hard-boiled

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This is another very strong argument against Flash incorporation to the iPad. It’s a little hard to see here but the Flash player in Safari is using well over 100 percent of the CPU time (Confusing for some because a CPU with two cores is represented as a 200 percent total. Flash is using half of my processors attention at the moment, never mind what Safari is already using…).

Under HTML5, the video is sent to the GPU (in this particular case) that makes quick work of playback. So playback is smoother and I have some power to spare.

No Flash compatibility in the iPad was a letdown for me initially. However, after looking at the results of switching to HTML5 for video playback on my own home machine, it’s clear that there are some efficiency issues with Adobe’s product.

Posted at 9:34am and tagged with: vimeo, video playback, html5, flash, 10.1 beta, snow leopard, cpu usage,.

I was going to grab another external to install this to but VMWare makes this so damn easy that it just didn’t make sense to go through all that trouble.

This should be a fun nerdy thing to mess around with during some down time.

Posted at 12:33am and tagged with: os x, snow leopard, server, install, vmware, fusion,.

I was going to grab another external to install this to but VMWare makes this so damn easy that it just didn’t make sense to go through all that trouble.
This should be a fun nerdy thing to mess around with during some down time.

Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard: the Ars Technica review - Ars Technica

Leave it to Ars to tell me more about Snow Leopard than I would otherwise care to know. There is a wealth of information to be found in those 25 pages if you take the time to read it. You will know more about OS 10.6 than anyone you know. Except for me, because I already read it. Unless you already knew everything in the article. In which case this wont interest you.

If the first thing that pops in your head is “wtf is Snow Leopard?” disregard this post immediately.

Posted at 7:52pm and tagged with: 10.6, arstechnica, mac, osx, snow leopard,.

Should you buy Mac OS X Snow Leopard? If you’re already running Leopard, then the answer is a resounding “yes.” If you’re still running Tiger, well, then it’s probably time for a new Mac anyway. When you buy one, it’ll come with Snow Leopard.

Great, another set of keys for people to hold when they boot a machine to troubleshoot another issue. Good times all around.

Posted at 8:02am and tagged with: osx, mac, snow leopard, 10.6, 64bit,.