Wishlist: MacBook Nano

November 27th, 2007 by Mark Jaquith


I would kill for this hypothetical machine:

MacBook Nano

  • Intel Core 2 Duo @ 2.0 GHz
  • 2GB RAM
  • 32 GB solid state hard drive
  • 11 inch LCD @ 1280×800 resolution (16:10 ratio)
  • ExpressCard slot
  • iSight camera
  • mini-DVI out
  • USB 2.0 x2
  • 6+ hours of battery life
  • Less than $3,000 USD

Note the lack of DVD drive, to save space. This thing should be small and light. I’d be okay with a keyboard that wasn’t quite full size… but no smaller than 80% of full size.

I’d take this with me everywhere, along with an EVDO ExpressCard. This machine could do everything than my MacBook Pro could do, minus Aperture (too small of a screen, not enough storage space).

Am I the only one who thinks that these, like the 12″ PowerBook before it, would sell like hotcakes?


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Drag/drop on monitor-spanning Finder windows

November 22nd, 2007 by Mark Jaquith


In OS X Leopard (can’t confirm earlier versions), if you have a Finder window spanning multiple physical monitors or multiple virtual Spaces, or extending off the edge of any physical monitor, try dragging a file and dangling it over that Finder window.  The Finder window will smoothly slide into the current physical monitor on the current space, giving you access to all the visible contents of that folder.  Drop the file or unhover and the window will smoothly slide back to its original position.  Nifty.Bonus tip: set up a corner to activate Spaces and another to activate Exposé.  Now you can drag a file to any window on any space without touching the keyboard. 


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Multi-monitor zooming now works in OS X Leopard

November 21st, 2007 by Mark Jaquith

One of OS X Tiger’s most annoying bugs to me was that the zoom functionality was broken for multi-monitor setups.  It’d work at first, but when you moved your mouse, it’d go all screwy.  It was useless.  I’m not sure if it was fixed in OS X Leopard or the 10.5.1 update — but it works now!


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OS X Leopard’s “Alex” takes breaths

November 15th, 2007 by Mark Jaquith

My wife and I were having a “yes” … “no” battle, and I was getting tired of saying “no” over and over again.  So I typed a bunch of “no’s” into QuickSilver and invoked the “speak text” action.  OS X Leopard’s “Alex” voice kicked in with a litany of “no’s.”  And then about ten “no’s” in, he took a breather.  No really, he inhaled.  And at regular intervals, he took more breaths.  It was creepy.


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Gmail 2.0 features permalinks

November 3rd, 2007 by Mark Jaquith

Google has been rolling out a Gmail 2.0 update for the past few days. I just got the update a few minutes ago, and the first thing I noticed was that every view now has a permalink! The address bar updates as you navigate the application. Each e-mail thread has its own URL, and each label and folder has its own URL. Even searches have unique URLs.

Google is accomplishing this by using anchor permalinks that are able to be dynamically updated without a page refresh.

Inbox: http://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox
Individual message: http://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox/1ef02abc56fe3127
Search: http://mail.google.com/mail/#search/test+search
Label: http://mail.google.com/mail/#label/Twitter

The search one will be especially useful, as browser search boxes and tools such as Quicksilver will now be able to point to Gmail search results.

Unfortunately the new version of Gmail seems to have serious issues with Safari 3.0 in OS X Leopard — so there are clearly some bugs to be worked out yet.


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