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useful
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#Post 16 Nov 2008 10:21:52    Klicko (beta) Reply with quote

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#Post 15 Nov 2008 20:29:59    Re: Klicko (beta) Reply with quote

Klicko 1.0b4 is just out. It's a little smaller and, despite that, is localized into Portuguese.

I switched some stuff around so that any new localizations will add only two small text files to the app. Localizers, please tell me if you're interested.
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#Post 15 Nov 2008 17:18:49    Re: Klicko (beta) Reply with quote

Klicko 1.0b3 is out with some fixes. In particular, it now brings applications forward independently of the window type, and the "About" window has better text.

I think this is probably the best functionality I can get out of this application. The only addition I can think of would be a list of applications to exclude. Let's wait for some feedback on this...
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#Post 14 Nov 2008 19:14:12    Re: Klicko (beta) Reply with quote

OK, I found out why Klicko apparently wasn't running on the PowerPC test machine; accessibility was turned off there, and I forgot to check for it.

So I pushed out a second beta of Klicko. Please reload if you got the older one. Sorry...

And yes, it's sort of inspired by Wilhelm Busch's line:
Quote:
Wie lieb und luftig perlt die Blase/ Der Witwe Klicko in dem Glase!
(also quoted here.)
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#Post 14 Nov 2008 18:04:28    Klicko (beta) Reply with quote

Yesterday I, for the N+1th time, was annoyed at Mac OS X's click-through behavior. I'm not the only one (see also here, and a follow-up). Basically, I have several apps in the Finder's toolbar, and I constantly find myself either starting one of them by mistake, or losing the selected folder by accidentally clicking in the sidebar. Yes, easily recoverable, but annoying. I'd also like to have it off in other apps.

So I finally sat down yesterday evening and did something about it. The result is Klicko (click on the link to download the beta). Just run it, and click-through will be disabled for all apps while it's running. You can set it to start at login; quit to return to the old behavior.

Yes, I know. The icon isn't too good; suggestions are welcome. This is basically thrown together over a few hours, and I wanted first to get it out and see if others find it useful.

Niceties: while it's running, shift- or command-clicks will get passed through as usual, if you do want click-through at that moment. It does NOT inject code, hack running applications, or do any magic like that; it just intercepts clicks (or not, depending on the click).

Problems: this is a beta version. It might run on 10.4 (Tiger); the APIs were already there, but I'm not sure if they worked OK. I don't have a Tiger system anymore, so I can't test it. It's a Universal app so it should run on PowerPC Macs, since there's no machine-dependent code I can see; but in a brief test I ran on my sole remaining PowerPC machine (a venerable PowerBook G4), it didn't work at all. I'll be trying to debug it there over the weekend.

Meanwhile, on Intel Macs running Leopard, this should work. Bug reports welcome...
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#Post 31 Oct 2008 11:56:56    Re: More tradeoffs Reply with quote

Thanks to John Gruber for mentioning my recent analysis of the new MacBooks (and MB Pros).

From there, several other sites picked it up. The emphasis and comments on some were... interesting. Let's go into that a little.

The article at Wired has a somewhat sensationalistic headline (which was copied by others): "Killing FireWire on MacBooks Was Necessary". Well, a careful reading will reveal I didn't say so outright. I said that under the design conditions that were chosen there was no good way to include a FireWire port on the MacBook. Also, most of my arguments didn't touch on the FireWire port at all, and there were almost no comments about those; so I'll mostly confine myself to FireWire in my answers here.

By the way, the lack of the FireWire port on the MacBook doesn't necessarily mean that Apple is "killing" FireWire at all. Yes, Apple killed the floppy drive, ADB, serial ports and so forth; because no shipping Macs include these. Contrast to FireWire: two shipping laptops don't have the ports, all others have them.

The Wired article also features some feedback from iFixIt, whose pictures of the laptop's disassembly I'd linked to:
Quote:
IFixit's Luke Soules, who performed the disassembly of the MacBook cited by Brockerhoff, agreed with the engineer's assessment that there isn't room for a FireWire port given the new unibody design and motherboard layout. Soules added that it's also important to keep in mind that the new MacBooks are substantially thinner than their predecessors (.95" vs 1.08").


I spent some time reading all comments posted to the various sites. Some people, as expected, hadn't read my post at all, or not carefullly. After filtering out the noise, here's a list of points of view expressed in decreasing order: (percentages sum to more than 100% since some people scored in more than one category)

- 35% say Apple/Steve Jobs are idiots and/or just want your money and/or don't care as long as idiot Mac users pay. I don't know how to respond rationally to that, so I'll leave it to the specialists.

- 31% agree with my arguments, at least for the most part. Thanks.

- 25% say that Apple can do anything they want to, so they obviously didn't want to in this case. These were about equally divided between people disagreeing with the particular trade-off chosen (which is reasonable) and people of the "bah just jam an extra port in there, make it so" variety (who overlap a lot with the first crowd, above).

(Most of the following arguments suggest inserting a FireWire port. To make things shorter, I'd like to recall my previous comments about any such port needing extra board space in form of a PHY (transceiver) chip and filters, several watts extra power supply requirements, extra battery capacity, all implying in either much shorter battery life or increasing the size of the machine. Yes, Apple could use Sony's 4-pin connector, or leave the 6-pin connector unpowered, getting around part of the problem... but imagine the complaints!)

- 18% say Apple should have put an extra FireWire port elsewhere; on the other side, in front or on the back. Of course it's not possible to put anything on the back - the hinge precludes that - or on the front, as that would have meant cutting down a little on the battery (refer to these photos). Putting one or more ports on the side, near the optical drive, means moving or shrinking the speaker (see also my comment below on the security lock). Some people objected to my describing this as an expensive solution, no doubt thinking of the cheap ribbon cables used inside desktop PCs. Well, inside a laptop such cables have to be thin and shielded against interference, especially at FireWire speeds. Think of your normal FireWire cable... with the thinner body, there's little or no space to route that behind other components. In older laptops, Apple got partially around that problem by using very thin (and therefore, flimsy and expensive) flat cables.

- 15% say that Apple should have left off one USB port and put a FireWire port in its place. At first glance this sounds reasonable; port sizes are about the same, the functions are supposed to be about the same, and the existence of adapters like the USB->Ethernet adapter for the MacBook Air reinforce this opinion. (Many people also asked why Apple doesn't bundle or make USB->FireWire or Ethernet->FireWire adapters; see more on that below.) Then again, some were complaining about having only two USB ports...

- 12% say that Pro users should buy the Pro models. However, much of the controversy is either about Apple's definition of what "Pro" means, or about people wanting "Pro" features at "Con" price. It's easy to forget that these are just temporary marketing names for price points.

- 11% complain that Apple is putting form over function, and letting the designers run free. Of course that's Apple's shtick, so to speak (ahem), and a big part of their appeal. (And yes, it doesn't always work out fine.) But in my humble opinion that's not the case with the MacBooks.

- 8% want even more things: more(!) USB ports, two FireWire ports for chaining devices (perhaps the "consumer pros"?), an ExpressCard slot, or one or more "media card" slots. Unsurprisingly, most of these also belong into the "make it so" group; they want it all, but in a small cheap package.

- 7% say that Apple should have moved the security lock to the other side (where it indeed is, in the MacBook Pros), and put a FireWire port where the notch in the motherboard is. But moving the lock would also mean flipping the battery latch mechanism to the other side, which would mean having the lock just above the hard drive, moving the optical drive upwards, and leaving no space for the speaker.

- 5% would opt for leaving out the Ethernet port and inserting a FireWire port there (nearly all of these were immediately contradicted by people who do need Ethernet). The Air's USB->Ethernet adapter is a makeshift, since it can't attain gigabit speeds. All Macs (except the Air) do have gigabit Ethernet, so... (Yikes! Apple would be killing Ethernet!!!)

- 5% say that Apple should have made the MacBook thicker or longer, or made the battery smaller. Can you imagine Steve Jobs signing off on that?

The rest are miscellaneous ideas: using stacked ports, leaving out the optical drive, crowding the connectors closer together, combining two ports, and so forth; and fall under similar arguments.

A common thread in many suggestions is a misunderstanding, or perhaps just ignorance, of the technical details of USB and FireWire. While their areas of application overlap, the solutions they offer are different, and so are the protocols they use. USB is master/slave, FireWire is peer-to-peer. Converting one to the other isn't simply a matter of rearranging pins, or reencoding signals, as happens inside most video adapters; you'd need a fast processor and RAM to do that, and even so you can't replicate special functions like target mode or streaming on the USB side. You'll find very few such converters on the market, and they'll all have some limitations.

Finally, a frequent question is "why doesn't Apple just implement target mode on USB"? It's not that simple. On FireWire, target mode is just a software matter - since the interface is peer-to-peer, no chip change is necessary. On the USB side, target mode would imply switching the originating Mac from master to slave and using a hard-to-find A-to-A plug. Current USB chips don't support that, and connecting such a cable without the port being pre-switched would probably fry one end or both. The upcoming USB On-The-Go supplementary standard supports this over two new protocols and a new connector type; neither work over hubs, and it needs different PHY chips too.
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#Post 30 Oct 2008 07:09:34    Re: More tradeoffs Reply with quote

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Farewell Firewire, Nice Knowin’ Ya
The Mac community seems to be quite enraged about Apple’s decision the slowly get rid of Firewire on the new MacBooks. The newly-introduced smaller MacBook (13-inch) has no Firewire port whatsoever and the larger MacBook Pro (15-inch) only has a ...
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#Post 29 Oct 2008 15:39:24    Re: More tradeoffs Reply with quote

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Psystar Still At it - Now With Notebooks
Six months ago, Psystar entered the Desktop arena with a PC for $600 that could get your choice of Windows, Linux or Mac OSX. Of course Apple responded with a Lawsuit and Psystar countered. Every time we speculated Psystar is...
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#Post 28 Oct 2008 23:42:03    Re: More tradeoffs Reply with quote

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Rainer Brockerhoff talks about the New MacBooks
With the new unibody, for the first time, both lines use the same materials...
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#Post 20 Oct 2008 14:59:50    Re: More tradeoffs Reply with quote

Having looked at the new MacBooks it's time to examine the new MacBook Pros.To recap, my main point is that the MacBooks have been designed from the 13.3" form factor inwards, and that the MacBook Pro, having a 15" display and more internal space, is really an expanded MacBook.

(The contrast is, of course, to the usual view of the Pro version as being the "real" machine, and the consumer version as a maliciously crippled of that.)

Looking at the internal space is, again, instructive. Refer to step 9 on the ifixit site. Now compare this to step 11 for the MacBook. Notice that the depth of the battery/drive compartment is the same (the hard drive being a standard 2.5" model), so the Pro's battery is only a little over an inch wider than the MacBook's.

The optical drive is in the same position and is the same size. To its right from this angle, the motherboard is an inch wider and deeper than the MacBook's it also has another cutout for a second fan, necessary no doubt because of the Pro's extra power requirements. These, in turn, are a consequence of the larger display, added video processor, higher CPU speeds, and the extra drivers for the ExpressCard slot and the Firewire interface. Of course, all that needs a larger battery, as we've seen, and a beefed-up power supply/charging circuitry.

Look at the motherboard in step 20. The ports are the same, except for the inserted FW800 connector.The empty space to the lower left corresponds to the ExpressCard slot, which is actually below the board (check it out in step 24). As in the MacBook, there's no wasted space, and changing anything will involve some tradeoff where something else would have to be removed.

To recap, the added space made possible the added features. When the updated MacBook Pro 17" comes out, it will have even more space, and I can only speculate what this space will contain. As before, the larger display will need more power, so we'll have a wider battery - maybe 1.5" wider than this one. If they maintain the same depth, there'll be some empty space - good for conserving weight. On the other hand, they could sacrifice this space, either to get longer battery life, or to feed more circuitry - quadcore, anyone? And/or 8-16GB RAM?

By the same token, there'd be leeway to have either a second FW800 connector, or eSATA; perhaps both and/or a third USB port. I don't think that an SD slot (or other media slot) is in the cards, as Apple probably doesn't want to get locked-in to a particular format, and USB adapters are so cheap. I can't see Apple using any of the extra space for a full-size DisplayPort as they seem to be trying to pull the industry into using the mini size for that everywhere.

In a few weeks we'll see how the new MacBook Air looks inside; I suspect we'll see fewer screws and a similar motherboard layout.
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