Tag Archive for 'macintoshes'

die einzwängenden Finger!

Title is the output of feeding Apple’s Translation Widget “The Cramping Fingers.” When translating the phrase back to English with the same widget, I get “the in-squeezing fingers.” Things like this keep me from worrying that machines will rise up to kill us in the near future.

I spend a disproportionate amount of my day in front of a computer, so I’m a bit of a keyboard geek. If I’ve got to use something for hours at a time, I want it to be top quality. For me and many others, the epitome of keyboards were the IBM Model M and Apple Extended Keyboard/Apple Extended Keyboard II, the latter of which was the keyboard I had on my first computer.

Quoting Steve from the Apple Extended Keyboard II page linked above, these keyboards are relics from a time

when building a keyboard actually meant building something that you could, in an emergency, reliably use as a blunt weapon.

Most modern keyboards would shatter if you attempted to use them to defend your person, and that’s just not acceptable. But I would wager that for most, it is not these relics’ value as melee weapons that makes them desirable. Rather, it is the mechanical, spring-based key-switches. These, as their name implies, spring back up immediately after they are pressed, which gives a much more solid feel–the user knows when a key has been hit, because it’s already trying to come back up.

Theoretically, and anecdotally in my usage, this results in a more pleasant typing experience, as the user expends much less energy pressing the keys, resulting in less hand strain and perhaps faster typing. By contrast, most modern keyboards use very cheap rubber/silicone membrane switches that are, for lack of a better word, mushy. There’s no real response in many of these cheap boards when you hit the keys, making it difficult to train your muscles when to know to stop, which means much wasted, superfluous effort and mashing.

There are a number of options for getting high quality mechanical keyboards today. I prefer the Das Keyboard. face-profile.jpg Out of all the boards I’ve seen currently in production with mechanical switches, it’s one of, if not the, sturdiest, and as such serves very well the keyboard-as-blunt-instrument-of-destruction ideal. It’s built with high quality mechanical switches, and doesn’t try to hide the fact that these switches are loud. When I really get going, it sounds like a tiny airplane is taking off, which I like to imagine impresses onlookers and passerby. Plus, there isn’t a single keycap anywhere on the entire keyboard. I’m enough of a nerd that I count that as a feature. And here’s a neat thing that those classic keyboards didn’t have: the keys are weighted. It takes less pressure to hit the keys meant for your pinky than for your pointer finger, etc. There’s even a nice chart on the we site illustrating the pressure zones. Cool! (Bonus: Casual usage of your computer by those just passing through is discouraged, as newcomers are thoroughly intimidated, even if they already know how to touch type. It’s kind of funny to watch.)

The keyboard does have two caveats potential buyers should be aware of. First, it’s rather expensive: 69-80 dollars retail, depending on where you shop. I don’t consider this a negative, per se: it’s a high quality piece of equipment and should last for years. You get what you pay for.

Caveat deux is a genuine negative, one I hadn’t discovered until tonight. The Das Keyboard is designed for Windows devices but since it’s just a USB keyboard there’s nothing to stop you from using it with a Mac. However, two of the key mappings are hardwired to be in the wrong place for a Mac user. Specifically, the Option (Alt) and Command (Windows)* keys are swapped. Since the latter is the key** to 95 percent of all keyboard shortcuts on the Mac, this is a bit of a problem, though it’s certainly not insurmountable. Quite the contrary, the solution is simple: using the Control Panel, it is very easy to tell the system to read a Command signal as Option, and vice versa. I did this several months ago when I got the keyboard and never thought about it again.

But as I mentioned in my last post, we’re moving, I’m writing this from a hotel room, and my svelte Das Keyboard is in the back of a Jeep Rubicon somewhere, which means I’m using my laptop’s built in keyboard again. I didn’t think much of this until I tried to Select All and instead pasted a symbol. Switching the key signals produced the proper behavior on the Das Keyboard, but left the internal keyboard with the key signals incorrectly swapped. Annoying. It took me ten minutes to realize the keyboard circuits hadn’t literally been crossed, and another ten to find the setting to switch the keys back, and thanks to my muscle memory and the odd contortions necessary to do keyboard shortcuts when the Command key is in the wrong place, I was left with a not insignificant bit of finger cramping. Double plus ungood.

This was easy enough to fix, but as far as I can tell, I have to go in and reset it manually every time I need to plug in/unplug my external keyboard. This is, obviously, somewhat lame, and could be fixed with a very simple keyboard driver from the makers of Das Keyboard, but they, like many other hardware vendors, do not believe full Mac support is worth their time, so I find myself faced with an experience that is overly clunky. Perhaps I can learn enough AppleScript to automate the setting changes? I shall have to ruminate on this. Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Peace out.

*Yes, I know Command and the Windows key are not direct analogues, but for the sake of this discussion, they’re close enough.
**Pun!

[tags]keyboard, keyboards, apple, apple extended keyboard, apple extended keyboard 2, apple extended keyboard II, ibm, ibm model m, model m, das keyboard, mac, macintosh, macs, macintoshes, os x, mac os x[/tags]

Mac Attack…

I really should just give up on this whole post-once-a-week commitment. It’s quite obvious I’m no good at it.

At any rate, some neat things from around the Mac web that have caught my eye over the last few days.

The Look

In honor of Halloween, here’s a guide (with prices) to dressing like Justin Long, the guy that plays the Mac in the “I’m a Mac” commercials. Almost decided to do this for Halloween, but I a) have no where to be that anyone will see me b) will not be getting any trick or treaters, and c) in the absence of (a) and (b) am not willing to spend $157.97 for the ensemble. Looking that casual should in no universe ever cost that much money.

Thought: Apple should sell the Justin Long clothing set at Apple Stores. Booku* bucks from fanboys with more disposable income than me (which is quite a lot of people, I think).

*Is this a word?

Mind Over Matter (and Reality)

Also of note is an eloquent fellow named Chris, who somehow managed to get the graphpaper.com domain and keep it (surely in defiance of the processed paper mega concerns and their armies of lawyer ninja), who frames the issue of switching from Windows to Mac in terms of a 19th century sensory experiment. Thanks to John Gruber over at Daring Fireball for the reference. Quoting:

In 1896, a scientist named George M. Stratton, showing an ingenuity that must have seemed like madness at the time, conducted a fascinating experiment in visual perception with himself as the subject. He constructed a pair of goggles with special lenses that inverted his view of the world by 180 degrees, causing him to see everything upside down, as if he were standing on his head, continuously. He wore the goggles for many days, never once opening his eyes without wearing them (he would shower with his eyes closed, for example). 

The article uses this experiment as a metaphor for the adaptability of computer users to new interface paradigms, and quite handily illustrates how easily and quickly the mind can reprogram itself as needed. I’ve thought for a long while that moving from one computing platform is as easy as sitting down and using your new device, but the fact remains that there are a large number of users out there who won’t consider moving from one operating system (or web browswer, or email client, etc.) to another, regardless of possible benefits, because of some sort of fear that their computer will become unusable for them and they won’t be able to get any work done and in the worst case something might actually explode. Articles like this emphasize the fact that while, yes, there is an adjustment period in any change, it is surprisingly short and painless.

And, so far as the Mac vs Windows debate goes, newer Macs all are able to run Windows out of the box, so retreating to something familiar is possible. Most often, though, one hears of Mac converts buying a new machine with the idea in their head that they’ll dual-boot or virtualize Windows in the begining so they don’t have to completely leave behind what they had before, and then finding themselves so enamoured with the Mac OS that they never enter Windows again, and go on to lead happier, more productive lives, with more disco parties.

Okay, so maybe part of that sentence might be made up. But in all seriousness, switching operating systems isn’t the Herculean task many make it out to be, similar in proportion to attempting to learn a new language by parachuting into a foreign country with no translation tools at all on your person and hoping for the best. It’s much closer to switching from a manual car from 1950 to a modern automatic. The car’s function remains basically the same, but there are a few minor details you’ll have to master to get the most out of it. And to continue to this obviously pro-Mac metaphor to its logical conclusion, once you do master those details, you’ll be much happier. Which brings me to my next item of interest…

Mac OS X 10.5 in (Roughly) 48 Hours

The next major version of Mac OS X, codenamed Leopard, will hit the globe at large on Friday. This is exciting news. Other, better sites have been putting a lot of effort into covering just why this new OS promises to be more awesome than Betty Boop with an uzi and a wakizashi fighting undead zombie hordes (okay, so that might just be my version of awesome, but bear with me here), and I’m not going to try to duplicate that effort here. Rather, allow me to refer you to the guided tour on this page.

That’s all for now. Later days.

[tags]mac, macintosh, macs, macintoshes, apple, justin long, halloween, switcher, switching, mac os x, os x, mac os x 10.5, os x 10.5, leopard[/tags]

Leaving Microsoft Word

For years now I’ve wanted to leave Microsoft Word–it’s the kludgiest app on my Mac that I use regularly, and it always feels like I’m using a badly callibrated bazooka to

shoot at flies. I’m really interested in Pages 2 for regular writing and Scrivener for prose.

So it was with particular interest that I read Steven Poole’s very well written farewell to Word. Nicely written piece that I agree with 110 percent. I remember Word 5.1a on my old Macintosh Centris 610. It really was a great word processor to use because it stayed out of the way. Word 6 was, by contrast, a terrible disaster that no-one at Microsoft apparently actually used, and it only got worse from there.

[tags]mac, macintosh, macs, macintoshes, software, word, microsoft word, microsoft, apple, apple pages, scrivener, writing[/tags]

Mac Noir.

My family is, by and large, into antiques. One of my aunts actually works at an antique store (furniture, dolls, knick-knacks, a gorgeous blue-green 1950s bicycle hanging from the ceiling by chains that no-one’s bought in at least 12 years, etc.). I’ve never really been into this kind of antique quite as much, probably in part because I moved to Dallas (and away from the antique store) when I was seven. The fact that I’m a bit clumsy and tend to break fragile things if I’m not very careful also makes me less likely to want to be surrounded on all sides by expensive fragile things.

That said, as I’ve gotten older I’ve grown more of an appreciation for this kind of stuff, and my antique bug has always manifested itself in the form of a love of computer antiques (which I count as anything before Windows and the Mac became mainstream), which I love. Before the Windows/Mac hegemony, computing was really a lot more like the Wild West in terms of innovation and discovery of new technology than it is today, and part of me wishes I could’ve been around for that. It was surely an exciting time. I don’t get too nostalgic because I love my 21st century computer technology, but I quite regularly get jealous of those people who create their own personal antique machine museums. I’d have probably picked up an antique machine before, but I really have neither the money nor the space for such a hobby. I do have a How Computers Work book from the early 1980s aimed at parents wanting to buy their children computers, picked up from the antique store where my aunt works. It contains information on “microcomputers” that contain exciting new technology like “hard drives.” There’s even a bunch of BASIC listings, because that was the time when you pretty much had to learn to program to get the most out of your machine.

Too bad it’s not still that way. A lot of people would have a much better understanding of technology.

Anyhow, the reason I bring all this up is because John Gruber over at Daring Fireball* linked to a very well done set of scans of the original Macintosh User Manual. Take a look at that: it was the instruction manual sent with every single one of the original Macintosh 128k computers in 1984. You hear about how much more effort was put into things and how much nicer they were back in the day, but this is still kind of hard to believe. I mean, look at that. I’ve seen magazines that don’t look that nice. And now when you buy a Windows PC you’re lucky to even get a full restore disk included in the box**. Forget printed manuals. One of the downsides of transitioning from a hobbyist pursuit to a commodity, I fear.

So, anyone else have some good computer nostalgia stories/thoughts?

*This is, oddly, not the strangest name for a Mac related website. See Drunken Batman.
**You can make your own restore disks, but that’s hardly the point. I just dropped a several hundred (thousand?) on a new system, and I’m still expected to make recovery disks. (As a sidenote, Macs don’t include recovery disks. They include full system installation DVDs with recovery capabilities, which is even better. When was the last time you bought a computer that came with a full (not upgrade or restore) copy of Windows? Does anyone even sell computers that come with said full copies?)

[tags]mac, macs, macintosh, macintoshes, apple history, apple, marketing, book, manual, instruction manual, nostalgia, old tech, old technology[/tags]




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