alice in intel-land

Somebody had to be the first one at work to get one of the new Intel-based iMacs, so I volunteered.

Wednesday, April 12, 2006

Endnote

I tend not to use Endnote in my writing, although many colleagues do. So, today I upgraded Office on the Intel iMac to Office 2004 and installed Endnote 9. The installation went fine. I then opened a fairly large Endnote library that one of these colleagues provided. I noticed that one title had phonetic characters in it that didn't render properly, and was able to use the SIL IPA keyboard layout to fix them. Then I opened a document, provided by this same colleague, with Endnote based references in it, and was able to format a bibliography for it, using the Endnote plugin in Word.

So, within the limits of my ability to test it, Endnote works fine.

Monday, April 10, 2006

More on Matlab

The Matlab installation went smoothly, and, as recommended, I ran the benchmark subprogram. If I'm reading the output correctly, Matlab on this computer is faster than on anything else except an AMD Opteron 248 dual 2.1GHz box running SUSE Linux 9.0. Of course, the comparison's a bit unfair, because there are much more powerful machines available and not all machines were running the latest OS. The Macs, for instance, were running OS 10.3.8. I can't embed the benchmarks here, because the Matlab figure windows don't allow access to the print dialog, and I can't figure out how to access the PrintScreen function on a non-Windows keyboard. I've been flailing away using the Option key (which doubles as Alt) with the various function keys. But all I managed to do was close some windows I didn't want to close. And googling for how to mimic PrintScreen hasn't gotten me any place. Nor have I found any useful information on the Apple discussion forums, though I did find that HalfLife 2 is screamingly fast; this at least is consistent with the Matlab benchmarks.

The deed is done

I can now run Windows on my iMac.

Friday afternoon, I did the installation. More than anything else, it was tedious. First, I burned a CD with documents and preferences; I haven't been using the iMac a lot, as it's a test machine, but backups before doing something potentially destructive are always a good thing.

Then I downloaded the BootCamp Assistant from the Apple web site and printed out the installation guide. Following instructions, I downloaded and applied the Firmware Update, and I created the Apple Drivers CD.

Then it was time to partition the hard drive. It's very straightforward, as you just move a slider to determine the partition size you want. The only gotcha here is that you have to have your Windows partition be less than 32GB if you want it to be formatted FAT32 instead of NTFS. Why would you want the less-secure FAT32, you might ask? The answer is simple. A Mac, running Mac OS, can't write to an NTFS disk. So, FAT32 it is. Fortunately, I had read ahead in the installation guide, so I knew this.

The next step was the actual Windows installation. The BootCamp installation guide had very clear instructions that you must put Windows on the partition labeled C:, and the (blurry) illustration is as follows:

E: Partition1 [Unknown] 200MB
F: Partition2 [Unknown] 102400MB
Unpartitioned Space 128MB
C: Partition3 [Unknown] 27824MB


with C: highlighted. Nonetheless, there's a real temptation to select the first partition, or, at least, the first large partition, especially as that's what the Windows installer highlights by default. Reading the Mac support sites, it appears that at least one poster clobbered his Mac installation by doing exactly this.

I have to say that it's quite spooky to see the familiar Windows logo on a Mac and to hear the familiar Windows startup chimes. But there you are. All it takes is time. The Windows installation just chugs along. Then you run the updates and install virus protection, and download Firefox, just to be safe. But it works. The screen resolution is wonderful.

The only downer is that now that I'm back in MacOS, for some reason, the ethernet connection isn't working properly; I can't get an IP number from the DHCP server, no matter what I do. Fortunately, the wireless signal is strong enough that I'm not completely cut off.

Now to install Matlab and see what happens.

Friday, April 07, 2006

Here goes nothing!

Apple has announced a way to install Windows on an Intel-based Mac, Bootcamp. It's in beta, so, of course, stuff can go wrong. First, I'll download the package from Apple that includes all of the drivers and partitioning software. (Well, before that, I'll back up any stuff I actually need on this computer!). Then I'll run it, and install Windows XP Pro, which just arrived from CDW today. Finally, I'll try installing (and running) Matlab. It's going to be a blast!