3 weeks in… still going well
by danlor on Dec.25, 2009, under Uncategorized
So far this project has been a complete success. I have a very stable machine now. Here was my final parts list:
ASUS P7P55D EVO
Intel Core i5-750 Lynnfield 2.66GHz (Overclocked to 3.9 Ghz Stable, ~50C)
Thermaltake Ultra Extreme Rev C
120mm noctua cooling fan
SAPPHIRE Vapor-X Radeon HD 4870
LG DVD Burner Black SATA Model GH22NS50
ASUS USB-BT21 USB 2.0 Mini Bluetooth Dongle
Intel X25-M 80gb SSD drive
I don’t use onboard audio for my machines. I instead use an USB audio adaptor for my headsets. I may work on getting the onboard system working in the future, but for now I don’t have a use for it.
The machine is wicked fast, just as I hoped, and the video card appears to be working very well. All my games are playing great. Video transcodes are wonderfully fast.
defeat
by danlor on Dec.15, 2009, under Uncategorized
I was able to confirm this morning with netkas that 4770’s are still not working with the latest driver sets. For now it appears I’m stuck in slow with my old 8600. We’ll see how long I can take it.
more hackintosh
by danlor on Dec.14, 2009, under Uncategorized
Got the machine working well now. I had to give up for now on my 4770, although I plan to work on it more after i learn a bit more about what is going on. I swapped out my wife’s nvidia 8600 for my 4770. Its a bit slower, but it works great!! I’m sure she won’t mind XD.
A couple more things I have noticed:
1) make sure you are running in the mode you expect (64 bit vs 32 bit) Many of the drivers only work in one or the other. You can verify this under system profiler–>software
2) pfix doesn’t work right. Make sure you repair permissions with disk utility.
i5 hackintosh
by danlor on Dec.04, 2009, under Technology
I’ve been experimenting off and on for some time now with OS X on alternative hardware. My experiences has been somewhat mixed, as I generally don’t pick middle of the road hardware for the systems I build.
But since I have extra time on my hands these days, I have pushed further into it than before. I have been met with moderate success, although I would never recommend this process to anyone. Its cheaper to buy a real mac.
Here’s my config:
ASUS P7P55D EVO motherboard running 915 firmware.
ATI 4770 Family Graphics
Noteworthy sites for reference:
http://www.insanelymac.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=199411
http://osx86.sojugarden.com/installer/
http://netkas.org/?p=315
Tips so far: Watch your security settings. Repair permissions before every boot while building. PFix can help tons with this (found on the second site). Don’t burn media, its not worth the money or time.
I’m currently wrestling with my graphic card, as its not fully supported.
Windows 7… omg… it actually works
by danlor on Sep.01, 2009, under Uncategorized
After the loads of fun I have had over the years with vista, and Microsoft’s insulting mantra that the issues were all simply in our heads, I expected little from win7. After all the bullshit with project mohave and the smoke and mirrors I expected nothing but simple retread.
But things are looking up. I’m still on my first install off my first try, and things are still working. Most of the insanity that was vista is gone, although win7 still is in many ways just a proper release of vista. The dock (taskbar) is basically what quick launch should have been 10 years ago, and I find it a long overdue improvement over the useless task bar of previous years. The days of running 3-4 apps in long over and the new system handles 10’s of apps very smoothly.
That being said, win7 is still very shallow when it comes to the management gui. I had really hoped that MS could have pushed the new mmc interface all the way down in this release, but it looks like we still have a ways to go. For example… click start, hi-light “computer”, then click properties. We are presented with an easy to read, and organized panel of system information. But this is only a display. Click any of the links in the upper left, and you are thrown back into the over stacked disorganized tab panes that we have been digging through since windows 3. Don’t even get me started on why “Computer – Properties” is still seperated from “Computer – Management” even though they link back and forth to each other repeatedly.
Then there is the fact that contextually identical links with identical wording don’t take you to the same places.
Over all its a great release that should finally allow us to get off XP. That’s a good thing.
Total Telecom – Online ad sales open door to viruses
by danlor on Jun.16, 2009, under Uncategorized
Total Telecom – Online ad sales open door to viruses.
Don’t Click on banner ads!
After two full years… Vista is STILL not ready for prime time
by danlor on Nov.26, 2008, under Uncategorized
I’ve made no attempts to hide my frustration with vista, and the incredible stupidity shown by the management over at Microsoft. The latest court cases bear out much of what I thought all along.
Well, after two full years, and many patches and updates, Microsoft has announced repeatedly that all of Vistas out of the gate hiccups have been cleared… though they have never actually acknowledged that there was a problem in the fist case. It’s selling like hotcakes!!!
Nothing has changed. At all.
Today I began retesting our internal applications on vista to see how our vendor compliance has come along. We can’t take their word for it, because they lie as much as Microsoft. We have to test ourselves.
Unfortunately, I never got that far. The problems with Vista started immediately.
#1) DON’T CANCEL AUTOMATIC UPDATES. EVER.
If you do, you will run into a nasty little problem, where vista THINKS all your updates are installed. The remaining updates have to be forced into service. This is improved by the fact that the Windows Update GUI happily allows you to click the “Update Now” button, only to be given back a cryptic fatal error after timing out. Looking online reveals this to be caused by “me” having dared to setup my own update server. The problem was corrected by using two other cryptic windows commands that are not limited to vista. “wuauclt /detectnow” and “wuauclt /downloadnow”. Running these in series a few minutes apart will kick vista in the ass and get it going again. BTW, when executed, neither gives any feed back. You could type in “wuauclt /youmomeatspants” with no error at all.
#2) UAC IS STUPID AS STUPID DOES
Don’t store your app installers on your network. UAC STILL cannot comprehend this simple reality. Why? because windows fucking blows. Its really simple. You will love it. UAC runs under a different user context than you. When you run your installer, UAC is invoked in it’s own security context, asking if you really really want to run the installer. When you click yes, UAC tries to execute it for you. Here’s the rub… UAC CAN’T SEE your installer. It can’t run it. You will get an error telling you the file cannot be found… but why? Because… windows does not allow multiple security contexts to map to the same drive letters. Microsoft COULD resolve everything to UNC paths, but, there are major legacy issues with some installers requiring driver letter to install. So… you are just fucked. You have to copy installers to your local hard-drive before you can install. Yes my domain is setup to trust both my drive letters and the UNC paths to the installers.
#3) UAC SUCKS SOME MORE… and crashes your windows too.
So, I was curious to know why exactly my windows session was using so much memory. I opened the task manager, and clicked on the process tab. Since the window doesn’t show all processes by default, I clicked “show all processes for all users”…. nothing happened… so I clicked it again… so I clicked it five times fast… oh no.
I got a UAC prompt… that I accepted. Then I got another. Then nothing. Except a ding every time I clicked anywhere on my screen. FAIL. UAC was up… in another context… and my screen didn’t flip. GREAT!
#4) cannot connect to services remotely.
In another amazing stab at admins everywhere. Windows 2008 and vista REQUIRE your helpdesk admins to also have vista. Otherwise you cannot remotely manage the machine settings. You can connect into the console… but in some cases that simple isn’t possible.
#5) Admin tools!
Would you believe that vista was not released with an admin tool kit? at all? You could force an install of the 2003 tools, but they were unstable and buggy. Luckily a short while back, this was “rectified” by the RSAT installer that was released shortly after SP1. I went ahead and tried to install it today, and was happy to see that it went through without any errors. Then I tried to use it. Nothing. The add-ins don’t show up in mmc… there is no admin tools folder added to the start menu. The admin tools folder in control panel still is missing all of my admin tools.
Time to once again… delete my vista install… I’ll try again in two more years.
Bill Gates and Balmer – THIS is why people hate windows
by danlor on Nov.11, 2008, under Uncategorized
Leave a Comment :fail, microsoft, Technology, torture, Work more...New Data Center
by danlor on Nov.10, 2008, under Uncategorized
and plugin…
Causation
by danlor on Nov.06, 2008, under Uncategorized
“Every book I’ve read about a campaign is that the one that won, it was a perfect and beautifully run campaign with geniuses running it and incredible messaging, etcetera,” Mr. McCain said then. “And always the one that lost, ‘Oh, completely screwed up, too much infighting, bad people, etcetera.’ So if I win, I believe that historians will say, ‘Way to go, he fine-tuned that campaign, and he got the right people in the right place and as the campaign grew, he gave them more responsibility.’ If I lose,” people will say, “ ‘That campaign, always in disarray.’ ”
