Showing posts with label Mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mac. Show all posts

30 October 2008

iWeb is Back

The caretaker blog is over, well, for the most part.  I finally have iWeb up and running again, and I know how it works so I won't permanently lose anything anymore.  So please check out my Mac Blog Site .  Thanks.

05 October 2008

Fresh is Best

This is me and Ted and Yunjeong at the butcher shop samgyeopsal restaurant last night.  You know the meat's fresh when you can watch the guy hacking it up for you when you order!  I had a nice evening with them; we chatted and caught up on stuff, ate samgyeopsal (pork with veggies), went to a late movie (Hellboy), then back to their place for more chatting and a really comfie bed in their living room.  The living room is the former serving area for La Cantina, which is unfortunately defunct right now.  Maybe a resurrection sometime(?)  We can always hope.  A little after 10:30 this morning, I got tired of waiting for those two to get up, so I left a note and took off for Seoul.  My intention was to get a camera that works with iMovie, then go to COEX Mall for a late lunch and shopping.  The former worked out, but the iPark Mall (where I got the camera) is loaded with shops and restaurants and all that, so I figured I didn't need to go to COEX. Got another book by Conn Iggulden to read on the train. Lunch wasn't at the mall; I went to Seoul Station and had a steak with mashed potatoes at Bennigans.  Outside there was a rally (protest?) regarding something about housing.  It was pretty darn noisy, but probably a worthwhile event.
Here's a picture of my camcorder that I have tested, and it does work with iMovie.  Everybody online said that all MiniDV camcorders with firewire will work with a Mac, so it really wasn't a big gamble.  This is a Canon ZR800.


Tomorrow I'll make a video with it, edit it in iMovie, and upload it to YouTube.  Also have to finish my lesson plan for this coming week. 



03 October 2008

Quick Run to Busan


Here's a screen shot of my Mac after installing the new software.
After watching the Palin-Biden debate on CNN, I took off for Busan to get some software for the Mac at the Apple retailer there.  They didn't have the software that I had seen advertised on the Apple Korea website, but the saleslady told me they had "pah-wah-lehr-suh deh-suh-kuh-toe-puh".  The really funny thing is, she only had to say it once more for me to understand what she had said. (You know you've been in Korea too long when...) It's two words totally in English, so give it your best shot! I got this software, and my intention is, if it performs as predicted and desired on my Mac Mini, I will get a Macbook so I can have a portable computer to take places with me... well, that was redundant-- I teach English? har har.  Well, the software actually works!  I honestly didn't expect it to, but there it is.  I can run a copy of my Windows Vista on my Mac and interchange between the two operating systems seamlessly.  I was so happy, that I even made a new entry in my iWeb journal until I remembered that iWeb will not upload my entries for some reason, and nobody can tell me why.  It keeps asking me to sign in to my Mac account, but I am signed in. iWeb doesn't recognize it, though.  The Mac technical guys are stumped, too.  It looks like I'll be staying on here at Google's Blogger, but I like Google a lot, so this is OK by me.

21 September 2008

Dies Horribilis

If you want to know where to do it, just read the sign.
Today I had a brilliant idea.  They say you can put Windows on a Mac if you use the Boot Camp program that comes with Mac.  Well, sure enough, Boot Camp partitioned the drive, and Windows had 32 gig all to itself.  It started out fine as I began installation, but then Windows asked where I wanted to install it.  I chose the 32 gig partition that was set aside by Boot Camp, and Windows said, "I can't go there!  It isn't NTFS formatted!"  So installing Windows on my Mac came to a screeching halt until I could figure out how to make the partition NTFS formatted so Windows would load on it.  Couldn't find out, because I couldn't get the other side of the drive, the Mac partition, to start up again so I could get online!  What a nightmare.  So I let it all sit idle while I went to Busan to see if I could find a good laptop computer as a back-up so this will never happen again. My students send their homework through the internet, so I need a working computer.  Couldn't find any of the laptops CNET recommended, but I'm thinking the Samsungs probably aren't too horrible... pricey, though.  Didn't buy one, because Joel sent me a text message on how to get the Mac up again:  hold the "c" key during start-up.  Easy peasy.  But I still have the apparently unusable Boot Camp partition on my Mac drive to deal with.  Online I've found that if I shell out money for a program, I can get the partition to accept Windows.  Isn't that always the case with Macs?  You have to pay for this, then for that, then something else before you have everything you need to use the damn thing.
Anyway, had lunch with Rob at McD's at the Mega Mart in Dongnae in Busan, then went to his place to try to find the control panel on his computer.  His wife insists the computer use the Korean version of Windows, and it was impossible to find the control panel.  I told him just to install the XP I had given him and let her gripe, because she can read English IF she needs to.  All she does is go to Korean websites, and you don't need a Korean version of the OS for that.  Men, on the other hand, need to work with the computer and do stuff on it, important stuff. ㅋㅋ 
My cell phone somehow got crushed while in my front pants pocket.  The screen is broken.  I can use the phone, but the screen is unusable, which basically means I can't see to read texts, to dial, or any of the other uses of the cell phone screen.  Ugh.  This phone has been cursed from day one.  I doubt they'll fix this bit for free, however, since it must be my fault, though I can't think of anything I did that would cause the screen to break.