Archive for March, 2008

Goodbye, iMac…Hello, Hackintosh

Posted by Matthew on March 26, 2008 at 11:00 pm

Hackintosh setup

Hello what?

As detailed in many places around the web (and to which an entire community is dedicated), a “hackintosh” is a computer built of off-the-shelf PC components that can, with just a little bit of tweaking, run the Mac OS X operating system. Ever since Apple made the switch to Intel processors a couple of years ago (and thus to a platform very similar architecturally to what every other computer vendor uses), this has been a growing community. Fed up with the iMac’s glossy screen and 4GB memory limitation (and partly because, as my wife repeatedly points out, I just always “have to have a project”), I finally jumped in myself.

I built myself a hackintosh, bought a Dell 24″ screen to be the primary display, installed the latest OS X Leopard (10.5.2), and now about 36 hours later I’m not missing the iMac one bit. I’ve been working on my web sites, editing RAW photos from my D40, watching movies, and basically doing everything I can possibly think of to stress-test it, and it’s been absolutely fantastic. For me, this fills a hole in Apple’s desktop lineup. The Mac mini is just too weak and can only run one monitor. The latest iMacs come with crappy-quality displays, at least for graphics work (they’re actually worse than the previous generation — something I didn’t know when I purchased the newer one because I just, you know, assumed that they wouldn’t actually downgrade something on a new model), and they’re limited to 4GB of RAM (I’m going to stick 8GB in my hackintosh eventually). Then from the iMac you jump up to the Mac Pro, which is very expensive and in reality is too much power for me. I don’t need a lot of CPU or GPU power — I just need lots of RAM and big, good-quality monitors. Basically, I’d be happy with a small Mac tower that fell somewhere in between the Mini and the Mac Pro.

For about $500-$600, this is what I bought (which, save for two cores, is very near a $2500 Mac Pro for most people’s purposes):

  • Gigabyte GA-P35-DS3R motherboard (if you don’t need as many SATA ports, get the GA-P35-DS3L for ~$25 less)
  • Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 2.33 GHz (these suckers are hugely overclockable — mine’s currently up to 2.8 GHz and hasn’t even gotten anywhere near hot); add about $150 and you can have yourself a quad-core 2.66Ghz
  • 4GB of RAM
  • 500GB SATA hard drive
  • Silent (fanless) Nvidia 7600GS PCI-E video card — bump up to an 8600GT for ~$40 if you care about gaming at all
  • Antec Sonata III whisper-quiet case and efficient 500W power supply
  • SATA DVD-RW drive

The install process for this particular hardware set, detailed in this thread, just requires a few extra package installations after the initial boot, and now everything works 100% just as on a real Mac. I’m really quite pleased. It was a fun project, and now I have a more powerful and more flexible machine than my iMac — and a bigger, far better monitor to boot.

I still love my MacBook Pro to death, and money being no object, yes a Mac Pro would be awesome. But I like getting my hands a little dirty, and this was very easy to do. Now of course as mentioned in every other post about building a hackintosh, it’s legally questionable — but I know many who have done this (including myself) buy a copy of OS X Leopard so then at least it’s somewhat morally justifiable (don’t steal OS X — it’s such a great piece of software, make sure Apple keeps developing it!).

If you have a hackintosh, have thought about building one, or have any questions about it, just post in the comments!

Gallery: Hackintosh build

Book recommendation: The Pillars of the Earth

Posted by Matthew on March 25, 2008 at 8:50 pm

It’s been far too long since my last post (things have been a little crazy at work), but I had to take some time to write a recommendation for one of the greatest books I’ve ever read (and its sequel): Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth. Apparently I’m a little late to the party with this one, but in my defense I actually did start reading this well before Oprah recommended it.

The Pillars of the Earth is a historical fiction by Ken Follett first published in 1989. Its genre deviates greatly from the novels by which Follett had become successful up to that point, and he was in fact — if not exactly discouraged — not encouraged to write it by his publisher and some friends. Most of the time, when a novelist tries to radically break out of their mold, it apparently doesn’t go so well. In the case of Pillars, nothing could have been further from the truth.

When I first stumbled across this book on Audible.com (I tend to listen to audiobooks more than actually read them, since I spend so much time commuting each day), the basic premise puzzled me: a story about the building of a cathedral in 12th century England. How could a giant, nearly 1000-page novel/40-plus hour audiobook be about building a church? However, the reviews were extremely positive and the ratings were ridiculously high, so I decided to give it a shot. It turned out to be one of the best books I’ve ever read.

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