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  • What Is Thunderbolt?


    Thunderbolt technology is what was Intel’s Light Peak. It’s not an Apple technology, but rather the culmination of Intel’s handiwork in combination with Apple’s mini DisplayPort. While Light Peak was developed to work over fiber (literally for light speeds), Thunderbolt is implemented over copper. Despite this, you’re still getting bi-directional (in and out as they say), 10 Gbps connection over a cable, plus a 10 Watt feed so you can power heavy equipment on the go (you don’t get that with USB). For comparison, your current USB 2.0 devices only get 480 Mbps through the cable! With this technology, you can drive multiple inputs including monitors, workstations, and audio equipment without a bird’s nest under your desk.

    What it does:

    Thunderbolt allows users to connect to monitors sport mini DisplayPort, or DisplayPort connections. Adapters can allow for HDMI, DVI, and VGA connections as well, but it doesn’t stop with these less ambitious technologies. Thunderbolt provides support for optical connections (you heard me: FIBER), to connect to high speed networks. It’s kind of insane to think about: USB 3.0 provides plug & play connections at up to 5 Gbps, yet Thunderbolt can accommodate almost any technology and possibly power a business out of a laptop. Apple and Intel are very much pushing the envelope here.

    Don’t worry about those silly terms above. Just think of it this way – data can go in & out of the cable at the same time with no waiting. Otherwise, Thunderbolt separates your display and data connections by passing your monitor input through DisplayPort, while your data is passed through the PCI Express bus. Thunderbolt is the combination of monitor and data technologies.

    How does it help me?

    For the consumer, the best part is simply this: you’ll no longer have multiple Cinema Display cables hooking to your laptop. You can still latch on your hard drives, USB sticks, and iPhone docks to your display, but because there’s such a huge amount of bandwidth with Thunderbolt, it can effortlessly slurp down one cable. Keep in mind that Thunderbolt is both giving the user display feedback, as well as shuffling bits of data around for files and music all in one tube. The idea itself isn’t new, but customer accessibility (especially in the Apple ecosystem) will simplify installation. You may not necessarily see a hard drive instantly fill up if there’s a USB connection in the middle somewhere (there would be a bottleneck at the Cinema Display for example), but the current generation of SATA III HDDs can gobble down data at 6 Gbps. Imagine if that was directly paired with Thunderbolt with or without an adapter, then plugged into your machine? It wouldn’t take long at all to clone your HDD or transfer a media center’s worth of files somewhere else.

    What if I have more than one Thunderbolt device?

    The cool part about Thunderbolt is that you can “daisy-chain” devices. So say you connect your MacBook to a Thunderbolt enabled external hard drive, but want to plug in another external hard drive via the same port. Well, instead of connecting to the MacBook, you’ll just connection to a second Thunderbolt port on your first external hard drive. Make sense? The connection will pass through subsequent devices until it reaches your Mac, but it will be instant.

  • MobileMe Goes AWOL At Apple Retail And Online Stores


    The single and family license packs of MobileMe have gone AWOL in Apple online and retail stores and some resellers have been advised that these products have been declared end-of-life by Apple.

    The abrupt departure by these apps from retail channels indicates that something is going to happen. I’m sure we’ll find out more on March 2nd next week with iPad 2 Launch.

    It isn’t clear about the direction Apple plans to take with MobileMe, Lets wait for March 2 and see.

  • MacBook Pro 15″ Unibody Early 2011 Teardown


    The iFixit got their hands on Apple’s latest Unibody MacBook Pro 15-inch.  Its not chock full of surprises but here’s what they found:

    • Wireless is Broadcom BCM4331
    • Intel BD82HM65 Platform Controller Hub
    • AMD Radeon HD 6490M GPU (labeled as AMD 216-00809000)
    • Quad-Core Intel i7-2629M Mobile Processor (labeled as 2V041112A0127)
    • Broadcom BCM57765B0KMLG Integrated Gigabit Ethernet and Memory Card Reader Controller
    • Intel L051NB32 EFL (we assume this is the Thunderbolt port controller) – pictured below
    • Parade PS8301 U08FUC
    • TDK 6T213HF 1045 H

    [via: ifixit]

  • Apple Lion Server Integrated Into Mac OS X Lion


    Apple has announced that Mac OS X Lion will have a server version and for the very first time, it’s actually integrated into the normal operating system. This just goes to show how Apple’s really wants to deploy the entire package, and not ship several versions of their operating system. Oh, and best part? Free.

    Lion Server is now part of Mac OS X Lion. It’s easy to set up your Mac as a server and take advantage of the many services Lion Server has to offer. Here are just a few of the new features that make server deployment faster, easier, and more powerful than ever.

    Profile Manager:

    Lion Server guides you through configuring your Mac as a server. And it provides local and remote administration — for users and groups, push notifications, file sharing, calendaring, mail, contacts, chat, Time Machine, VPN, web, and wiki services — all in one place. Easy Setup