Wacom delivers with the new Bamboo Line

Wow! That’s the first word that came out of my mouth with the unboxing of the latest Wacom Tablet products under the new Bamboo Line. Not only does Wacom deliver with a tested and strong product but also with packaging that gives the user the feeling they are opening up a long cherished gift handed down through the generations or something you would find on the bed of a 5 star resort.

An opening of the box will present the user of the Bamboo Fun with a welcome that states “This is your Bamboo, Use it to get more out of your computer. Let us know how it goes. “It is signed by Dennis Hoff, Wacom Consumer product manager. The Bamboo and the Bamboo fun both offer 4 programmable buttons that Wacom identifies as ExpressKeys to set up as Undo, Copy or a wide range of the commands most frequently used. A Ring in the center of these keys can be used for Zooming in and out of projects. The Bamboo and the Bamboo Fun work with both Mac and PC and supports Win2000 – Vista on the PC Side and Mac OS X on the Mac Side.

We opened up the Bamboo Fun Medium size unit in Silver. The Active Area for the screen is 8.5’Wide and 5.3″ from top to bottom. Wacom has two different sizes for the Bamboo Fun, Small and Medium. The Small size Bamboo Fun features an active area of 5.8″W x 3.7D. There are 512 levels of pressure sensitivity with the Bamboo Fun and the resolution is 2540LPI. The colors available are black, silver, white and blue.

The Bamboo Fun ships with the tablet, USB cable, a Bamboo Fun Mouse and Bamboo Fun Pen. Both the mouse and the pen use Wacom’s Patented No batteries, Wireless technology. The stylish looks of the tablet itself spill over to both the mouse and the pen holder which can be displayed nicely on the desktop. Software on DVD also ships with the Bamboo Fun to get you up and running with Adobe Photoshop Elements 5.0 Win/4.0 Mac, Corel Painter Essentials 3.0 and Nik Color Efex Pro 2.0 GE. we love the feel of the Bamboo Fun unit, it is in line with the other Wacom products we have looked at including the Intuos 3 which offers more in detail and fine desktop graphics work. Users for this will still enjoy the ability to Edit, Paint, Draw, Handwrite and be up and running in no time. More information can be found at http://www.wacom.com/

The other product we took a glance at is the Wacom Bamboo Small Unit with an active area of 5.8″ x 3.7D. This unit is available only in Black however also features the 4 ExpressKeys and Zoom in/out ring. This unit is more designed for the user that will work this into handwriting type of features which are a part of Windows Vista or with the Mac Inkwell program. The tablet and included pen will work with Windows 2000 as well as XP and Vista as well as the Mac OS X 10.3.9. The Software bundle that ships with the Bamboo Fun is not available with this unit however with the recent release of the Adobe Photoshop Elements 6.0 it is certainly worth getting that program to work with the tablet. The Bamboo unit has an SRP of $99 while the Bamboo Fun in the Small size retails for $99 and the medium for $199. You can find the Wacom Bamboo products at most computer retailers. We found the Bamboo at CompUSA in the Mac Section.

new Mac OS Oct. 26

Figures…after I review a MacBook, Apple is about to release a new version of the operating system…

“Mac OS X version 10.5 Leopard will be available on October 26 at Apple’s retail stores and through Apple Authorized Resellers for a suggested retail price of $129 (US) for a single user license, and online pre-orders can be made through Apple’s online store (www.apple.com)…The Mac OS X Leopard Family Pack is a single-household, five-user license that will be available for a suggested retail price of $199 (US). Volume and maintenance pricing is available…The standard Mac OS Up-To-Date upgrade package is available to all customers who purchased a qualifying new Mac system from Apple or an Apple Authorized Reseller on or after October 1, 2007 for a shipping and handling fee of $9.95 (US). Leopard requires a minimum of 512MB of RAM and is designed to run on any Macintosh® computer with an Intel, PowerPC G5 or G4 (867 Mhz or faster) processor. Full system requirements can be found at www.apple.com/macosx/techspecs.

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…new Braille support for VoiceOver with Apple Braille Regular, Apple Braille Outline, and Apple Braille Pinpoint fonts.

“…Alex — a new English male voice…

“…refreshable Braille displays. VoiceOver detects and configures as soon as you plug them in. No additional software or setup is required.

“For the first time ever on a desktop computer, you can use a Braille display while installing or upgrading your operating system.

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Application-Based Firewall

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“..parental controls…

“Control exactly how much time your children spend with the computer each day. Limit total daily usage and define hours the computer can or can’t be used (set differently for weekdays and weekends)…

“…Apple technology automatically trys to detect inappropriate content and prevents those web pages from appearing. You can override the filter by identifying sites you wish to explicitly allow or disallow certain websites.

“…Leopard logs websites visited and applications used. It also maintains a list of people who have chatted with your child using iChat and a transcript of each text chat session.

“…setup and monitor parental controls on your child’s Mac from any Mac on your home network.

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“…TextEdit automatically save copies of your document at a specified time interval.

“…TextEdit support for the Word 2007 and OpenDocument formats for reading and writing.

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“…iChat recording…stores completed audio chats as AAC files and video chats as MPEF-4 files…

“In Leopard, iChat allows you to log in to all your chat accounts simultaneously, whether you use .Mac, AOL, Google Talk, or Jabber.

“Show nearly any file on your system through an iChat video conference. Put on an entire photo slideshow, click through a Keynote presentation, play a movie, and more — in full screen, accompanied by a video feed of you hosting.

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“Synchronize Address Book on your Mac with your Yahoo! address book. Just enter your Yahoo! account information in Address Book preferences to get started.

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“…Use a new action called Watch Me Do that lets you record a user action (like pressing a button or controlling an application without built-in Automator support) and replay as an action in a workflow.

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“Copy, open, modify, or delete files in Mac OS X that you saved to your Windows partition. Leopard understands the Windows FAT32 disk format.

“Run Windows XP and Windows Vista on your Mac at native speed with full compatibility. (Windows not included.)

“Install Windows without affecting your existing files. Boot Camp Assistant carves out the necessary disk space required by Windows automatically.

“Microsoft WHCL-Certified Windows Drivers…Enjoy the unique hardware features of your Mac including the iSight camera, trackpad scrolling, keyboard backlighting, and volume keys using fully compatible Windows drivers.

“Easily delete Windows and restore the disk space being used by the Windows partition back to Mac OS X.

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http://www.apple.com/macosx/

MacBook review

Keep in mind that the intent of this review is to evaluate the MacBook, not necessarily the operating system. iMacs and PowerMacs have other/more applications and abilitites.

It is my opinion (and experience) that the Macintosh operating system has not been as flexible as Windows and Linux. This scenario has lead to less opportunities for possible modifications that could cause instability…and, I imagine, limited opportunities for contributions to the platform.

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I was allowed to review a “model a1181” MacBook…

For external monitors, it has a mini DVI out port.

Magnetic attraction is used to keep the unit closed…

…and, the power connection is magnetic. Tripping over the cord doesn’t send your MacBook flying off a table or desk: it breaks away without damage to the cord and the system.

The AC powercord shows green when battery is full. There are lights on the battery so you can check its capacity status. You can check it with the computer off, and the battery out of computer.

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After booting to a desktop, I chose to “install” the Mac OS X…choosing the option to erase the hard drive, and install the operating system.

After completion, I found there is no easy/simple way to disable the startup sound. To not have the sound at boot, you must mute sound before shutdown. (After a search of the internet, I found other options…but none I preferred.)

The bottom of the notebook was warm enough for me to use a notebook lap desk…

The touchpad is nice and large…sometime too sensitive to the touch…sometimes I had to press on the pad to get a response. I consider myself a “Windows power-user”, so I wish there were a “left-click” button. When I rested my hands near the touchpad and keypad, the sharp edges of the MacBook began to indent my skin causing some uncomfortableness and pain. I assume by its looks, the MacBook Pro gives more space…

The “sleep” function is nice! When in “sleep” mode, you open the MacBook, and it awakens. And using the wireless remote will do the same.

VoiceOver is an application that reads aloud the contents of files, web pages, Mail messages and word processing files (allowing you to navigate the interface and interact with application and system controls…visually impared individuals I have been in contact with give me the impression that they prefer the “Jaws” application).

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The operating system indicated…

Hardware Overview:
Model Name: Mac
Model Identi?er: MacBook2,1
Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
Processor Speed: 2.16 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache (per processor): 4 MB
Memory: 1 GB
Bus Speed: 667 MHz
Boot ROM Version: MB21.00A5.B07
SMC Version: 1.17f0

For me, 1 GB RAM felt a little slow…

System Software Overview:
System Version: Mac OS X 10.4.10 (8R3032)
Kernel Version: Darwin 8.10.2
Boot Volume: Macintosh HD
Computer Name: TechTalkRadio MacBook
User Name: S!ick (slick)

MATSHITADVD-R UJ-857E:
Model: MATSHITADVD-R UJ-857E
Revision: ZB0E
Protocol: ATAPI
Socket Type: Internal
Low Power Polling: Yes

Only 120 mm round discs can be used in most models…a 120 mm round disc is a standard CD/DVD.

To boot to the optical drive:
power on computer…
insert the optical disc…
and hold the “C” key.

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I am dissappointed that there is no “Firewire 800”. (It is available on the MacBook Pro…)

802.11n Wi-Fi lets you connect to: 802.11n, 802.11a, 802.11b, and 802.11g wireless networks.

Bluetooth 2.0+EDR is included.
There is an infrared port.
Audio in and out ports also support optical digital connection (as well as 1/8″ plugs).

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The operating system will allow connnectivity to Windows server networks.

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An integrated iSight camera is placed about the display screen…the microphone is positioned to the right of it.

The iChat application allows access to AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) accounts. You may video chat with up to three connections, and audio chat with up to 9.

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I love the Front Row application. Via its interface it gives access to music, photos, and videos and can be controled with the included wireless Apple Remote control unit.

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I like the iCal calendar application: it’s nice…inviting…it makes me want to use it…

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Every Mac comes with iLIfe ’08 to allow creation of photo books, greeting cards, calendars, DVDs, websites, and podcasts.

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After using Garage Band, I can only recommend it for creating very basic podcasts…

There’s iPhoto…iDVD (for playing DVDs)…

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I would use iMovie for video mail, diaries, blogs, etcetera. You can export movies to different file formats, including:
3g
apple tv
QuickTime movie (MOV)
MPEG-4 (considered to be the latest, worldwide standard)
AVI
more…

I recorded some example videos and posted them in my Revver account.

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Having never attempted to install applications into a Mac operating system before, after a few tries, I was able to (install Yahoo Messenger). I didn’t know what I was doing wrong, and I wasn’t sure how to do it…

I was very dissappointed that I needed to install software for a (Logitech) mouse. I expected that if I connected a mouse I would at least get basic functionality.

I did not attempt to do so, but removing applications is supposed to be easy: delete them from the hard drive. You will need to search the entire hard drive for remnants (THIS IS WHY I LOVE “PORTABLE” APPLICATIONS)…

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At an Apple Store, a “Genius” can transfer your data from PC to Mac: http://www.apple.com/getamac/movetomac/

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While I was reviewing the MacBook, I read a post from a guy that had trouble getting his issue resolved by Apple, he received a response…and an offer for a free iPod. I’ve heard that a lot of the Apple/Mac faithful have not been happy with the company lately…but I feel that this guy’s experience is something worth mentioning, and considering.

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For what it’s worth to you, I was able to boot to an Ununtu CD…

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In summary:

As they say, “It just works”. Novice, elementary, and intermediate computer users should consider a Mac as their:
first computer…
and only computer.

More experienced computer users should be able to determine on their own if they should purchase one.

If I were to spend my money, it would be on a MacBook Pro (with the RAM maximized).