There are a few games I have actually enjoyed that don't involve combat - Monument Valley is really good but it is only on phones and tablets - this vid actually encourages me to try and make my own game but there is only so much time in my day. Even the relatively simple works I make on computer easily take up my free time. Still, if you have an idea for a good game that doesn't involve war and murder, let m know, maybe we can get together on it.
Friday, July 27, 2018
Something completely different
I don't play computer games. Here is why:
There are a few games I have actually enjoyed that don't involve combat - Monument Valley is really good but it is only on phones and tablets - this vid actually encourages me to try and make my own game but there is only so much time in my day. Even the relatively simple works I make on computer easily take up my free time. Still, if you have an idea for a good game that doesn't involve war and murder, let m know, maybe we can get together on it.
There are a few games I have actually enjoyed that don't involve combat - Monument Valley is really good but it is only on phones and tablets - this vid actually encourages me to try and make my own game but there is only so much time in my day. Even the relatively simple works I make on computer easily take up my free time. Still, if you have an idea for a good game that doesn't involve war and murder, let m know, maybe we can get together on it.
Sunday, July 1, 2018
The Rant plus Shutup10
For those of you who use Windows 10, you might want this: ShutUp10.
It's a free app that lets you turn off all those little messages to Redmond just in case they might be spying on you watching pron or something, I don't know. Apparently everyone is supposed to be doing things with their gadgets that they don't want anyone else to know about.
Yeah right.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
THE RANT
Frst, I got Netflix here in OZ specially to watch The Expanse. Then they stopped at Series 2.Okay, so it got canned after series 3 by SYFY in the US who have now sold it to Amazon because it is such a good show and the fans raised such a hullabaloo about it. (Some of them got a plane to fly above SYFY HQ trailing a banner saying "Save the Expanse!" Yep. )
I still can't get any more Expanse.
Then there is The Orville. Somehow I can't watch it here in Oz AT ALL.
Am I the only person who thinks this is absolute Bullshit? We live in a world where content can be purchased online for a few bucks, but somehow the few shows I actually want to watch ARE NOT AVAILABLE HERE. Instead we get SHIT like Star Trek Discovery, which I have not watched, but thanks to DOOMCOCK I know enough not to waste my time on.
Yeeessss, I could muck aroun and use a VPN service to illegally spoof my location and watch American TV directly - but WHY SHOULD I NEED TO DO THIS?
I am prepared to PAY for these shows, it is not as if there is some terrible shortage of bandwidth that would prevent these shows from being shown here . . . no, this is nothing more than stupid.
NOT ONE of the streaming services here - Netflix, Stan, Fox(?) Amazon Prime - even mention either of these shows apart from Neflix still posting those same two serieses that I have already seen.
There is no extreme violence or pornography in these shows - nothing that censorship rules might consider dangerous . . . . . oh wait, that could be it . . . . about the only thing there IS in these shows is perhaps some new, intelligent ideas that might make people THINK while they are being entertained - instead of sport, soap and phoney politics that seems to contain only personal attacks and fearmongering.
PAH!
Saturday, June 2, 2018
Windows 10 Software, the Post – Mac Users's Guide
this is not a complete list, it is a
work in progress.
All of these work with the current
version of Windows 10.
Also, please note that I don't get any money or support from the makers or vendors of the wares shown here.
A good place to look for alternatives
to wares you know and like is . . . ..
I can't thank these folks enough. Just
fill in the name of whatever you want an alternative software to and
pop! There it is. Or to be exact, there they are.
MaComfort
I've already mentioned this one - it makes multiple desktops work sensibly.
Even if you never used Mac OSX it would be worth it just to have that feature.
Actually it sometimes doesn't quite work properly - but that is because I use DAZ Studio which takes a lot of computer power just to open a detailed scene. It's also not an essential feature, just a nicety: nothing stops you from having several programs running and switching between them on a single "desktop", after all. That's what CTRL-TAB is for.
Actually it sometimes doesn't quite work properly - but that is because I use DAZ Studio which takes a lot of computer power just to open a detailed scene. It's also not an essential feature, just a nicety: nothing stops you from having several programs running and switching between them on a single "desktop", after all. That's what CTRL-TAB is for.
Seer
This provides the "Preview" feature that I really can't go without: just pick an image or movie icon, tap he spacebar and there is your picture!Listary
This does what Default Folder X did on
Mac OSX – namely, remember where you opened that file from and let
you go straight back there. The free version of Listary does that
and more. To use it, when you go to open or save, click the middle
mouse button and pop! There's a menu of everything you just accessed
called “recent” along with some other options I haven't even
looked at yet.
WindowBlinds
Once or twice, for a brief time before
Apple updated their OS again, we had OS skins on Mac, but Apple DID
NOT WANT ANYONE TO SKIN THEIR OS so they killed it. Not once but
repeatedly.
Over in Windowsville, folks never had
that issue: they have Windowblinds and there are hundreds
of themes that work with Windows, 7, 8 and 10. All of this cost
me a whopping $14 AU and there are lots of free themes, and some that
you can buy too, although I am very happy so far with the free ones.
You can also edit the colours of any theme to your preference which
is very, very useful – and I haven't even dug into all of the
features yet. There is also an editor for themes that you can buy for
a modest price and make your own.
This is sooo good!
MicroSoft doesn't seem to mind either.
This one is called "Aspect":
FolderMarker
This allows you to change a folder icon
to a different colour or a whole different icon from the right-click
popup menu – and you'll see “Mark Folder”. This doesn't quite
go as far as the Mac OS tagging system I went on about in previous
posts but it sure helps a lot. The free version works fine but is
limited to ten personalised icons. I got the Home Edition for $36
which has more room for icons but even the free version is perfectly
usable. It is also a whole lot quicker than changing icons the
standard windows way – it's there, but it's four clicks away and
then you still have to find the icon and confirm it, twice.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Finalised performance info for you tech
heads out there: I fitted a Noctua NF-A12 fan to the NH-D15S cooler
to lower the max temperatures and it seems to have worked by about 5
degrees.
Now, running at 100% load, the Max
temp is 75-77c with a max of 45-47 Db of fan noise from the two fans
on full. I'm not so worried about the noise since I always have music
playing when I am using the computer but it's there for your info.
Adding a second smaller fan to the D15S
was the only way to get more air moving and it is a little bit odd
since the fan that came with the D15 is a 140mm but the new one is
120 and faster – but nothing bigger would fit in the case due to
the RAM height.
Performance figures- Blender Tests
Mac Pro
BMW 6:17 377
Classrooom 18:20 1100
Pavilion 20:00 1200
7900x
BMW 3:52 232
Classrooom 11:54 714
Pavilion 13:08 788
7980XE
BMW 2:28 148
Classrooom 7:32 452
Pavilion 9:58 598
So for all three Blender CPU tests, the time has been halved or better.
Saturday, May 26, 2018
The New PC
Costings
Original Cost $4659
New Case FT-05B $419
32inch Display $1304
NH-D15S $141
Corsair HX1000i $326
7980XE CPU $2775
Thermal paste& BDR $145
Samsung 2TB SSD $890
PCIE Wifi Card $79
NH-D9L $89 (for GPU, not yet
fitted)
Slimline DVD Writer $99
Windows 10 $199
Total $10926
Recovered costs:
Sale of Mac Pro & Displays $2355
Case, PSU and DVD $100
Core i9-7900X $650
Total $3105
LESS RESALES $7821
Comparison note: The iMac Pro 18 Core
model with 64 GB Ram, a 2 TB SSD and Vega 56 w/ 8 GB of VRAM costs
$9000 currently. I did buy some unnecessary items - the DVD and GPU cooler - that would have cut the cost even more ($200 less) , but then I'm not that poor that I need to save the money.
The non-comparable is the screen; The iMac Pro has a
5120 x 2880 screen but it's only a 27 incher. This visually is no
better than the two I just sold imho: dot pitch doesn't mean
anything to me at the res of modern screens, but screen size
definitely does.
If you ignore the $2355 from selling
the Mac Pro the prices are closer but then there is the screen thing
– and nothing can equal the freedom to upgrade and the freedom to
choose my own parts, or even make my own case or case mods.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Screen
I got a BenQ PD 3200U, which features
3840 x 2160 res, full 10 bit colour and at least two inputs along
with a built in KVM. This all works okay buuuut. . . . . First, I
got both computers connected to it and then used the “hotkey puck”
controller to program it so that by touching the lit buttons on the
bottom right of the screen I could switch between the two computers.
That’s the good bit - well, actually you need to tap the buttons
twice to get it to switch. You can get the puck to switch between
displays but it takes a few clicks. I hoped to get it down to one if
I can just figure it out but in the end I was not going to keep the
Mac Pro so it doesn't matter. Just remember that the switching
process also doesn't automatically wake the computer you want to
switch to - and if it isn't getting a signal it will switch back to
the active one. Get the idea?
I watched an interesting Youtube Vid by
DIY Perks where he built a silent PC by mounting everything
vertically so that the airflow naturally provided cooling, and
getting rid of the fans altogether. He also built a custom case for
this project and in a follow-up vid, mounted a CPU cooler on a GPU
also in pursuit of a quiet PC.
I won’t be going quite as far as
having NO fans as I suspect that would be impossible if you want to
have high power chips, but I can certainly take some of his ideas and
try to make something much quieter than the current models on sale.
First, the PC I bought has a Corsair
Carbide 100 case, AIO water cooler and a fan-forced GTX 1080 Ti GPU.
I will first replace the case with a
Silverstone FT05B which has vertical mobo mounting and airflow – in
the bottom of the case are two huge 180mm fans that I can get
spinning slowly enough to be barely heard, yet they might even give
enough airflow to cool everything. Well, that’s the ideal.
It also comes standard with
magnetically held dust filters. (Why the hell doesn't Apple ever have
dust filters on it's computers? Almost everyone else does.)
Next, I am getting rid of the liquid
cooler. I don’t like them as they are unnecessarily complicated and
any leakage will be very, very bad. The CPU will instead be cooled
by the biggest, best cooler I can find - The Noctua NH- D15S will
fit in the case. Also, I will be able to use it to test if it will
fit on the GPU card as-is, or if I will need extra hardware to mount
the card so that the cooler will fit in the case. Coolermaster make
a mounting kit that can do this and all I need to do is chop it a bit
to get the offset I need – well ,that’s the theory.
I have thought long about how to get a
second GPU card in but it just doesn’t look possible with the FT05
and a whole new case seems a waste at this point: It would be better
to get a more powerful GPU card first – two video cards mean a new
power supply anyway. The big test is pushing the GPU and seeing if
it sounds like a vacuum cleaner. I haven't quite reached that point
yet. There is also rumours of a new Nvidia card coming out so maybe I
will just wait until that appears and either run two which will mean
no fan mods on them.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Update May 13 2018
Transplanting the board into the FT-05
case was easy as was replacing the PSU – the only problems I had
installing new parts were with the slot loading vertical mount DVD
drive. This doesn't seem to like DVDs much, it being tricky to get it
to load them – it loves to split them out though. I think I will
have to take it out at some stage. I also had to make a special
bracket for the third SSD mounting and that worked out quite well.
Now the only spinning discs are externals that I use for backup. All
the other fittings were smooth and easy apart from a slight cramp
when fitting the clips that hold the fan onto the radiator on one end
as it is close to the wall of the case.
Today I installed the i9-7980XE and I
used Thermal Grizzly metal thermal paste to keep it as cool as
possible. Previously I fitted the HX1000i PSU, the idea being that it
would be as quiet as possible since the fan on it doesn't even start
moving until you are over about 40% load.
After fitting the 7980XE I ran a few
tests to see how hot it got – Blender and DAZ renders and it all
looks very good: I think the max for any core was 68c and most didn't
get near that.
At idle it is at 38c which is pretty
darn good.
The temp testing I did used Corsair
Link 4 to tell me what the temps were because that is the only one
that works for me. I also go an external DVD/Bluray drive (plus free
version of Cyberlink Director, a video editor) so I loaded up the
Gigabyte disc that comes with the Mobo and it said all of the goodies
are installed - but they just don't show any info apart from
hardware recognition so it's Corsair Link. Note also that you can't
adjust the fan curves or anything from running, you need to get into
the BIOS to do that. I have no idea why this problem occurs but so
far I have not even tried to fiddle with the settings. Maybe later.
The BIOS is easy enough to get to, there is even a one click
Overclocking setting or if you are crazy enough an advanced OC area
but I won't be going there, at least for now.
Having watched some YouTube vids I got
the impression that the 7980XE would suck up power and generate a lot
of heat, but the results so far don't seem to support that – of
course, compared to the old Mac Pro which really worked its fans hard
under load (and you could hear them too) the new machine is very
quiet and even when running full CPU load there is surprisingly
little heat coming out the top. I suspect all that hoopla about heat
and needing a liquid cooler is just to sell more liquid coolers.
Mind you, I have the biggest (and best?) cooler that will fit the
case too.
All of the “old” parts from this
project were sold on eBay except for the liquid cooler. It seems
nobody wanted to buy it, even when cheap. In contrast, the 7900X CPU
sold in minutes – mind you, I was selling it at half price.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I know, you may well ask “Why didn't
you just buy the parts you needed and build straight from that,
wouldn't that have saved you money? “ Well, yes, quite possibly,
but this is my first ever build and I was a lot more confident about
transferring parts of a working unit as opposed to assembling parts
from scratch. Call me cautious but I do remember a time when just
getting the right PC parts to work together was an arcane art. I did
not want to get stuck with a dead computer because of a noob error.
For example, how do you install the BIOS software? When exactly on
the assembly process? Do you even need to? There are many unknowns
for me here. Maybe next time I build a new PC (five years time
perhaps?) I will try it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
May 22 update
I tested the 7980XE and found that it
sey off the heat alarm at over 70c – so I put the alarm up to 80c
and all was well – according to CorsairLink4, the main CPU cores
reach up to 84c under full load. Is that okay? I have looked online
and can find nothing that tells me what is a “safe” temp for the
7980XE and on one site they said they had overclocked theirs and had
it running stable at 100c !
I still think water cooling is BS: what
you really gain is thermal mass, that is, the amount of water in the
cooling loop can absorb a lot of heat until it reaches peak unlike an
air cooler – but if you are running your system at full power for a
long time (more than , say, two minutes) there is no gain at all
compared to an air cooler – also, it is more complex and can make a
big mess if it leaks.
My solution, the NH-D15S is plenty good
enough, it seems 85c is no big deal to the system buuuuuuut. . . . .
. I still want it as cool as possible so I bought a second fan to
mount on the radiator.
I also put Conductonaut Thermal Grizzly
metal compound on it when I fitted the 7980XE.
This is also fairly close to the
original liquid cooler as it had two fans on it too, but mine are
bigger and should be quieter too. I have tried to change the fan
profile in the BIOS but somehow I could not do so. I must be missing
something there.
Last note: there was one handy Mac system app that I miss: it remembered where you opened a file from and sent you back there when you went to save it again. Why doesn't windows have that? It wastes so much time digging around looking for the same friggin' folder I was just in two minutes ago. It seems so bleeding obvious, I seem to recall that one upon a time, the OS did that by default.
Sunday, May 13, 2018
DOOMCOCK RULES !
I am a lifelong Sci-fi fan but it seems that evil forces work to prevent me enjoying any good shows that might appear. The last one I actually watched and enjoyed was The Expanse which appeared on Netflix here in Oz for the first two seasons then . . . for no apparent reason they didn't bother to give me Season Three. I voted with my wallet and cancelled my $12 month because that was the ONLY show I was paying for. . . . and, well, now it seems SYFY Channel in the US has canned the whole show at the end of season three even though the ratings were fine. But don't take my word for it, check out my new Overlord of Sci Fi Reviews, Dictor Von Doomcock (and Harvey Cthulu !)
Having seen a few of his other vids now, I can only agree with him on almost everything (except conquering Earth).
Sure, the outfit is a bit rough round the edges but who cares, His analysis and critique are right on the dot.
To me, it seems that Disney has ruined every movie it has made lately. Consider Pixar, for example: they made some great movies when they started, but now they seem to have no good ideas and the stuff they made recently I didn't even like the idea of, it just didn't grab me. Then there was Frozen which I only watched because the person I was with wanted to see it. It was just, well, the characters were ugly and although it had a couple of moments that worked, mostly it was . . . . blaaaaaaaaah. Something has gone seriously wrong in the writing and plot department over there. Well, that's my opinion anyway. Check out what Doomcock says about the Star Wars franchise, I'm glad I didn't waste my money on seeing it now - and he doesn't think much of the new Trek either which confirms what I read and saw from other sources, The original Trek was cheap and cheesy at times but at least they had good stories and didn't wreck things with stupid gaping plot holes. The writers must all be aflicted with some sort of malaise. Either that or there aren't any writers.Yeah, that must be it.
I can only hope that Netflix or someone else with the power will bring The Expanse back from the dead. All I can do is hope that my own efforts result in something better than the dreck we are being afflicted with lately - but then that is a rather low standard to exceed, unfortunately.
Having seen a few of his other vids now, I can only agree with him on almost everything (except conquering Earth).
Sure, the outfit is a bit rough round the edges but who cares, His analysis and critique are right on the dot.
To me, it seems that Disney has ruined every movie it has made lately. Consider Pixar, for example: they made some great movies when they started, but now they seem to have no good ideas and the stuff they made recently I didn't even like the idea of, it just didn't grab me. Then there was Frozen which I only watched because the person I was with wanted to see it. It was just, well, the characters were ugly and although it had a couple of moments that worked, mostly it was . . . . blaaaaaaaaah. Something has gone seriously wrong in the writing and plot department over there. Well, that's my opinion anyway. Check out what Doomcock says about the Star Wars franchise, I'm glad I didn't waste my money on seeing it now - and he doesn't think much of the new Trek either which confirms what I read and saw from other sources, The original Trek was cheap and cheesy at times but at least they had good stories and didn't wreck things with stupid gaping plot holes. The writers must all be aflicted with some sort of malaise. Either that or there aren't any writers.Yeah, that must be it.
I can only hope that Netflix or someone else with the power will bring The Expanse back from the dead. All I can do is hope that my own efforts result in something better than the dreck we are being afflicted with lately - but then that is a rather low standard to exceed, unfortunately.
Saturday, April 28, 2018
Last thoughts about Apple and Mac Pro
Well there it is. Confirmed – Apple
is working to replace all Intel chips with their own by 2020. They
tried this approach before but they could not afford it – now they
can, but I still think it is going to be a bad thing for high end users for these
reasons:
Apple will try to shave down the
processing power you use to do things with since it is cheaper for
them to do so. Remember the time they made all the nice colour icons
in your sidebars grey? That was a power shaving trick. Expect more of
this. They will also try to make the Mac apps more the same as the
iPhone and iPad since it saves them cash and puts less demand on the
chips.
Apple noted recently that users don't
want Mac and iPads to use the same software (I wonder why?) but I
think they will try any way.
This also means that Mac software will
diverge from Windows wares again as it was way back, and this will
mean that many common apps will disappear.
Personally I think this is nasty: the more Apple gets into this “walled
garden” idea the less I like it. Maybe it will be more “secure”
from hackers (or so some will tell us) but the price is the computing
world will split.
You might not have noticed it but there
were always some divisions between Mac and Windows – recently this
was really shown up to me by my own webpages having dark and yellowy
images on it because of the different way Apple and Microsoft define
their colour spaces in the monitor controls.
I didn't see it until I got a Windows
computer and tried both systems on the same screen with the same
image.( see previous post here )
This sort of thing is partly handled
by using software made by people independent of either OS maker –
for example, Firefox as a web browser runs on all platforms so it
doesn't favour either – but the more specialised Apple makes their
hardware, the less other makers are even going to bother making a
version just for Mac OS. If Apple moves away from Intel and (by
inference) x86 architecture, they will need some serious attractions
to get people to buy into it.
Apple is not, and has never been the
biggest supplier of computers or OSes – although they dominate the
phone market, that is something quite different. The more Apple goes
toward fancier iPads rather than seriously powerful hardware, the
less I want a Mac. Yes, OSX as it is now is still better in some ways
that Windows 10 (see previous posts for details) and it has always
been nicer to look at and easier to configure thanks to some neato
apps and features (many of which came from BSD so I am told, and not
Apple) – but Windows 10 is working just fine for me so far. It
really is the same situation as OSX – to get it to do what I want
it to do, I have to find and sometimes buy other software that gives
me the features I need. Maybe I am just seeing OSX as better because
I am so accustomed to it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
If you are wondering about the iMac Pro
and how it compares to the “normal” Intel computers, check out
this video:
It turns out that the differences
between Core i9 and Xeon W chips are not so great– and at the top end,
in tests done by Linus Tech Tips, the Core i9 7980 XE is faster than
the matching 18 core Xeon W 2195. but not by a lot. It looks to me
like the differences are very small and not worth worrying about –
well, apart from the prices. Makes me wonder how different they are on the Chip Fabrication line.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I sold my Mac Pro on eBay for $2000 –
but only because I threw in a monitor and didn't leave out any of the
bits. It arrived at the buyer two days later but thanks to eBay I
don't get the money until two weeks later. The main source of
trouble was due to Auspost not dealing with objects over 22 Kg: eBay
has an automatic integration with Auspost which then could not send
the item and there was no other option or button to get me to a
service which didn't care about said weight limit – so I went
outside to another site which subcontracted StarTrack which is (as it
happens) a branch of Auspost. Why didn't they just send me there from
the eBay page when it was over the weight limit? I have no idea.
I really thought that the last great
cheesegrater Mac would be worth more - but what would I know? Just
because people list their computers at price “X” does not mean
anyone will buy them at price “X”. If I wanted to sit on it for
months until I got sick of waiting I could maybe have got 3 or 4
grand – but I'm just not that tight – I'm just glad it went to a
good home – a printing company.
For me, there will never be another Mac Pro. It
was noisy and heavy but it was reliable and more flexible than any
Mac before or since. I still find Apple's approach to cooling a bit
disturbing and if you really want to know about hardware issues with
Apple gear check out Louis Rossmann's Youtube channel. He fixes a lot
of Macbook Pro boards and can't help pointing out the things he
regularly has to deal with. No, Apple isn't perfect but I'm not
saying they are any worse than other hardware makers either: all
have their faulty designs and product recalls. All of them. Read the reviews before you buy folks, regardless of the brand.
One last thing: there was one Apple
item that I just couldn't let go: The Apple extended keyboard. I kept
mine with it's silicon rubber cover because I just could not find
anything better.
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Mac To Windows Part 8: Transfer Complete
Okay, here is the Short Version if you just joined us, and are looking for a smooth transition from Mac to Windows:
You will need these wares -
* MaComfort (allows various Mac key combinations in Windows PLUS Spaces clone PLUS you can change the key assignments)
* Seer (simulate Apple's Quicklook or Preview feature)
Pretty much everything else is already there in Windows 10, you just need to find it.
You will need these wares -
* MaComfort (allows various Mac key combinations in Windows PLUS Spaces clone PLUS you can change the key assignments)
* Seer (simulate Apple's Quicklook or Preview feature)
Pretty much everything else is already there in Windows 10, you just need to find it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As of now I have finally completed
the move. The new machine is already much quieter than the Mac Pro,
which is nice. If I went the whole way I could fit a 7980XE and beat
anything Apple sells, and still have a very quiet black box, with
plenty of upgrade potential. Downsides? Well, when I do huge copy
operations it can get crappy and needs to be restarted . . . . but
that is hardly a normal situation. Having finished the transfers,
all is good.
There are still major differences or
issues with Windows 10 as compared to OSX:
The main one is what I call loosely
usability: For example, in OSX when you go to open a DAZ file you
will get a preview of all files to help choice. There really isn’t
anything like it in Windows: To open files in DAZ I must find an
image of the file I want in my rendered images and then find the file
based on the name of that image - and that is because I have named
all images based on their origin file although they are in a
different folder system. Yes, I’m sure some folks will store all
renders with the originating file, but I didn’t because I wanted to
be able to move them to another drive if things get cramped, and I
don’t want to spend time sorting files.
The Icons
I have used folder icons for many years
to quickly identify specific folders or mark certain folders as
special in a folder full of them. On a Mac this is quick because you
can (a) quickly open the info window for a file or folder and (b)
freely copy and paste icons between folders - not so for Windows
however. In Windows land there is a way to change a single folder
icon but it takes a lot more steps and there is no copy and paste. I
hoped that I could find a small app that would do this but so far no
joy.
File Transfers and folder merges
This week I found RichCopy 4, which can
swiftly merge folders and has lots of options, and is free. I thought
that there was some way to merge folders with just a key held down
while copying, but it seemed this was not true. . . . . and then I
discovered how to merge properly in Explorer ( Explorer is the
windows equivalent to Finder - well, sort of ) : If you are new to
Windows 10 and want to merge folders there is a setting you need to
find which turns on the merge dialog – for some unknown reason it
is turned off by default in Win 10. Search for “File Explorer
Options” and when it appears, go to the “View” tab. Uncheck the
“Hide folder merge conflicts” item. This then gives you the
option to merge by overwrite or just skip, and a checkbox for “do
this for all the others”.
Having now migrated my DAZ/Poser
content to a 2TB SSD, there only remains the odds and ends to clean
up: another 1TB SSD needs to be fitted and all the odds and ends
moved onto it – the usual stuff: photos, text, artworks, music.
I had underestimated the time it would
take to transfer everything from one computer to the other.
Now I am doing it by ethernet cable as
opposed to copying files to an external ExFat drive then re-copying
to an internal drive as I did first, but even so it is sloooooooow.
Currently it is telling me the next operation will take 14 hours . .
. This is direct transfer from Mac to PC, please note.
I can’t get RichCopy to see drives on
the connected Mac so it’s Explorer all the way. I am not sure it
would make any difference anyway. Just be warned that transferring
data between Operating Systems is slow. Veeery slow. I don't think it
was any faster using a USB drive either.
Multi-tasking
Well shit. It just didn't want to
behave for me. . . . . but after some head scratching and mucking
about, I realised what was wrong. MaComfort has the whole “Spaces”
thing covered: all I had to do was give it all the rght keyboard commands
to make it work and bingo, Windows now has a proper multi - desktop
system like Mac OSX.
Windows has one feature I still use:
when your Apps (programs) are pinned to the taskbar, you can open or
hop over to them by using CMD- (number) - of course, the numbers
start from the left and can't go past 9 and 0 – still, ten major
apps is plenty enough for me.
I have searched and could not find any
key commands or information about how to use multiple desktops in
Windows – you need (a) keys to move between desktops (b) keys to
move apps between desktops (because it seems sometimes windows apps
move without asking) and (c) the overview - but MaComfort has all of this covered.
There are other features that make
MaComfort essential for me too: First, you can quit programs with
CMD- Q (or another key if you want) – somehow while I have been
away from Windows world, ALT-F, X has disappeared from the lexicon of
being able to quit things. To be honest, this is an extra keypress
compared to what I know but worse still, I find there are some apps
that don't seem to have ANY key command to quit them – and shutting
down the PC also has NO key command - but MaComfort has all of this
fixed, and with your choice of key commands too.
The one thing Windows 10 just doesn't
seem to be able to do that OSX has is to remember the desktops and
program windows between startups. I can now get close since I can
assign a major app to a numbered desktop and open it with a keypress,
but it does not remember what it was doing before shutdown.
I went one step further: I got a new
Power Supply. This is a “platinum” quality unit that has ALL of
the cables plugging into the box. This is partly so that I can get
custom cables made later (if I go that far). This is also part of my
attempts to make the machine as quiet as possible as it has the
feature that until it hits over about 40% load the fan will not even spin
up.
As a side effect, it is longer than the
original unit so I had to remove the drive cage for HDDs in the case
to make it easier to plug in the cables – but this is a good thing:
I have 3 SSDs and don't need HDDS any more, and this will improve
airflow too. The only hiccup in progress here is the the case only
had mountings for two SSDs – so I had to invent a mount somewhere –
it's not critical since this is a desktop and SSDs can't be damaged
by rattling around in the case but then I am a neatnik and loose
things can cause trouble later on.
Okay, that worked fine: made an SSD
mount from some plastic scrap and superglued it to the case, fitted
new PSU and all is good . . . . . . . . except the DVD drive doesn't
work. No idea why, only just got the power adapter for it hooked up,
but I (foolishly) assumed that it would just work.
So what do I find? The drive doesn't
even pull the DVDs in (It's a slotloader, only one that fits the
case). Time to check the cables and plugs.
I bought Windows DVD player for $22.45
from MS to get it working. Well, it DOES work, it's just a little
fickle – I'll probably learn how it works with practice. Actually
I hardly need or use DVDs these days anyway- but sometimes the only
way to get old data or device drivers is to have one.
Well there it is. It works well
enough, it is very quiet, and it also doesn't generate the amount of
heat the old computer does. I can swap out bits and mess with it any
way I like, but I would not claim it was cheaper than the Mac since
there really isn't any direct comparison: the parts were personally
chosen and there is no single model that would come with this
combination of parts on sale.
I still find myself looking to the top
right corner of the screen for the time and using Mac key
combinations but I'll get over that. The Mac Pro is now up on eBay
for sale and I have solved all problems with running everything on
Windows. There are definitely nice Mac OSX apps that I miss but
nothing essential. I still have a lot of tidying up to do but that
was due anyway: every yer or two you should consolidate or wipe all
those files of stuff that collect.
The Mac Pro is now on eBay and all I need do now is box it up once someone buys it.
Bye, Mac. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"What about the New Mac Pro . . . . . .
. . aren't you going to buy one of those?"
I can't resist adding a few words about
what Apple is doing with their hardware. First, Apple will probably
never use Nvidia GPUs again – nothing they make at the moment
supports them yet the Windows world is completely dominated by them.
Yes, this was one of the reasons I
switched to Windows but not the only one.
Will Apple bring out a new Mac Pro in
the recently pushed back timeframe of 2019? I suspect not – they
just released OSX 10.13 with support for Thunderbolt 3 cabled external GPU boxes.
Of course, in typical Apple fashion this only supports AMD cards, not
Nvidia.
What is the iMac Pro with an external
GPU box but an otherwise named “New Mac Pro”? Using Thunderbolt
enclosures for more storage, I suspect that Apple expects all those
“Pro” users to be happy without the added trouble of making a new
“Mac Pro” to replace the Cheesegrater Mac Pro that was at least
basically flexible like a regular Pee Cee.
It seems clear to me that Apple does
not want to make computers that you open (and add or change parts of)
ever again: they want you to buy a new one and never, ever open the
box. Buy more external boxes, cable them together, no need to do any
hardware changes inside the box, riiiight?
My theory is that Apple will probably
not be making a new Mac Pro at all until either they can make their
own CPU chips for it or the iMac Pro gets so old that they need to
replace it, as in five years plus into the future . . . . Why
increase their product range unnecessarily in an area that is not a
major profit centre? More phones in different colours, Yeah! More
Macs? Naah, not enough monero.
All this hints to me that Apple may be
moving away from compatibility with the rest of the world's systems
again and I have already run into that in the past: I'll be happy not
to deal with that again. Apple already has made some questionable tech
decisions and I expect more in future (Touchbar anyone? or how about
laptops with no touch screens? $200 stylus? All those missing ports
on the new Macbooks? Dumping the magsafe power connector?) - but then it's not just about what we, the customers want - it's also about business, patents and secretive future plans.
Bye for now, lots to do.
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