harddrive

Latest

  • Clearing up specifics on the MacBook Pro

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    01.10.2006

    Laurie A. Duncan is feeding us a few more details from the Macworld floor on the new MacBook Pros that I thought were quite interesting: Macbook has one FW 400 port, no FW 800. I guess that ZDNet post was at least on to something no pcmcia slot - new ExpressCard/34 slot, whatever that is Hard drive is SATA now, not IDE Magnetic power adapter and port is very very cool! Snaps nice and tight Display now also uses magnetics to close, clasp is gone We'll publish more details as soon as soon as they roll in.

  • LaCie Rugged: Successor to the Pocket Drive?

    by 
    Dave Caolo
    Dave Caolo
    01.09.2006

    First and foremost: I love LaCie Drives. From the bad boys we use at work to the beige, external SCSI boxes I have connected to my ancient Macs, they just run and run. For the longest time, my favorite general use LaCie external has been the recently discontinued Pocket Drive. It was very small, came in sizes up to 80GB and featured a dual interface (FW 400 and USB). Best of all, its edges were wrapped in a very durable layer of rubber that made it possible to just toss it into a bag, backpack or what have you without worry. I loved it, then it disappeared.Last week, LaCie announced the Rugged Drive, and it looks like it could fill the hole that the Pocket Drive left in my geeky heart. This "all-terrain" drive features a bus-powered triple interface, storage capacity up to 120GB and a durable rubber edging that takes the stress out of transportation. I want one.LaCie is currently taking pre-orders (shipping is scheduled for February of 2006) at the following configurations: $169.99US for 80GB (USB 2.0), $329.99US for 120GB (USB 2.0), $199.99US for 80GB (triple interface), $399.99US for 100GB (triple interface) and $359.99US for 120GB (triple interface).[Via MacNN]

  • Install OS X from a hard drive

    by 
    David Chartier
    David Chartier
    01.05.2006

    MacOSXHints has a short and sweet how-to for creating a hard drive-based installer for OS X. Using a CD/DVD is fine and dandy, but if you're in a hurry or you're working with a machine who's optical drive is less than cooperative, the sheer speed and convenience of a hard drive install can't be beat.The how-to basically has two steps. The first uses NetRestore Helper to create a Master Image of your Mac OS X install disc for the second step, which is using said image in Disk Utility to apply your install disc to an actual hard drive or partition. A few good considerations are listed at the end of the how-to, and I'd suggest reading the whole thing over if you're going to create a handy tool like this.