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Mar 14

No More Sad Mac!

Posted on Friday, March 14, 2008 in Apple, Leopard, OS X

Two and a half years ago I popped into the Apple store in Des Moines and walked out with a 1.5ghz G4 Mac Mini. It wasn’t a rash purchase. I had planned on buying that particular model. It took over desktop duties from my SUSE 9.x Linux box I had built a couple of years prior. I needed something that could run the photography software I wanted to run, and I wasn’t willing to go back to Windows. It has served me well for two years. It has been run hard and put away wet frequently. A memory upgrade to the max 1Gb in the first year gave it some breathing room, and two external Firewire drives provided backup and archive space. I had been weighing the idea of replacing the mini with a new Intel Mac for many months. I was torn between a MacBook Pro and a low-end Mac Pro. Finally, in December ’07 I purchased a 15.4″ 2.2Ghz MacBook Pro. Portability won out over raw power. The day after I brought the MBR home, my mini died. Unwilling or unable to boot up. I took it to the local Kansas City Apple store and they confirmed my worst-case scenario: dead logic board, $450. I couldn’t justify spending that much money to fix a $600 computer. So, I took it home, still dead, and starting looking for alternatives. I found a company, DT&T Computer Service, that advertised $225 logic board repairs. I boxed up the mini and off it went. Weeks passed. And finally, 5 weeks and $240 (with shipping) later, my mini is back and running! In over 26 years of owning a large variety of computers, this was the first time I have ever paid to have one of them repaired. That alone was a strange feeling. But, stranger still was how much I missed having my mini on my desk. I had backups of everything on it, so there was no danger of data loss. I had a new Mac that was faster, portable, and sleeker looking. I guess I just wasn’t quite ready to give up on the mini. Now it’s home, getting a Leopard upgrade, preparing to become my wife’s ‘new’ computer, replacing her worn out HP laptop. Hopefully, it will live a long life and serve as force for good against Windows.l

Jan 13

Hand cart on the (Ruby on) Rails

Posted on Sunday, January 13, 2008 in Leopard, OS X, programming, rails, ruby

In my previous post I detailed my problems getting NetBeans 6.0 to use the native Ruby installation on OS X Leopard. So, we pick up the story with that issue resolved.

Ok, time to create a new Rails project and get started. I go through the standard steps in NetBeans and am informed that there is a problem with my gems directory, and NetBeans thinks I am using Rails 1.2.6, instead of the 2.0.2 I installed. The error message sends me off the NetBeans wiki for details. So, off I go to figure out how to add GEM_HOME and GEM_PATH to my environment, so NB will recognize my gems directory. After about 30 minutes of surfing for answers I find the right combination of pages that allow me to piece together the answer.

I’m now running with a freshly created Rails project, complete with a database, with tables.

NOW, I can start coding. So far, the NetBeans/OS X combination has been more frustrating than it should be. Hopefully, I’ve completed all of the initiation rites.