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MacBook Air FTW!

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    #11
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post
    Excellent machine - even Eclipse feels responsive on it
    Thats a first.

    Its the SSD that makes the difference really. With the Dell I picked up last week (Latitude E6520 top of range but not SSD £470 inc) adding the SSD moved it from being very good to blimey that's fast.
    merely at clientco for the entertainment

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      #12
      What's the problem with Eclipse? It runs wonderfully on my 64 bit Win 7, 6 core Bulldozer setup

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        #13
        Originally posted by Churchill View Post
        What's the problem with Eclipse? It runs wonderfully on my 64 bit Win 7, 6 core Bulldozer setup
        Fine on my dual core laptop as well. Of course I do have 8gb RAM and an SSD, and I increased the starting heap size and switched off a chunk of autocompletes and autovalidations and disabled a few plugins i don't use.

        I do keep meaning to try netbeans though.
        While you're waiting, read the free novel we sent you. It's a Spanish story about a guy named 'Manual.'

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          #14
          Originally posted by chef View Post
          What spec?
          The biggest, but I didn't bother with the slightly faster processor - from various articles I've read, that's only really of value if you do a lot of video encoding and such, which I don't. The real speedup comes from the SSD, at least as far as the majority of develeopment-related work goes; and of course any old machine is capable of running trivial stuff like word processing and spreadsheets more than adequately these days.

          Originally posted by doodab View Post
          I do keep meaning to try netbeans though.
          I've been using Netbeans at ClientCo, but finally became disillusioned last week when I discovered that, if it's running on Windows, there's absolutely no way to get it to save a file with Unix line endings unless that file was originally created with them: any files it creates get the platform-it's-running-on's line endings, and can't be changed. (Similarly, if you use it to edit a file created elsewhere with Unix line endings, it can't be saved with DOS line endings even though you are running on Windows.) This was very annoying when I was trying to knock up a quick shell script for the STB, which runs a very barebones version of Linux. In the end I had to use dos2unix from a Cygwin shell

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            #15
            Hackintosh?

            you ever done it ?

            I have an oldish Thinkpad I was gonna have a go on.

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