So, Kid finally hosed his 50th Laptop. Well, I say hosed, it really works just fine - he just dropped it and the charger doesn’t work and it pops in and out of the charging state if you move the laptop.
It works fairly well if you just keep the bloody thing still, but my dad hasn’t used a desk since I was in high school. You see, most desks face some kind of wall, and he isn’t down for staring at a wall all day. If he’s going to work on a computer, that computer’s going to be laying on his lap while he’s in a recliner, staring at a TV. Kid loves him some Judge Judy.
So, sometime in the not too distant past, he dropped his laptop or something and broke the AC adapter dongle. I say he broke it, but it still gets the job done. You just have to be careful with it.
So, being that I’m a hardcore computer geek that he bugs constantly with all of his “Why does my computer get viruses” and “what’s this thing with the blue sky and the green field? and why do I have pictures of vanilla folders on it?” questions, he asked me about what kind of laptop I’d get if I were him.
Seriously, he asked me! It’s like asking Henry Ford what kind of car he’d buy.
So, anyways, he got his 13″ White MacBook friday. It’s kind of strange, you see Kid’s a PC. An unproductive, style less, install-every-screen-saver-and-browser-addon-on-the-internet-then-complain-his-system-gets-viruses PC. Since the day I got my Mac, and before then with my years of GNU/Linux game, about how Windows was like the only OS on the planet that I’d never use on a computer that I wanted to run.
He was on the fence about buying a Mac for like two weeks. He had all the common questions, i.e. ‘Will it run all of my applications?’ - ‘can I use Microsoft Office’ - ‘when I send e-mail attachments, will people be able to read them?’ all of which the answers are yes. I had to convince him though, the boy didn’t believe me… but he finally came around.
So, he gets his computer Friday, and the first thing I do, after installing Office 08, is throw a copy of Parallels Desktop on it. I haven’t used Parallels since my brief stint as a Mac user with the original Intel Core Duo MacBook Pro’s. Christ oh’ mighty, it’s gotten better.
Parallels has a nifty environment migration tool that literally mirrored his running Windows XP laptop, and built a bootable disk image on his mac. If you’re thinking about trying it out but would like to hear a user testimonial…
Kid has no idea what virtualization is. He doesn’t understand that with virtualization, you can run a sandboxed operating system within another operating system. These concepts are alien to him. I did manage to show him how to click a dock icon (after a lengthy explanation of how to click using the Apple Mighty Mouse - total junk), and with no more preparation than single click, he managed to launch his old laptop on his new laptop.
Clearly, this astonished the old bat. After about a day of him asking me virtually no questions about how to use his strange new machine, I walk in to the living room and see him playing Spider Solitaire. Microsoft’s Spider Solitaire.
I asked him what he thought about his new mac, and he looks up at me and says ‘I can’t tell the difference. You said this thing would be different.’ I’m like, Kid, you got to leave Parallels.
I’ve got to admit though, and this isn’t an exaggeration, his old laptop was an Intel Core 2 Duo running at 1.6GHz with 1GB of RAM, and his MacBook is a 2.4GHz Core 2 Duo with 2GB’s, and his Windows XP experience is like 30% faster. In a virtual machine. He didn’t even have to reinstall his printer drivers. He literally can’t tell the difference.
I imagine, after a few weeks of getting confused with the whole ‘desktop within a desktop’ concept, he’ll yell at me and demand that I turn off all the crap that he doesn’t need… i.e. get rid of OSX and just run Windows. Especially since he’s convinced that now that he’s running on a Macintosh, Windows is now impervious to viruses. I’m like ‘Kid, it doesn’t work that way’, but I know he wasn’t paying attention.
More as it develops…