After finding the dock that originally came packaged with my first iPhone model, I decided it should be put to actual use.
At first, I wasn’t sure what to do with the ancient piece of technology. I began by dusting away what appeared to be months of lying without use. Then, I did what many would have done. I took a drill bit to it and carved it into a useful iPad dock.
First off, like countless others, I’m partial to products designed and manufactured by Apple. All of my computing, both work and mobile is done on Apple computers. When the rumor mill begins for new shiny products, I quickly shoot out emails to my friends that can scoop me some details.
That being said…I was very underwhelmed after the announcement and demo of the iPad.
I’m the type of consumer that is attracted to great marketing. I am also very aware of this problem. When shopping for things like toothpaste, mouthwash, and etc, you will often find me reaching for the best designed packaging. When the product in question is usually under five dollars, why not reach for the shiniest first?
After weighing the pros and cons (aka listening to gq/men’s health), I settle on a purchase. I had been hearing great things about the Aquafresh Iso-Active toothpaste. I could write on and on about its foaming technology that goes beyond the normal realms of ordinary toothpaste, but who wants to read that? Go on, get your google on.
As I’ve been taking on more and more film work, I’ve been needing more and more space to store all of this data. This problem has been easily fixed with external storage situations, and I’ve never really had a serious complaint about that setup.
The more work I did with the Canon 7d and other high definition captures, I came to realize that my current setup wasn’t cutting it. The macbookpro I was using had historically been a workhorse for me. I loved the face that I could do the bulk of my media work on this extremely powerful notebook. At the time, it was priced at $2799, and it has been well worth it. The sad fact is, uncompressed HD and unconverted ProRes files were a nightmare to edit on that machine. I had to upgrade.
Fast forward to more recent time. I had obviously been in the market for a mac pro. I had already acquired a 30inch Apple Cinema display, and I wanted to match it with the tower. When the new iMac line launched last fall, I wasn’t too excited. I feel as if pro users have been conditioned to believe the iMac wasn’t a serious machine to be doing loads and loads of production work on. Rather than write on and on about my debating process, let me throw down some facts about the current iMac line and the current mac pro line.
Hi all-
I’ve been working to relaunch zackluye.com to a more eye/user friendly design. I hope you like. In the mean time, enjoy this very empty blog post as I debate whether to import my old blog’s content or start fresh. Thoughts?
