News, Reviews and more from Australia's Macintosh Authority

Music: the bare necessities

I received a fascinating URL the other day for The Food Lifeboat . It’s a site that lists the basic food requirements you’ll need to live at home if a pandemic like bird flu hit Australia. Aside from my sometimes obsessive interest in contingency planning (yes, I filled my bath full of water just in case for Y2K), it got me thinking about music technology and surviving on the bare basics. Like most musicians who use their computer as a central part of the creative process, I’m damn effective at accumulating gear.

David Holloway | Apr 7, 2008

Leopard Server install disaster

I've had one of "those" weeks as we upgrade our network to fully integrate Leopard and, in the process, discovered some things that may assist others who are moving the same way. As has been mentioned many times elsewhere, you wouldn't have considered moving to Leopard on the server side before 10.5.2, but there are still problems even with this release. First, a little background on what we were trying to achieve. We'd upgraded student laptops, but left Open Directory at OS X 10.4.11 — preferring stability over the improved parental controls ...

Martin Levins | Apr 7, 2008

Wanna free book?

No Starch Press is trying a bold experiment to discover whether distribution of copyright content via peer-to-peer networks is harmful to sales or helpful. It's releasing two of its (well worth having) books in BitTorrent form, with no digital-rights management protection whatsoever. Either it will boost legitimate sales or it will kill them off. Either way, the implications of the experiment are huge for anyone who publishes content and needs to know how to make it profitable in the era of "information wants to be free".

Matthew JC. Powell | Apr 4, 2008

Control freaks -- Mac gaming

I’m finding it difficult to be a Mac gamer in a fundamental area: controls. Mac games can only ever be as good as the controls that developers can reasonably expect the player base to have, and in the case of Macs, the picture is … well … it’s not very good, really. First off, there’s the classic keyboard and mouse combination. Beloved of both the first-person shooter fan and the RTS obsessive, a good mouse and keyboard can be the difference between successfully leading a raid on the evil Horde and coming away with the glory, or being slaughtered in the first five seconds because you can’t, for example, press both mouse buttons simultaneously.

Alex Kidman | Apr 2, 2008

Help wanted: scribble thing

Nearly eleven years ago, Steve Jobs casually killed off pen-based computing initiatives at Apple. Now, it seems, he's bringing them back to life. If a job posting at apple.com is any indication (and it probably is), the company is looking to invest pretty heavily in pen-based computing sometime in the not-too-distant future, and it's looking to find some pretty high-powered talent to run it.

Matthew JC. Powell | Apr 2, 2008
Flip video

Flip it out

There was a minor blip on the web a couple of weeks back but you may not have noticed it. David Pogue — Mac reviewer extraordinaire for The New York Times — reviewed a small video camera called the Flip. It's funny, the camera has been around for a while already, but it seems that since its release in May last year everybody missed it in some sort of HD-induced rage. The easiest way to think of the Flip is as a digital camera that only takes those dinky web-style movies and doesn't take still photos at all. And so you ask the question, why wouldn't I just use a point-and-shoot digital camera instead? Well, because unlike a point-and-shoot camera, you don't need a manual. All you do to use the Flip is turn it on, start filming (by hitting the red button), and then, you guessed it, hit the red button when you're done. If you don't like that bit of footage you just captured hit the Trash button to delete it. And that's all there is to it. Literally. No mucking around with resolutions, white balance, focus, fade-ins or anything else that makes $1K-plus video cameras so complex.

Danny Gorog | Apr 1, 2008