Hmm, sorry to see them bring that useless enter key back, or maybe it never went away on the Pro? My iBook had that, but the Macbook I have now (previous generation) has command and option keys on both the left and right. No control key on the right, but I've learned to live with that as my iBook didn't have it either. No numpad, but I din't use it anyway so no big deal there for me. Did the Pros always keep that enter key, or did they just bring it back on these new models?

On Dec 13, 2008, at 13:25, erik burggraaf wrote:

Hi, well there's a useless extra enter key. Other than that there's nothing. I wish they'd ditch the enter key, shorten up the space bar a fraction, and throw in a set of command and option keys on the right hand side. Then it would look similar to the new desktop aluminum keybord.

I was actually thinking of buying one of those keybords. It's incredibly sleek and it would give me back a number pad, as well as provide me an extra set of vo keys.

Best,


erik burggraaf

Certified Technician
Assistive Computing LTD Support and training
Sales department: 888-828-2445
Support and Training: 888-255-5194
Email: [email protected]

Website coming soon



On 13-Dec-08, at 10:04 AM, David Poehlman wrote:

so what is in plac of the command and option keys?

----- Original Message -----
From: "erik burggraaf" <[email protected]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by
theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, December 13, 2008 12:56 PM
Subject: Re: new macbook question


Hi,  I recently upgraded from a macbook pro 2.4 ghz to a new macbook
pro 2.4 ghz.  Don't worry, you are reading that right.
I upgraded from 2 mb l2 cache to 6, 2 gb of ram to 4, 160 gb hd to
250, and some other nice improvements.  The sound, which I thought
couldn't get any better, actually did get better some how.  The
monitor is thinner. The keybord is just a bit nicer, although I wish
they would put in right hand command and option keys and restore the
built in number pad.

They directly immaged my 160 gb drive onto the new 250 gb drive,
leaving all my settings and such in tact.  I lothe and abhour itunes,
but I can tell you that performance of VMware Fusion has improved
significantly, no, astronomicly,, on the new system.  I never have
gotten around to tweaking it for performance and I could really bog
down my old macbook pro if I left the windows VM running when I wasn't
using it.  Now it just goes off into it's corner.  Of course now I'm
in the habit of shutting it down and that's not such a bad thing, but
if I do forget I can count on having no sluggishness getting my email
the morning after.

My primary gripes with it asside from the loss of the number pad are,
they moved the dvd drive from the front to the side, and they moved
all the connectivity to the other side panel.  The reason they did
this is so that people could put in a second hard drive, but I think
that is re-damn-diculous.  If you can't get by with 250 or 320 gb
storage on your notebook then get yourself a NAS, smiles.

Overall though I'm really really happy with it.  And then when you
considder that they go up to 2.53 and 2.8 ghz on the processer, it
just makes it even sweeter.  The 2.53 ghz macbook pro costs what I
paid for my old 2.4 back in February, so I am pretty jellus now, smiles.

Best,

erik burggraaf

Certified Technician
Assistive Computing LTD Support and training
Sales department: 888-828-2445
Support and Training: 888-255-5194
Email: [email protected]

Website coming soon



On 13-Dec-08, at 7:57 AM, jeffrey greene wrote:

Hi guys, well my wife who couldn't stand mac osx a year ago has
highjacked my macbook pro. She says she now loves it. I'm thinking
about buying one of the new aluminum macbooks but was wondering how
fast they are? With my one-year old macbook pro 2.2ghz itunes seems
to really hesitate so I was wondering if the new macbooks do this
also? Any feedback from new (aluminum) macbook owners would be
appreciated.
Thanks, Jeff

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