The Cadillac of Notebooks
17/Nov/2008 11:52 AM Filed in: Personal
So I’ve taken the plunge and splurged on the newest
Macbook Pro model (late 2008). The Apple Store had
the stock 2.53GHz model in, and $2700 later, I own
what I affectionately call the “Cadillac of
Notebooks.” I mean, honestly, what else would you
call a notebook that dynamically readjusts the screen
brightness based on the amount room lighting. This
thing is most definitely the whhhhhhhhip!
A couple of things regarding gaming on my new rig:
I loathe the thought of Boot Camp for the simple reason that I’m too dependent on Mac OS X now. Even with my first generation white Macbook, everything was extremely snappy, responsive and familiar...and mind you, when I got it in 2006, it was my first Mac ever. What the hell do I do if I want to listen to music AND play games!? Ohhhh no.
But I suppose now I must concede to the idea that no one operating system has it all. I need Windows for gaming and XNA development (pretty important stuff), and I need Mac OS X for everything else.
A couple of things regarding gaming on my new rig:
- Using Codeweavers’ “Crossover Games for Mac” to play Team Fortress 2/Half-Life 2/Counter-Strike: Source is doable; however, it’s drains the battery more than necessary, therefore, I’m going to Boot Camp the harddrive for native fraggin’.
- Also in Crossover, all Source games were forced into using the DirectX 8.1 renderer. No need for that when I spent all this money on the dedicated Nvidia 9600M GT! I do own a copy of Parallels 4.0, but again, it, too, has to route all my gaming through a software layer first.
I loathe the thought of Boot Camp for the simple reason that I’m too dependent on Mac OS X now. Even with my first generation white Macbook, everything was extremely snappy, responsive and familiar...and mind you, when I got it in 2006, it was my first Mac ever. What the hell do I do if I want to listen to music AND play games!? Ohhhh no.
But I suppose now I must concede to the idea that no one operating system has it all. I need Windows for gaming and XNA development (pretty important stuff), and I need Mac OS X for everything else.