...more recent posts
Got my new memory. I'll be curious to see what kind of performance difference there is in OSX with 512megs instead of 128megs. I'll report back. (And I'll repeat my plea: memory is cheap, cheap, cheap. Buy more. If you don't have at least 256megs of RAM you should definitely buy more. 256megs for an iMac costs around $60 and will make your computer much faster.)
No new PowerMac towers? They've got to come soon because that top of the line iMac makes the present towers look a little underpowered and expensive.
But I think the iMac is a homerun. $1299? Sure that's expensive for the entry level model - but that thing is powerful. Really powerful. Hopefully I can convince my friends Virginia and Steven to buy one.
The biggest surprise for me was the new top of the line 14 inch iBook. I definitely didn't see that one coming. $1799. Makes it kind of hard to justify the TiBook. This is just like the iMac/PowerMac problem. The consumer machines are so rocking that they will take a bite out of the professional lines. So I think it won't be very long (way before MWNY in July) that those machines get bumped up too.
I was really expecting a "one more thing..." release for the towers. I thought they'd be 1.2 Ghz, 1.4Ghz, dual 1.4Ghz G4s. The fact that this didn't happen makes me think that the G5 is coming, but wasn't quite ready. Look for a special event by the end of the month, or maybe a MacWorld Tokyo release. I had made H. wait to buy her new tower, and she's a little disappointed, but what could I do? It might have happened today. Soon hopefully.
So while it wasn't "way beyond" the rumor sites - frankly it wasn't anywhere near what some people were expecting - I think the iMac is right on. Priced well. Beautiful. And sure to be a big seller.
Lots of dreams last night. At one point I was hanging by both hands from a cable stretched between two high points over a river far below. I was way out in the middle and very unsure I could make it to either side. I kept thinking 'this can't be right... how do I get out of this?' And then I went through the whole 'maybe I'm dreaming?' thought process, and determined that, indeed, I was dreaming. But I don't think I woke up. The dream just switched to something else. So, again, I'm close to what I understand to be lucid dreaming, but it doesn't work out quite like I expect. I only gain a little bit of control, like I can nudge events one way or the other. But I can't just decide to fly around, or talk to old friends, or... um... anything else.
Later - and yes, I know it's ridiculous to dream about such things, but it has been on my mind - I was dreaming about Steve Jobs' keynote speech at MacWorld. This actually happens in a little over an hour, but I saw it last night. There was a big image of a chip and I kept looking at it and at first it said G5 and then I looked again it said G4, and then back to G5. That's the sort of clue - text that keeps changing when you look away and then back again - that is supposed to remind me that I'm dreaming, but I missed it. Seems like I can realize I'm dreaming much easier if I'm in a tight spot and the realization will serve to get me out of it. Anyway, then it changed and I saw a very tiny Mac that was somehow hooked up to a Nintendo GameCube. Or it was a Nintendo Gamecube. Yes, I know, my life is fascinating.
And then later I was hanging out with my friend Sarah who is still away out West. I miss her. When are you coming home Sarah?
Bare Bones Software has a special deal on BBEdit 6.5 from now until Jan. 11. $85, or $44 if you registered any past copy (even the old bundled ones that came with Dreamweaver.) Nice.
Alex took a beautiful picture of the midtown skyline from Central Park to go with his epiphany post.
This message board has answers to a lot of my OSX questions.
Well it's frustrating, but that makes any small amount of progress fun. I've spent the entire morning trying to get mod_rewrite to work correctly. That's a module for the apache web server that allows (the way I am using it) for me to send every request - regardless of path - to one central php script for execution. All my sites are built around this ploy so that I can have regular looking URLs that all call the same script which assembles the apparently static pages on the fly from the mysql database. Without mod_rewrite I'd have to have URLs like:
www.digitalmediatree.com/page.php?path=/jim/weblog/
which would call the php program page.php and pass it a variable (here $path) with the page path I want. Besides being ugly, some search engines don't like the '?' in the path and won't follow such links. With mod_rewrite I can accept URLs like:
www.digitalmediatree.com/jim/weblog or
www.digitalmediatree.com/treehouse/comment/1143 or
www.digitalmediatree.com/arboretum/archive/2001/12
and have each request actually invoke the same php script (like page.php) which can then parse the request path (/jim/weblog or /treehouse/comment/1143) and figure out what page to call from the database. These two examples produce the same result - either calling the central script in the URL like the first one and passing the page variable to it on the end of the URL, or using mod_rewirte to invisibly force the calling of the central script and having the script extract the variable from the request_uri environment - but the later way yields better looking URLs, and that turns out to be pretty important on the web.
Anyway, like most problems this one turned out to be fairly simple. But that doesn't mean the time to find a solution is short. Apple ships Apache with the 'AllowOverride' directive set to 'none'. This foils the use of .htaccess files for mod_rewrite rules. Changing the httpd.conf line to 'AllowOverride all' solves the problem.
The rest should be fairly easy but boring work of changing some file system specific paths from what they are on the linux server to what they need to be on my iMac. If I was a better programmer I would have had all of that stuff in some sort of configuration file so I didn't have to go back through all the individual php files. I'll try to implement that more tidy centralized system this afternoon.
Here's a couple of very off color balanced photos of 76 Clinton (Alias Restaurant.) These were taken on 12/27/2001, so work has progressed slightly since then. I believe 2/1/2002 is now the tentative opening day.
My local email client was not checking my digitalmediatree.com email account for the last few days (operator malfunction.) I think I'm caught up now. Sorry if you were temporarily ignored.
It's weird how Apple has root disabled by default. That threw me a little. In any case, I finally have apache, php, and mysql all running locally on my little iMac. 512 megs of additional RAM are on the way. I can't tell you how great this is. Being able to develop on my local machine - without FTPing every change to my server over a 56K dialup - is about the best thing I can think of.
Hopefully by the end of today I'll have this site replicated at home. And of course the ease of setting this up under OSX is making me think of strange distributed scenarios where every user has the full system replicated on his/her home computer, and everything is synched through a central server. That way traffic spikes (ha!) could be handled by a round robin configuration of all the users. I just wish that internet access was developing in such a way that casual serving was possible. Unfortunatley it seems like the big providers want you to consume but not serve. Still, there are always ways around.
One interesting thing I noticed is that even on my dial up (upstairs, not down in the office) my web server is accessible from the outside. Granted the IP address would change every time I got disconnected, so it's not very practicle, but I wouldn't have expected it to work at all. When I get something up here I'll post the IP address and you can try to hit my iMac from where you are. Because, you know, edge of the seat excitement is what we're all about.