Obama in the Village

President Obama visited the West Village the other day. Apparently blogger Hi-Fi Bri lives on the same street as Anna Wintour, who hosted the president for dinner. So Bri has done a write-up about being in lockdown, including some photos, starting here and continuing in subsequent entries. Neato.

My New Mac

I’m writing this on my new iMac, which arrived today, Thursday. (It’s after midnight as I type this.) I ordered it online on Tuesday, but I had to call Apple customer service to fix a payment issue, and after it was resolved, the customer service rep bumped my order up to two-day shipping. For two days I tracked its progress online, waiting for it to arrive… and here it is.

I’m psyched. It’s pretty nifty. Especially compared to my seven-year-old PC. After I unpacked it and set it up on my desk, the first thing I thought was, Jesus, this thing is huge. It’s a 21.5-inch widescreen, compared to the 15-inch 4:3 monitor I’ve used since 2003.

I’m not completely new to Macs. In 1999-2000, I worked at a small company for 10 months where my work computer was a Mac. It must have had OS 8 or OS 9. I didn’t particularly like it. I thought Windows 95/98 looked sleeker, and I was completely unfamiliar with how Macs worked. But I’ve always thought OS X was a lot prettier.

So now I’ve got my own Mac! There are a few things I’m getting used to:

One, the green “maximize” button doesn’t do the same thing as the maximize button does in Windows; it doesn’t fill the whole screen but maximizes to as much space as the program needs. Or so I’ve read. I can’t quite figure out exactly what it’s going to do before I click it, especially when I click it a second time.

Two, if you close a window, the program doesn’t actually shut down unless you make it “quit.” It’s weird to see a menu in the top left corner for a program I thought was closed.

And three, I don’t yet fully have a handle on how to install programs that I’ve downloaded.

But I’m slowly figuring things out, and I’ll figure that stuff out too. This evening I bought Switching to the Mac, by David Pogue, because it’s convenient to have a book by my side to look stuff up instead of having to Google things.

One other thing of note: I have an external hard drive, so it was easy to copy all my personal files from my old PC onto my Mac. And I realized that I’ve been copying some of these files from computer to computer for years. I have a folder called “College papers and letters,” and the “Date Modified” on the earliest of those files is from October 1991. Holy crap. I wrote my college papers with WordPerfect 5.1, but I think I found a way to read them on my PC, so there must be some way to open them.

I’m looking forward to playing around with this thing. I know it’s just a computer, but really, it feels like a more enjoyable experience than a PC. I’ve promised Matt that I’m not going to turn into a crazy Mac person — but for a while I may be experiencing the zeal of a convert.

So, that’s that. This is gonna be fun.