Posts tagged rant

New MacBook performance decrease.

All over the blogosphere there are reports about the new MacBook and MacBook Pro’s performance decreasing when the battery is removed. By 37% to be exact. This hereby raises the questions: why did Apple allow this? What else did they do to ruin our lives? And WHO IN THE HELL CARES???

The Apple MacBook and MacBook Pro lines are laptops, or more specifically, according to Apple, notebooks. Laptops and notebooks are precisely this: portable computers. Why on earth are you removing the battery for anything more than maintenance? If you’re using your MacBook as a main computer (which I do, in fact) I’m almost certain that you don’t have to have the battery out.

I want to know who is a perpetual MacBook or any sort of notebook user who uses their portable computer without the battery in it that this 37% decrease in performance would really…REALLY affect. It doesn’t affect me, not only because I’m still using an ancient MacBook, but if I did, in fact, get myself a new MacBook Pro (hint hint xmas gift) the contacts for that battery would never see the light of day unless I was upgrading my RAM or Hard Drive. You know why? Because I use a portable computer the way it’s supposed to be used: in the office, out of the office, on the road, on a plane, in class, outside of class, at my friends house, at my neighbor’s house, at a client’s house, at my girlfriend’s house. (HINT: when typing most of these posts, I’m running on battery)

So shame on anyone who’s making a fuss about it.

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[11/23/08] TUAW

Today’s Mission: Computer Repair

dusty, eh?

dusty, eh?

I was given a mission today. Rid a computer of all it’s problems (without just buying a Mac), something I haven’t done in a while. What seemed to be the problem with the computer? (pictured above) Well, it was dusty as HELL, but it was also bogged down by viruses and other mal-ware. (typical Windows stuff) What I found to be most painstaking was that the power supply was completely unable to power my external drive if it needed to write something, thus causing data corruption to the backup.

Any computer tech will know my pain the second I say that it was, in fact, a Dell.

It wasn’t just the computer I was working on today. I fixed up another computer (practically the same model) and it gave me the exact same problem with the power supply. So, here’s the thought: why put a PSU in a computer (whether it be Mac or PC) that will not be able to power everything the computer can offer simultaneously? I understand that the computer is not meant for the power user, but for low-end consumers, but it should be able to work at it’s prime no matter who’s using it.

One could argue that the age of the PSU would slowly make it less powerful (small pun, lol), and I see where you’d be coming from, but I’ve got computers as old, if not older than these two I’ve worked on in the past couple days that can power more than they can.

My diagnosis: it’s one of two things: either it’s a bad PSU or it’s an ID 10 T error.

Just as no one will ever know how many licks it takes to get to the center of a tootsie pop, the world may never know why these power supplies are bad.

PS: I actually fixed them both completely, minus the PSU problem