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210 lines
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210 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2457
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Title: HPR2457: Getting ready for my new Macbook Pro
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2457/hpr2457.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 03:27:59
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This is HPR episode 2457 entitled Getting Ready for My New MacBook Pro.
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It is hosted by ITWI and is about 19 minutes long and can remain a explicit flag.
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The summary is ITWI is about ordering a new MacBook Pro and share some tips and tricks.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
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At 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at An Honesthost.com.
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Hey there, Hacker Public Radio.
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This is Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast calling in with another random show.
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Now excuse the road noise.
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The little soft tapping that you might hear, which sounds like the rustling of fire in
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an open fireplace is not my car burning down, but me driving through the rain.
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On holy maintains rainy Belgian freeways towards an appointment that I have a little bit later on.
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So please excuse me for the road noise.
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I will keep it down to a minimum and I will entertain you with some content instead.
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So what I wanted to talk about today is the preparations that I'm doing to get my new laptop.
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As you know, I'm a cross-platform slider.
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I am constantly on either a Linux machine or a Windows machine or a Mac.
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And I regularly update my devices.
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I'm a freelance consultant, so the MacBook Pro that I bought for my company that I've used
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over the last three years was complete right off from my taxes, so it was time to upgrade
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it.
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And within a few days, hopefully a week or two, I'm going to be getting my MacBook Pro.
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My new MacBook Pro.
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What an order.
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I ordered a 13-inch MacBook Pro I5 with a 3.1 gigahertz processor 16 gigabytes of RAM
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and a 512 gigabytes SSD drive.
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I know what you're going to say, oops, above the 2000-year-old mark, that is an expensive device.
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Yes, it is.
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It is an expensive device, but swaying the pros and cons against each other, it is still
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a viable purchase for me to make.
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It's a good right off and it has good resale value.
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As I noticed, when I sold off my own MacBook Pro 3-years-old last week, for half the price,
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which is pretty good for a computer, I dare you to do the same with the Toshiba or an
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Acer or Lenovo for that part.
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So that being said, the new MacBook is on the way.
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So after spending hours online choosing the right model, reading all the reviews, watching
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YouTube videos of over enthusiastic vlogging half-gods, you talk about their Mac and what
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they do with it, I was convinced that yes, the MacBook Pro is the next Mac for me, although
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I was in a phase of a little bit of having a doubt if I would ever buy another Mac again.
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But yes, I will have to yield and I will go for the new Apple device with zero USB-A
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ports, zero thunderbolt ports, zero display ports, and all nice USB-C ports, four of them
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that being the case, not like with the MacBook, where there is actually zero, oh no, one.
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Yeah, I read the reviews, I listened to what people had to say about it, the doubts that
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they had, the comments that they made, but in the end, hell, it's a working machine.
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I do a lot of multimedia things, I do videos, not as much as I would like to, but I'm going
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to do more.
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I do, let's see, I do audio productions, I do presentations, and for that I use a Mac
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because it's the most reliable platform to go with, at least, onto this day.
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So that wraps up the choice of device, and I want looking to find a good reseller who
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can help.
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We get one.
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Here's the funny part, in your consumer protection and warranty isn't like what it's
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like with the U-Americans, where you can basically return the product after buying it, having
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dinner with it, having had intercourse with it and bringing it back.
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Here, no, you just can't do that, you can't just turn the device back in to the retailer.
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And on the other hand, there is also the issue of warranty.
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Europe has a very good deal, and us as a consumer get two years of full warranty on any
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electronic device, which is great, Apple being Apple just offers you two, if you really
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want to, because you're a consumer, then you get two, but if you buy Apple care, then
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you get three, but actually you get one, especially if you own a business, then you get
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one, one year, I don't know why, I suppose because I use my MacBook Pro to deep trenches,
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getting ready for World War III, or I use it as a baseball bat, I don't know, what professional
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use versus, well, Lehman's use differs in, all I know is that I only get a one year warranty
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from Apple, and I don't like that, yes you can buy Apple care, yes I can buy Apple
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care, I will legally buy something that I am, I will financially buy something that
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I am legally entitled to, two years of warranty, screw you, Cupertino, looking around a little
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bit, I found an online reseller, coolblue.nl, which is a Dutch online electronic shop,
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kind of like the Amazon, but then for electronics, who have a very good service, who give you
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a pretty good price, you know, the price is all the same, it's the Apple price, there
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it is, but they offer you two years of warranty, even if you are a business, so that's where
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I'm going to get it, I'm going to get my MacBook Pro there, so I have two years of warranty,
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that's what I want, that being said, I am still excruciately careful with my devices, I
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kind of shut up, when I see people just shove their laptops into a bag, sometimes not
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even a laptop bag, just a plain bag, it gives me the Yibi Yibi GB, I really don't like
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it, because, you know, your device gets scratched and damaged, and I know what you're going
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to say, but likewise, that's what the thing is for, and you are correct, partially, that's
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what the device is for, it's meant to be used, and if there are usage marks on the device,
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well, hence that's the fact that it's been used, but even so, I don't like it, one, because
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as I said, I am very neat about my devices, I hate the sight of dinged up scratched and
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dented laptops, and I even hate the fact of dirty laptops, I hate that more, people who
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just keyboard looks like, I don't know, manure truck went over on it, I don't know, I absolutely
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discussed that, so I hate a dirty computer, and I hate a dinged up laptop, so I like to
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protect my devices for one other reason, that is, resale value, aha, of course, I'm planning
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on selling this Mac three years down the road to the next Apple enthusiast who's going
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to be more than happy with a three year old device, that looks brand spanking you, that's
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why I keep the box, I keep the files, I keep the wrappers, I keep the elastic bands, I
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keep the invoice, I keep everything, so it, and I also keep my Mac in pristine condition
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by using a case or a cover, in this case I went, this case, not intended, I looked around
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a little bit at the Urban Armor gear case for the MacBook Pro, which makes your very
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elegantly Johnny Ives designed MacBook Pro look like a tank, and it's cool, it's really
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cool, but it also makes it look like a tough book, and it adds quite a bit of thickness and
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a bit of weight to the MacBook Pro, which I don't despise, I like my devices to be tough
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and well protected, but, you know, they don't have to be too thick, and there are some
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issues about the Urban Armor tough case that I don't really like that much, so I decided
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perhaps I can go for something else.
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The other alternative that I have was the a case from Moshe, Moshe makes, makes good
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stuff, makes, makes very nice screen covers and keyboard covers for MacBooks, but they
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also make a case, and this is one of those silicone snap them around, doesn't add a lot
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of weight to your Mac if you don't really notice, you don't notice it's there, cases.
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Nice, pretty, even add some room for a nice decal on the Mac, which I'm going to put
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on there, I've also got some ideas on my head which I can use, so happy with that, but
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as for protection, there's not a lot of protection there, it protects it against scratches and
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stuff, that'll be fine, but, you know, things and drops, idiot, sorry, stupid guy with
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car trying to get in my way, as opposed to dropping it, it's not going to protect it
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that much, so I kind of went like, maybe not, so I went for something in between that resembled
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a fool bumper that I bought on my previous Mac, now this is a black bumper for around
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your Mac, so you snap it on the top and the bottom, and it kind of makes your Mac a little
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thicker, it makes it a little easier to grip, and it also protects it when, you know, you
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drop it, and oh they've got great videos on the fool website about this product, and
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it's absolutely horrifying, you know, the slow-mo crash videos of a very expensive MacBook
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hitting the ground and like shattering, and it's really, you know, if you're into that
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thing, it's cool, but, I don't want that to happen, so I bought a second fool case for
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this MacBook Pro, because the old one of course doesn't fit, and I sold it off with my
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old MacBook Pro, so I used that for, I used that for cover, and then I went for a screen
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cover, because quite frankly, I think that it should have one, I saw a coworker of mine
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who had a mushy, mushy, not mushy, mushy, mushy screen cover over his MacBook Air, added
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protection against scratches and figures and stuff like that, but it also gives it a little
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bit of a matte shine, sorry, and that's something I like, because I hate absolutely the test
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the glossy Mac screens, I don't like it, I don't like glossy screens, period, I don't
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know why we should have glossy screens, there is no added value to add reflection, so
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you can't have, you know, if I buy glasses, they don't say, you know, we have angi-reflective
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ones, and we have glossy ones, so let's take the glossy ones, there's like light reflection
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you know, all over the place, but hey, it's glossy, so I don't understand why, so I ordered
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me one of those, I ordered me a mushy, I visor screen guard, which gives my little new
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MacBook Pro a little bit of a matte shine and protects the screen, so, warranty covered
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two years, case and look and feel of the Mac, you know, structural integrity covered,
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we've got a bumper case for that, screen optimization for matte screen and anti-scratches
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covered, so all right, aside from, you know, wrapping it in a, I don't know, a mattress,
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I think I've predicted my MacBook as good as I can, now it's time for cables, because
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this is USB-C, you need an adapter, you basically need an adapter for everything, you even
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need an adapter for other Apple products, which is insane, but hey, that's what it is,
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and this is where our lovely little, Oli-Baba-based adapter resellers really go to town, if you're
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going to buy an adapter at the store, where you get the Mac, my god, their profit margins
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that they lack on the MacBook Pros is going to be, I don't know, quadrupled on whatever
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accessory they can sell you, yes, don't ever buy your accessories at the Apple store or
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at a store, that sells Apple products, because that's where their profit margin is, and you
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pay too much, so you went online, went looking around and then nearly got a heart attack,
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some of these adapters cost like 40 euros, 60 euros, 90 euros, and let's see, how much
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was the most expensive, oh yeah, 149 euros for an adapter that's pretty much provided
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me with USB-2 to everything, so not parallel ice scusy ports or something, but pretty close,
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I decided that was too much, it's too expensive, I'm not going to spend that on a stupid adapter,
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so I looked and I said which are the ports that my Mac has right now that I use the most,
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and those are my Thunderbolt 2 connectors, and of course my USB connector, so what I did
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is I ordered two of them, two of each, so I've got a Thunderbolt connector, USB-C to Thunder
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bolt connector, on which I will connect my screen, I've got a big 25 inch display port driven
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blip Dell UltraShark, and a USB-C to USB-A adapter, which is connected to my USB-3 hub
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on the back of that screen, and with these two connectors playing them in, I can basically do
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everything that I want, so I only have need for that, because all of the other accessories I have,
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so it's pointless to buy an adapter that is also converting to HDMI, and that is also converting
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to SD card, and it is also converting to, I don't know, VGA, I have all of these adapters,
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Thunderbolt 2, all of these adapters, so all of these adapters that have this little brick that
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has a VGA, HDMI, DVI, and mini display port connection, which I take with me when I go on public
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speaking tours to make sure that I can just about connect my Mac to everything, and I just connect
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that one to the USB-C to Thunderbolt connector, and boom, it works. Yes, I know, I'm Daisy Chaining,
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but I don't want to buy yet another bunch of connectors just because I bought a new Mac,
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so I'll try to keep, you know, perhaps over the course of time, I will replace those adapters
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that I use the most, but for now, USB-C to USB, and USB-C to Thunderbolt is all that I need,
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I have one pair for home, and one pair which is permanently settled in my bag, so I can connect
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to whatever I need to connect to, period, and well, that is actually all that I'm buying
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to get ready for my Mac, this is the whole package I think that, including taxes, it brings me to
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about 2,400 euros. I bought a lot of the connectors on Amazon because they're basically cheaper there,
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and I only bought the Moshe case at the online retailer where I'm getting the Mac because I
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wasn't really sure if the screen would fit, and I didn't feel like returning stuff to Amazon
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in Germany, so because we don't have an Amazon in Belgium, we have to shop at Amazon Germany,
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which is basically, you know, powerful. So good, that all being said and done, I am complete
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you're ready to receive my Mac, and now it's of course a fact of how do I set it up? A lot of
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people kind of copy the data from their old Mac to their new Mac, I never do that, I despise
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that, if I have the chance to do a clean install, I will do it. Luckily I have found out a cool trick
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to install all of the apps that I need without, you know, a major hassle. So when my Mac arrives,
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I will boot it, I will run all of the updates, and then I will go to the store, and I will go to
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the purchased tab of my app store app, and click on all the applications that I use, they get
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downloaded and installed automatically. As they are doing this, I am installing HomeBrew. HomeBrew
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is a command line tool for the Mac that lets you install apps via the command line. For example,
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Linux apps, like it lets you install IRSSI, it lets you install SSH Apple, it lets you install
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MPS YouTube, all of the cool command line apps that you have on Linux, bam, you can install them
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on your Mac using HomeBrew. And then there is a second command line tool that I install, and that
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is Cask, which is an extension from HomeBrew, and which will do what app get us with apps. It will
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download the latest version of a shitload of popular apps, and all you have to do is say like
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app cask install, I will put the links in the show notes to give you the right command line syntax
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because I don't like to read them out on a podcast, it's too darn boring. But you just type
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cask install, and then the name of the application cask install Google Chrome, Firefox,
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FileZilla, Spotify, Clementine, Audio, Audacity, and so forth and so forth, and it will all
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install them to your applications, it will download them, it will unpack them, it will put them in
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their application folder and boom it's there. So I have already made this one big script that
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installs basically everything. So when my Mac arrives, as I'm downloading apps from the store,
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I'm going to run this script so it will install all of my applications, and all I need to do when
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it's done is make sure that my preferences are in place, that I've got my icons just right,
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that I've got the right tools on my toolbar, and that I've picked the right wallpaper, and then
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my new Mac is ready to go, and this is how I roll. I hope I inspired you a little bit,
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give you some ideas, perhaps if you're going to buy a Mac, or perhaps if you want to re-boot
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nuke your Mac, a boot nuke nut, no, nuke and pave, sorry, nuke and pave your Mac,
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perhaps there will be some interesting tips in there. Well, I hope you enjoyed the show,
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until next time, this was Nightwise, signing off, signing off.
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You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org. We are a community podcast
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network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday. Today's show, like all our shows,
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was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was
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founded by the digital dog pound and the infonomicon computer club, and it's part of the binary
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revolution at binrev.com. If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly,
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leave a comment on the website, or record a follow-up episode yourself, unless otherwise
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stated. Today's show is released on the create of comments, attribution, share a like,
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3.0 license.
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