Hello Lew

On 18 Nov 2011, at 18:16, Mr. L. Alexander wrote:

• I'd advise that only a certified mac engineer do this work. it's a complex 
task to remove all casing screws, then get to the hdd. not like windows 
machines where access doors are under the machine. It can however be done but 
if your notebook is under warrenty, take it to a warrenty approved apple 
service centre or retail store.

We don't have either of those close to us. We might be able to find a reseller; 
I'm not sure. But the closes Apple Store to us is about 45 miles North of here. 
I know that PCWorld in the UK sell Apple hardware but I wouldn't take the thing 
there if you paid me! i've seen the kind of workmanship that the so-called 
engineers at the local branch of that store turn out, and it's truly appalling 
if they call themselves professionals.

• SSD though faster is expensive. you're looking at more money for a 256gb as 
an example than a 750gb 7200rpm drive.

Yes, I realise that. I was thinking from the perspective of speed at least 
where our servers are concerned. Our servers process tens of thousands of 
messages per day, most of which are spam. But the more speed we can pull out of 
these things the better.

The Quad Core Minis use an Intel® I7 processor, and they all have 8GB of RAM in 
them now which is the most they can handle. Buying the RAM from Crucial saved 
us a very great deal of money in terms of how much we'd have paid from Apple. 
In fact, when you add it all up the cost was only something like 50% of what 
Apple would have charged to equip the 4 quad core Mac Minis.

The problem with the new quad core Minis is that you cannot boot from DVD as 
far as I can see. Thus, you have no alternative but to use Lion Server. You 
couldn't even use the regular Lion as far as I know, not that we need too. But 
for configuration purposes it would be utterly magic if I could have one of 
these quad cores running SL Server.

• If you want extra performance, consider a 7200rpm version of the 2.5in drive 
in a maximum 750gb capacity. I use this on my macbook pro. however, the 
heatsink on the smaller machines might not support it. let me look into the 
technotes and come back to you on that lol

I'd appreciate that. the new Minis are tiny; about half the thickness of the 
old models. But at least you can remove the foot on the bottom of the machine 
to get access to memory and the motherboard. The memory upgrade was easy, even 
for me. I did all that work myself but there again as you rightly say it didn't 
involve any major disassembly.

If the 750GB drives would work I'd certainly consider that route.

Lynne

<--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net --->

To reply to this post, please address your message to [email protected]

You can find an archive of all messages posted    to the Mac-Access forum at 
either the list's own dedicated web archive:
<http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/mac-access/index.html>
or at the public Mail Archive:
<http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>.
Subscribe to the list's RSS feed from:
<http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml>

The Mac-Access mailing list is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and 
worm-free!

Please remember to update your membership options periodically by visiting the 
list website at:
<http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/mac-access/options/>

Reply via email to