Micro-review: Parallels Workstation 2.1 Beta for OS X

ParallelsParallels released this past week a virtualization product supporting OS X called Parallels Workstation. I’ve been playing with it and wouldn’t you know it, it works. I was able to install without too much trouble Windows 2000. Since it’s using the virtualization options of the Intel Core Duo CPU the client OS runs at pretty much full speed. As a disclaimer, I haven’t put the thing through any serious benchmarking, but it’s clear that this is virtualization and not emulation going on here. The only thing that doesn’t currently work is audio or a convenient way to exchange files with the host OS.

I still think WINE is the ideal, but this is a product I’ll probably end up getting (it’s only $40) so I can easily have multiple virtual machines available (Win2k, CentOS, Fedora Core, etc.) without the hassle of rebooting.

Of course, for fun, I tried to install the hacked version of the OS X install DVD (the one that supports BIOS) and it started booting but crashed quite quickly. That’s O.K. since it isn’t a supported client OS. It would have been neat to have OS X running in OS X. Could I install Parallels inside the Parallels client? It would be like the Russian nesting dolls but geeker.

Here’s a screenshot for those doubters. ;-)

Windows XP on Intel Macs

Ever sense Apple announced that they were transitioning to Intel last year, questions began if the Apple produced hardware will be able to boot Windows. While I don’t personally need that option (I have other machines available with Windows), I do think it is a worthy effort as it would allow people and organizations to buy a Mac and have the option to dual-boot Windows which makes the “risk” of buying Apple hardware much less.

Windows XP on Mac solution posted – Engadget

Finally, some information about PlayStation 3

Ken Kutaragi, President and CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc., made some information public about the upcoming launch of PS3.

Worldwide launch (North America, Asia, and European territories) will be in November consisting of approximately 2 million units with 1 million a month additional each month for the remainder of the fiscal year (March 2007). It will come with a 60G hard drive, full Blu-ray support, and be 100% backward compatible (upscaling to HD). An online service will also be freely available providing lobby matching, voice chat, and commerce features.

Pricing hasn’t been officially announced but is expected to be in the $400-450 range.

Not too bad. The real question is if SCEA employees will get one gratis (employees were all given a PS2 at launch). Personally, I doubt it. If it duplicates the PSP launch, we won’t even be able to buy one until the channel is filled (about 3-4 weeks after launch) and even then, since the hardware is sold at a lost the emplyee "discount" will be minimal.

A new member of the family

The MacBook Pro I ordered way back in January showed up in Southern California yesterday. It made pretty good time taking only five days from Shanghai, China to Murrieta. In fact, it would have been delievered Sunday if they did deliveries on Sunday.

How is it? Fast. Very fast. I read about how Universal binary programs (those built for both PowerPC and Intel) are, of course, much faster than PowerPC ones emulated in Rosetta so I have kept my eyes peeled for Universal versions of the apps I use.

Before getting to work on it, I copied the contents of the hard drive for a backup and then copied all the user data from our PowerBook. I’ll get everything tricked out as best as possible and then make the switch tonight.

Now that leaves me with the old G4 iMac and the PowerBook I need to clean up and get listed on eBay. Need a Mac, let me know and I’ll make you a deal to save me the trouble.

Palm update

I was able to get Becky’s palm working in relatively short order. The only problem was with the iSync connector for the Palm software. The Palm software is installed with incorrect permissions so the iSync connector can’t install. I was able to resolve it by following the tip on Mac OS X Hints (I used a less brute force method but this led me in the right direction). Once resolved, it synced without problem and now she can see my schedule and I can see hers.

I also got a copy of Bible+ which is a free Palm bible reader. It works quite well and even allows a split screen to compare two different translations. The only think I haven’t yet gotten is a copy of the NASB translation as it is commercial and I need to purchase it.

What? How many computers?

I just saw a post on slashdot asking what people’s first computer was. Me? That’s easy, an Apple ][+ that my dad bought for the family during the summer of 1983 (if I remember correctly). The true test of the geek, though, is if he (or she) can name all the computers they’ve owned. Let me see if I’m up to that challenge:

To be honest I think I may have missed one or two in the middle but man, that’s a handful, huh? Granted that’s over 20 years so I’m not too out of control, right? Right?!