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iLife’09 on PowerPC G4 Mac

February 2nd, 2009

I think that PowerPC Mac are not as powerful as actual Mac, even the fastest PowerMac G5 Quad could not compete in term of raw CPU power with a Mac Mini of today!

But many people stille use their PowerPC G4 Mac, such as my PowerBook G4 15″ HD (that is my Backup computer). so it’s cool to be able to run iLife’09, even if some applications are heavy to handle.

Here is a link to enable use of iLife’09 on PowerPC G4 Mac.

Remember to put as much RAM as possible, and close all other applications, I recommend at least 1GB and will prefer 2GB (Hey it’s 15$ for 2GB stick these days!)

General, Tricks ,

8GB memory limit on MacBook & MacBook Pro

October 24th, 2008

nVidia communicates the supported memory limits on the GeForce 9400M chipset that fuels the new MacBook and MacBook Pro : 8GB maximum, 2×4GB DDR3 sticks.

Apple specifications is 4GB (2×2GB DDR3 sticks), but since Leopard runs in 64bits mode on MacBook & MacBook Pro it is still possible that 8GB may be recognized, we will have to check it :-)

MacBook, MacBook Pro, Tricks , , , , ,

Memory limits of the new MacBook & MacBook Pro

October 20th, 2008

Apple claims, in the MacBook and MacBook Pro specifications, that the maximum supported memory is 4GB.

On the past Apple claimed that first MacBook Core2 Duo are limited to 2GB albeit they support 4GB, recognizing 3.1GB. Same story for Core2 Duo MacMini.
And on other model such as the Core2 Duo iMac, the EFI BIOS limit memory use to 2GB albeit the chipset support 3GB or more.

The nVidia chipset that includes GeForce 9400M on both MacBook and MacBook Pro support 2 DDR3 ram-modules. These module have a capacity that rangeĀ  from 1GB to 8GB individually (4X the DDR2 SoDIMM ram-module capacity).

Theorically, we could put up to 16GB (2 modules of 8GB each) into the new MacBook and MacBook Pro, nVidia doesn’t state any limit other than the number of modules, and the CPU in the compatibility list supports all more than 4GB (at least 64GB) RAM.

So my asking is: did Apple limits its new laptop to 4GB by the EFI firmware, exactly as the old iMac GMA950 “Education”, or is it possible to have 8GB or even 16GB RAM on these new MacBook and MacBook Pro?

I wonder specifications where just false, as usually, and 8GB may give a huge boost to a MacBook Pro using VM (Parallels, VMware Fusion or even open-source VirtualBox), on video edition, photo library management…

MacBook, MacBook Pro, Tricks , ,

How-to wake-up a MacBook [Pro] that doesn’t want to?

October 17th, 2008

On my desk I have a set-up where my previous MacBook and my actual MacBook Pro are used closed, displaying on external 24in LCD with an alu keyboard and gamer mouse connected to my USB hub.

To start, I have to open my MacBook Pro, start it, then at any point, close the lid to put it to sleep, and wake-it up by pressing enter on the keyboard. It enables me to have a clean desk, or nearly :-)

But sometime my MacBook Pro doesn’t wake-up when I press enter or click on my mouse, wether they are connected to my USB HUB or directly on any laptop USB port. It annoyed me until I found a workaround that seems to work any time: I plug an USB key or any USB device on the USB hub or on the available USB port of the MacBook, and then it wake-up instantly!

PS: If you put an USB key, you just have to insert it, and when hearing the Superdrive sound, remove it, it wont even mount.

MacBook, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, Tricks , , , , ,