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More about Jaguar on the 800 MHz iBook
Korin Hasegawa-John - 2002.12.18
I got lots of great feedback on Jaguar on the 800 MHz iBook from readers. Thank you to everyone who took the time to write me.
The greatest amount of feedback came from readers pointing out that you can drag things to the dock in any view that you bloody well please. However, this isn't strictly true. I have the Dock set to show/hide automatically, and while this option is checked you cannot drag any item from Column View to the Dock. You can drag items to the Dock from Column View if you grab the icon from the preview pane.
This problem seems very strange, and I hope Apple will fix it at some point. (For the record, OS X 10.2 seems to be working as expected now. Go figure.)
Another note came from David Weber, pointing out that I had mixed up multithreading and multitasking. OS X includes preemptive multitasking, which controls tightly how much of the processor time each task gets. OS 9 includes cooperative multitasking, meaning that any one program can bully every other program and take all of the processor's time. Cooperative multitasking is sort of like a free-for-all - each task dives for the pile and tries to latch on to as much processor time as it can.
Many people also responded to my strange iMovie bug and thought it might be due to bad third party RAM. I neglected to mention that these kernel panics occurred with the stock 128 MB configuration from Apple. Since adding the RAM, I have not tried to replicate the problem.
Onto more interesting things. I downloaded the Mac OS X 10.2.2 update last week. It seems to work nicely, and I didn't experience any other problems. The biggest new thing is a Journaling File System (JFS). Basically journaling uses an 8 MB cache space on your drive to insure that if you have a hard crash or have a kernel panic, the hard drive won't get corrupted.
In order to enable JFS, you must use the Terminal (ack! scary!). Here's what you have to do:
- Launch the terminal.
- Type the command sudo diskutil enableJournal / This will enable JFS on all of your volumes. You'll be required to type in your root password.
- The terminal should say report Allocated 8192K for journal file. Journaling has been enabled on /
- If you want to see other commands for the Disk utility, just type sudo diskutil
Close the terminal. JFS is now enabled. The only drawback is a decrease in write performance of 10-15%.
Another interesting thing that Apple has made available through their Developer page is IP over FireWire preview. It only works in Jaguar, but if you install it on two computers with Jaguar, you are able to connect them via a 6 pin FireWire cable for very fast file sharing or LAN gaming. With an iBook 800 and an iBook 600, transfer was about 130 Mb/s - better than ethernet, but not as fast as FireWire's potential of 400 Mb/s. A caveat: If you have lots of complicated network locations in your Network control panel, it will break them all. You will have to set them up again.
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Recent My Turn articles
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- More in the My Turn index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: iMac Core Duo, Jan. 2006 - The first Intel-based iMacs ran at 1.83-2.0 GHz, came with 17" and 20" displays.
- Group of the Day: Mac Pro List is for those using a Mac Pro.
- November 23 in LEM history: 99: Should I buy a USB card? - 01: Can a low-end Mac be an only Mac? - Palm Desktop without a PDA - CyberDog saves the day - 05: How Consumer Reports could compare Macs fairly - Speakers for your Mac - Living with the hi-res 15" PowerBook - Birth of the PowerBook - Daystar 1.9 GHz iMac G4 upgrade - 1.92 GHz PowerBook upgrade
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Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Apple's Tablet an End Run Beyond Netbooks, Frank Fox, Stop the Noiz, 11.20. Whatever Apple has planned will leverage existing technologies while going beyond what its competitors can offer.
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- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
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- More deals in our archive.

