re not as robust as the ones I build and sell to companies, but I don’t have hundreds of thousands-to-millions of dollars to spend on data protection, either.

So I’ll tell you a secret, for free.

Every ten minutes, my PowerMac G5 looks to see if my PowerBook17 is on the network, after determining that the process I am now describing is not already happening.

If G5, which is called trogdor finds the laptop, which is called sm, then it connects to it and starts copying work-related files that have changed (since trogdor is really the main repository of all data, and sm only “checks stuff out”, and brings it all back home.

Trogodor also has about 1.5TB of disk space on it, and sm only has 80GB. Which is another reason why this is this way.

The system works pretty well. Mostly.

Which is why when the hard disk on my PowerBook17 began failing in the middle of a data migration process (getting everything off it in preparation of wiping it and giving it to my wife, my new (and awesome) Mac Book Pro having arrived the day before), I wasn’t particularly concerned about the work-related data on it. Or my writing, or receipts related to stuff I bought on the web, or a ton of other crap. It was all backed up to the mighty trogdor. On more than one physical drive, in some cases.

What I didn’t back up, though, because I am a f’ing idiot, are the honeymoon-related photos that have been sitting on the PowerBook, and only the PowerBook, for the last month or so.

Now, normally all digital photos in the house are imported through my G5 (trogdor), where there is a policy to (you guessed it) back the photo repository up to two separate hard drive automatically, daily.

The whole honeymoon photo thing… the photos were imported into the PowerBook (mid-honeymoon… mid-ocean, actually: we were on a cruise, as I’ve been very slowly describing in these pages; the PowerBook was with us, and the G5 obviously wasn’t)… the PowerBook came home, my wife began immediately turnings the imported photos into books within iPhoto, yada… it just sort of… getting them into the G5, and therefore into the backup policy, just didn’t happen.

So now, since there is a set of data of immeasurable value on this failing disk, I am faced with doing something I would normally never do: roll up my sleeves and become sort of computer forensics-ist in order to recover this, urp - the pain, priceless data.

Some people would be thankful that their work (work-work and non-work-work, i.e. hobbies) stuff is safe and sound. I am not one of those people. I am an animal — a data animal.

What would I do normally, you ask, were all the data confirmed safely backed up?

1. Computer to Apple store
1. “AppleCare. Hard drive. Replace. Ball peen hammer.”
1. fin

Why didn’t I, say, at least post the honeymoon pictures to a web site or something? I messed up. Simple as that.

Moving on / taking action

Ok, on to coaxing data off a dead/dying hard drive that wants to take the data with it to Davey Jones’ (Casey Jones’? Who was in the Monkees?) locker. Things of note:

1. The drive, which is a Toshiba 80GB laptop drive, is not mountable in the Finder. It has a journaled HFS+ partition. That’s it.
1. The drive won’t pass a fsck_hfs (broken sibling link), which means that it’s not going to pass Disk Utility, which is basically a shell into fsck
1. DiskWarrior doesn’t see it. TechTool Deluxe doens’t see it.
1. The finder does indicate, when i put the laptop into Target Disk Mode and plug it into my G5, that an unrecognizable disk is now on the system, what should it do? I tell it to ignore.
1. The drive is not making any grinding / cackling / drooling sounds inside the case; in fact, that whole side of the laptop (the left side) is rather cool, which leads me to believe (at least part of the time) it’s not even spinning up.
1. S.M.A.R.T. (drive auto-diagnostics) on the drive indicate a status of “failing”. No sh*t. That technology sells itself.

Point 4 above qualifies as a very, very faint heartbeat on our patient, so I’m willing to take a (benign) whack at recovery before I send the laptop off to DriveSavers or the like to do their expensive magic.

Since all the jelly-coated Apple tools (provided and 3rd party) that I’m aware of either ignore this drive or can’t do anything with it in its current state, I need to see if there’s any way I can get the data off, on to a more stable (i.e. not-failing) media, for further analysis.

What will I do with the data then, since it looks like at a minimum that the directory on the drive has been cooked? I really don’t know, but we’ll worry about that later. Now, I want to get the data off the drive. I just want it off. It could turn out that the current state of accessible 1s and 0s on the drive is worth a pile of steaming excrement. I just want it off. The warp core is breaching; all the crew on the cruiser may already be dead, but we’re beaming them off. Just in case. I can’t believe I just used a Star Trek analogy; you can see what the stress of this situation is doing to me.

fsck says chunks of the filesystem directory are toast. This means tools. Real tools. Man-tools: block-level tools. Thank dog OS X is UNIX.

Some people have been saying good things about GNU ddrescue, which (from what I can tell) is basically the UNIX dd command combined with some sort of retry&log system, so that when used with failing drives, when the program (inevitably) experience failures during a dd copy process, the log can be used to determine the point of failure and pick up at that point after the drive has been reset / given smelling salts. A checkpoint, if you will.

Whatever. I’m not one to look too deeply into things before charging ahead. I download and compile ddrescue.

>trogdor-5:~/Desktop/ddrescue-1.2 rshangle$ sudo ./ddrescue -v /dev/disk6s3 “/Volumes/Backup0000-0000 1/MyVolImage.dmg”
“/Volumes/Backup0000-0000 1/MyVolRescue.log”
>Password:
>
>
>About to copy an undefined number of Bytes from /dev/disk6s3 to /Volumes/Backup0000-0000 1/MyVolImage.dmg
> Starting positions: infile = 0 B, outfile = 0 B
> Copy block size: 128 hard blocks
>Hard block size: 512 bytes
>Max_retries: 0 Split: yes Truncate: no
>
>Press Ctrl-C to interrupt
>Initial status (read from logfile)
>rescued: 7222 MB, errsize: 914 kB, errors: 5
>Current status
>rescued: 19471 MB, errsize: 914 kB, current rate: 3080 kB/s
> ipos: 19472 MB, errors: 5, average rate: 3420 kB/s
> opos: 19472 MB
>Copying data…

Ok, I know that looks… marginally allright and sort of depressing at the same time. It’s copying the data directly from the drive at the block level (bypassing the filesystem) and dumping what it finds into a file called MyVolImage.dmg.

What you don’t see is that periodically the drive just hangs/locks (as failing drives are wont to do), which means I need to control-c on ddrescue, shut down the laptop (which is in target disk mode), wait a bit, turn it back on (with T held down, for target disk mode), re-attach it to my G5 (where this is all running), and then restart ddrescue. Well, restart is the wrong word — continue. Remember that log I spoke about.

So far we’ve hit about 5 (as you can see) non-recoverable drive errors in 20 or so GB. It’s a pain in the ass, but if I have to experience 4x as many on the path to getting these pictures (if nothing else) off the drive, it will be worth it.

There we are for the moment - we are in scanning mode. ddrescue is churning away. Stay tuned.

and, if this works out, i’ll post all the honeymoon picts to the site. promise.

[1] total f****ng data loss
[2] and, in parallel once that’s done, I want to take the powerbook to the apple store and have a genius replace the drive so I can get to the business of getting the machine operational again

rds macbook pro warped tour - part/day 2

Filed under: Apple, ignoble ranting — rshangle @ 12:54 pm

summary:after 2 days light use, computer not so hot as to warp, way too hot for infants to use practically

I’m not a huge puss, allright? I’ve dealt with the rigor of extreme heat on a PowerBook 12″ gen 1… and a PowerBook 17″ gen 2 (currently with failed f****g hard drive I’m attempting to salvage honeymoon pics from; another story). I have the burns, I’ve felt the heat.

All day, all night, I’ve felt, the heat.

Felt, felt, felt, felt the heat.

This MacBook Pro 17″, however, is the first system I’ve had where I can literally say it’s burned me.

Not like “heh, wow… that computer’s really warm || hot!”. As in, “ow!” followed by (several minutes later), “Damn… it still hurts.”

Know what that’s called? A burn. So I now know not to touch any exposed metal in the roughly 9pm-12midnight quadrant of the laptop’s deck (in other words, any exposed metal around the MagSafe, left speaker, the bar above the keyboard F-keys, and ports on the left side of the system).

Really fast, though. Clean. Parallels is great. We’ll deal with that later.

Now, we’ll do the tale of the temp:

1353
Wed, 2PM. In-use 2.5 hrs. Hot, but not too hot

d18pm
Wed, 8PM. Woah! That left processor is running a little hot. maybe that stabilizer’s broken loose again. R2, see what you can do with it.

d1-11pm
Wed, 11PM. Throttle down, throttle down.

note - overnight, i turned the MBP off to avoid mid-night apartment-burnings

d2942am
Thursday, 10AM. WAAUUUUUGH!

day 2 noon
Thursday, noon. Whatevs.

the real tale 2 days
two days of heat: the tale

I’m realizing now I need to be able to graph this against disk / cpu activity. stay tuned.

So, day 2 verdict: laptop operates dangerously hot[1], will burn you[2], but after two days of moderate use, has not burst into flames or popped like a kernel of popcorn.

In totally related news, though, my powerbook 17″ (gen 2)’s hard drive has eaten it while migrating data to the new machine (while performing a backup to a network share on my g5, actually, but same diff). That’s another story, but perhaps the point being… what’s going to happen to MBP17 when I actually start running the drive and processor at full power, as opposed to having it sit idle?

Looks like we’ll find out, as soon as I can find a clear way to map disk io, cpu activity and temp on one matrix. CHECK-1!

And finally, as a side-note, I don’t think I’ll be closing the lid on this one, letting her go to “sleep”, then throwing her in the laptop bag. As absurd as this sounds, I think I’ll be shutting this one down before putting it in enclosed spaces. Just to be safe.

And, really finally, just as I’m about to hit “save” on this, the XP instance under Parallels just rebooted… of its own accord. Again, that’s another story. Stay tuned. hot!

[1] I realize this is non-quantified, since I don’t know what “too hot” means from a design spec or a practical failure perspective.
[2] Which in my book doesn’t really differentiate it much from the 17″ PB.

## update ##

Courtesy of Neil, a debate rages over on an Apple support forum as to whether resetting the PMU (power management unit) can have a hand in fixing too-hot MacBooks and MacBook Pros.

I’ve followed the procedure (because I’ll do anything for laffs). We’ll see what happens.

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