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A new computer takes some time to get right (even with four Xeon cores)

I guess I forgot to mention on this blog that I pulled the trigger and bought a Mac Pro. It's a thing of beauty not only in terms of its looks, but in its power. I mean, I'm blown away. 

As much as I've always loved getting some shiny new hardware to play with, I have to admit that the transition to the new computer is always a something that takes more time than you like. It takes even more time when you're changing platforms entirely.

But in this case, I guess it hasn't been all that painful. I moved all of my iTunes library, which was super easy because of the awesome backup features in iTunes 7. They actually work between platforms. I also moved all of my photos over so I can use iPhoto. Since I had no real solution in the first place on Windows, this was a lot of fun and I made a bunch of new albums. I can't believe I've collected some 3,600 photos since early 2003, when I finally went to having a digital SLR. It should be pretty easy to make dupes for Stephanie too.

Aside from all of my development stuff, the only two Windows programs I need to use are Microsoft Money '97 (don't laugh, it still does exactly what I need) and Quickbooks '99. I'll just install those in Parallels.

The only real question mark I still have is with regards to my backup scheme. I've been using IBackup for years, and with one account I can backup my desktop automatically and my Web server. Now I'm not sure how I'm going to handle that. There are plenty of Mac-centric services that also do this, the cheapest actually being .Mac, but I don't want to pay for another service on top of IBackup if I don't have to. I could use IBackup in Parallels to get stuff from my shared OS X folder, but that feels dirty. At a little over eight bucks a month, I might as well just bite the bullet and get .Mac, and enjoy the doc sync to my MacBook Pro.

Overall though, so far I'm really pleased with all things Mac. I'm planning to do a little HD video experimentation on the nuclear machine later this week or next, and I'm anxious to see just how fast four Xeon cores will crush H.264.

Comments

Marc Brooks said:

Have you considered using FolderShare?

https://www.foldershare.com/

# October 3, 2006 1:04 AM

Stephen said:

Hmm, as i read this blog post i was thinking "this computer sounds like it costs an arm and a leg"... surprisingly i see it's only an arm ($2500)... nice purchase...

I'm waiting until the notebook's come in Core 2 Duo, then i may pull the trigger on my first Mac purchase

# October 3, 2006 11:12 AM

Jeff said:

I don't remember where I saw it now, it was a mainstream PC rag's Web site, but the difference in performance between Core and Core 2 isn't enough to merit waiting. Do it now. ;)

# October 3, 2006 12:23 PM

Scott said:

Why not just get a firewire external hard drive and use SuperDuper! or something to back up to? Once Leopard comes along, the external drive should work great with Time machine anyway.

# October 4, 2006 4:37 PM

Jeff said:

Because that doesn't help me if my house burns down.

# October 4, 2006 6:45 PM

Stephen said:

This news might apply to your new computer:

http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/35313828/

# October 10, 2006 9:15 AM

lukas said:

Have you tried, or seen anyone try, Visual Studio 2005 on parallels? I need a new machine for freelance programming, and I need a new machine for home use. The latter seriously wants a Mac, the former need requires serious performance though.

# October 31, 2006 10:50 AM

Jeff said:

Yes, I use the entire suite of development products via Parallels on a MacBook Pro and Mac Pro, no issues at all.

# October 31, 2006 11:08 AM
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