MacBook Pro First Impressions

. Saturday, September 16, 2006
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Well, its 7:30am on Saturday morning and my son refused to sleep in, so while he's enjoying his morning apple juice, I thought I would post my first impressions of my new acquisition.

First of all, I ordered this thing on Wednesday night around 9pm, and it showed up Friday at 3pm. Admittedly, I paid an extra $23 for expedited shipping, but I did not expect to receive it within 2 business days. It came in a slick black box, all wrapped up nicely in styrofoam for protection.

I got the machine out of the box, and plugged it in for a charge, but the battery was already full. I started it up, and the Mac began asking me some simple questions (e.g. region, language), and promptly found my wireless network and connected. I was beginning to get impressed, but I felt like it was saying to me, "dude, don't worry - this is the easy stuff". After registering my account with Mac and denying a few things like setting up a .Mac account, I was at the desktop. Immediately, a window popped up with software updates, 12 in total, so I let it do its thing while I started making dinner.



Everything updated just fine, so after the little monkey was put to bed, I got down to really checking it out. First of all, the finish is amazing. Brushed aluminum, translucent apple logo inset in lid, gently backlit keys. Then you look at the screen. This thing is breathtaking. Its HUGE compared to the screens I've been using in the past, its bright, crisp, and just a pleasure to gaze at. The laptop is light - less than 6 pounds - but it feels big. Fold it up, though, and it seems fairly compact. Probably because it is very thin, even though the footprint isn't so small. When this thing is plugged in, it runs hot. I don't mean warm, I mean HOT. Those online reviews were not lying. I do find that when just on batteries, it is considerably cooler, though.

I feel like I might be rambling a bit, but I am just throwing down things as they come to me. The backgrounds that come with the machine are a nice touch, and convey the quality of the screen nicely. I started checking out system preferences and some applications. Browser worked nicely, and did many of the applications. They all seem pretty basic, but I'll have to spend some more time with them to understand if I will use them. I found that most things were self-explanatory, but at times, I was left wondering how to do certain functions I would previously had done by clicking on the right mouse button.

One of the first things I did was to connect to the network, and grab an MP3 off of our desktop (Windows) computer. Found the machine just fine, got to my music, and selected, "By My Side". iTunes launched, and sweet music began to play. The sound was crisp, albeit a little tinny, but that might mean it needs a bit of adjustment. I checked out the trial versions of a few programs (MS Office for Mac, Keynote, Pages), then thought I would get down to business and try out WinXP. I decided to try Parallels, and downloaded the trial version.

I started a virtual machine and threw in my XP disk, but after considerable time, I realized it just wasn't installing. It "hung" while trying to "detect and install devices", so that didn't work. It may be because I used my OEM disk from my Dell, so I am going to have to try another version.

So, all round, my first impressions are about 90% positive. Can't wait to get more into this machine - still getting use to some of the OSX stuff!

4 comments:

dubby said...

You sound like a baby taking his first steps...

You will get used to using the CTRL, OPTION and APPLE keys to find the hidden functionality of your mouse clicks and keyboard short-cuts (or you can plug in a 2-button mouse and find the extra functionality back where you are used to.

Not sure if you are going to get any better sound out of laptop speakers. But setting iTunes to equalize for small speakers is a start.

My life is governed by Mail, Safari, iCal and Address Book. Preview has replaced the clumsy Adobe Acrobat Reader for reading PDFs (and most other files). Don't even bother with Explorer. You will only be frusterated as Microsoft hasn't updated it for Mac in years.

As for the iLife set of applications, I regularly use iTunes, but the jury is still out for iPhoto, iMovie and iDVD. I import my photos using Image Capture and manage the photos in my own file structure. And I have Final Cut Pro installed on my machine, so I default to that for cutting video. And I used DVD Studio Pro for prgraming my DVDs.

If you can get in the swing of things by using iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie and iDVD as a unit of applications, managing and creating with your digital media will be a breeze.

Garage Band is wicked if you have the desire to make some tunes and I tried my best ot design my website/blog in iWeb, but felt hand-cuffed.

I am gutted to hear that sorting out Windows on your machine wasn't as simple. If you are going Mac and use M/S Office, what is stopping you from purchasing a native Mac copy?

slippy said...

I'll probably splurge for the Mac version of the MS Office. I just figured I'd use my Win license since I already own it. Same for Quickbooks to manage accounting for Toggle.

You pretty much hit on exactly the apps that I thought were a little weak - iPhotos isn't great, and I might see if I can't find an equivalent to Google's free Picasa app for Windows, or just try and see if iPhoto is workable. I use Picasa and Adobe Bridge on my other computer.

Garage Band is awesome to play with! I put together a cool litte reggae background in about 10mins. Gotta figure how to connect my guitar to it - play some rockin' solos!

You are SO right about baby steps. Its all new to me, but I am getting the hang of it! I can't wait for you to see this thing and give me an expert tutorial on how to actually use the "special" Mac functionality!

slippy said...

By the way, I used the "bass booster" preset - sounds a lot better.

slippy said...

You know what? I take back my comment on the speakers. These things are absolutely amazing. I probably had too much background noise the first time I listened.