Grab shot.
G1, kit lens @ 20mm, 1/3200, f/5.6, ISO 320.
At 24th Street and Mission in San Francisco.
Grab shot.
G1, kit lens @ 20mm, 1/3200, f/5.6, ISO 320.
At 24th Street and Mission in San Francisco.
Equalling the original at half the price.
Expert computer builder FU Steve set out the current state-of-the-art in Hackintosh building for photographers and video artists in his piece here. At a cost of $1,347, which included one Dell 21.5″ IPS display it’s some 20% faster on most tasks than my Core2Quad machine which is overclocked to run at 3.60gHz versus 2.83gHz stock.
Truth be told, that latest build, using the Intel i5 Sandybridge CPU is overkill for most, so I asked FU to spec out a lower cost machine whose goal was to equal the performance of my Core2Quad Hackster at half the price. In contrast to the paper specs of the i5 machine, this one would be put to work as a stock quote and Excel machine in my office, so there is no room for any cost cutting which threatens reliability.
I’ll hand it over to FU Steve. Having built the HP1, my daily user, he now embarks on the HP10.
Thank you Thomas.
This build is going to use the Intel i3 3.1gHz CPU and a low power drain motherboard and graphics card. That will save on cooling without compromising reliability. On the other hand, the power supply will be over-spec’d to allow for the addition of more drives and monitors down the road with a possible upgrade to an i5 or i7 CPU which is a drop in replacement for the i3. The stock Intel cooler will be used; it’s a poor cooler but should be adequate for the demands here.
CPU:
Intel Core i3-2100, 3.1gHz – $124
This is a superb bargain. It can only accept very modest overclocking, which is a waste of time, but uses little power and is easily cooled.
CPU cooler:
I am using the stock Intel cooler which comes with the CPU, with Arctic Silver thermal paste in lieu of the stock paste supplied by Intel.
Motherboard:
Gigabyte Intel H67M-D2-B3 – $100
I’m sticking with Gigabyte as it’s a known and reliable maker. This board is a Micro-ATX board, though we are using a full sized ATX case. It supports the new 6gB/s SATA data transfer rate, twice as fast as the older 3gB/s. It will only accept two memory sticks, but we will only be using one, for 4gB.
Memory:
Corsair XMS3 4 GB 1333MHz PC3-10666 240-pin DDR3 Memory Kit for Intel Core i3 i5 i7 = $30
Another can be added if needed later on.
Graphics and video:
EVGA GeForce GT430 1024 MB DDR3 PCI-Express 2.0 Graphics Card Video Card 01G-P3-1431-KR – $64
There are faster and far costlier GPUs than this one but this is a tremendous price for an advanced card which will support two DVI-D displays. You can start with one display and then add a second later. I’m sticking with EVGA and the Nvidia chip as Thomas has had such excellent performance from his EVGA Nvidia 9800GTX+ card, which is marginally slower than this card, but cost twice as much. The card comes with its own cooling fan, which is as it should be. This is a low power consumption card and does not require plug in power, deriving what it needs from the motherboard.
In addition to the two DVI-D sockets for computer displays (a rarity on a card which is so inexpensive), the card also has an HDMI socket for use with modern LCD TV sets, making this machine ideal as a home theater PC, though I would use a smaller case and a notebook HDD for such purposes. There is no VGA socket – if that’s required, look at other cards. Gigabyte alone makes so many it’s mind blowing.
Computer case:
Cooler Master Elite 371 Mid Tower ATX Case – $40
Not as massive as the Antec Sonata III Thomas uses in his Core2Quad machine, but adequate for our purposes. It has especially easy installation for disk drives and peripherals and lots of space for cooling and expansion. There is no reason to go with a small case for this application.
Power supply:
Thermaltake W0070RUC TR2 Series 430W Power Supply with 2 Fans – $41
It’s easy to be cheap here, but an under-spec’d power supply will die on you, maybe taking the motherboard with it. Plus it limits upgrade potential. The power supply used here has shielded cables, lots of connectors, a twin fan and a great reputation. It includes a 115/230 volt switch.
You can use the table here to properly determine the power supply wattage needed. This rig demands 234 watts, so with a 430 watt power supply there’s no stress. Add a second HDD, two SSDs, more USB devices, more fans and an i7 CPU overclocked, and the power needed rises to 295 watts. (By contrast the Core2Quad Thomas uses needs 404 watts at full power, which gives you some sense of how power needs have fallen with the latest components).
Keyboard:
Kensington K64366 wired slimline USB for Mac – $38 (not at Amazon).
Forget wireless – simply not reliable enough. This keyboard uses mechanical scissor-type key springs and is superior in every way to the execrable ergonomics of the overpriced ones made by Apple. You use a keyboard all the time – why not the best? Get a cover while you are at it – $20 – and keep it clean and long lived.
Disk drives:
Seagate Momentus XT 500 GB 7200RPM SATA 3Gb/s 32 MB Cache 3.5 Inch Solid State Hybrid Drive ST95005620AS-Bare Drive = $100
You can get awfully used to the fast boot of an SSD but it comes at a price. As you can leave your HackPro on 24/7 there’s no need for a fast booting costly SSD, so use a good compromise, a hybrid HDD. This uses some internal memory to cache frequent uses (open PS, open LR, etc.) but traditional spinning disks for storage. The price is right. 500gB is plenty; if you need more buy larger traditional drives and consider using a small SSD drive for booting the OS and for loading apps. If the budget is tight, you can get a 500gB 6gB/s Seagate 7200rpm drive for as little as $40.
DVD readers:
DVD: Sony 24X SATA Internal DVD+/-RW Drive AD-7260S-0B – $20
Steve Jobs may be junking the DVD drive but you don’t have to at the price Sony is asking. Forget slimline or slot loading drives – made to fail.
If you need an SDXC card reader, external USB types can be had for $20.
Mouse:
Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 6000 – White – $23
Bluetooth mice – Apple’s and many others – are plagued with interference problems. Like Thomas once did, I use the Microsoft Mobile Mouse because it’s cheap, comfortable, runs for three months on one AA battery and uses RF not BT. A small dongle is inserted in any available USB port and there’s no pairing or disconnection issues. Instant on, never off. Best of all, the white one has a semi-gloss surface which does not show fingerprints and is $4 less than the shiny black one. Go figure. Download MSFT’s Intellimouse software and you can tailor the two side buttons and the scroll wheel. The latter supports both vertical and horizontal (tilt the wheel) scrolling. A superb product, even if it does say ‘Microsoft’ on the box. The scroll wheel is freewheeling – if that does not work for you look at RF mice from Logitech.
By all means try Apple’s Magic Mouse. I suspect you will conclude, as I did, that the ergonomics suck, leaving you $70 poorer.
Bluetooth:
IOGEAR USB 2.1 Bluetooth Micro Adapter GBU421 – $12
If you need BT, plug this in to any USB port. The mouse used does not need it.
Speakers:
Logitech LS11 2.0 Stereo Speaker System – $18
These will give you sound about a billion times better than the ones in an iMac for very little outlay. They are wired – forget wireless toys. This model has been around for ever, with just cause.
Display:
ASUS VH222H-P 21.5-Inch Widescreen LCD Monitor – $138 + $5 for a DVI-D cable.
With 1920 x 1080 definition this is a nice modern display. Not top of the line but adequate for all but the most critical users. Comes with DVI-D cable included. There’s a small built in speaker (poor) but will suffice if you do not need big sound.
Wireless 802-11n:
Newer Technology USB dongle from MacSales – $30
The latest driver works perfectly with OS Lion.
If you prefer wired Ethernet, be sure to install the RealtekRTL81xx.kext file (available free from kexts.com) using KextBeast (available free from the Downloads area of Tonymacx86.com). Simply place the kext file on your desktop and run KextBeast, then restart the computer.
Software:
OS X Lion – $30
The most overrated ‘upgrade’ to an OS ever, but robust, stable and easily made to behave like its awesome predecessor, Snow Leopard. Thomas has written about it a lot on his blog, and it is priced right. I used the TonyMac installation which is clearly documented here. The site has a host of DSDT files – these are specific to your hardware to make Lion run. Installation is simply a question of placing the file on your Desktop and running MultiBeast.
Sound is a little tricky. The motherboard uses the Realtek ALC888b codec. To avoid nasty crackling sounds run System and AppleHDARollback from Multibeast. Then go to Kexts.com and download GigabyteALC888b.kext and HDAEnabler.kext, place both on the Desktop, run KextBeast, reboot and you are done.
The installation here is a ‘clean’ Lion one, with no need for a pre-existing Snow Leopard installation.
You can update Lion 10.7.0 to 10.7.1 using Software Update in OS X; mine installed flawlessly.
Time to assemble the hardware and tools required:
Study the pictorial at the end of this piece first, then run it on your iPad as you do the work. I believe that even a first time computer builder could assemble this in a very leisurely ninety minutes, two hours with a pause to walk the dog. Tools needed are a medium Phillips screwdriver, a flat bladed screwdriver, a pair of snips to remove blanking plates (though you can just wiggle them until they break off), a 5mm nut driver to tighten the motherboard stand-off posts (though you could butcher these just as easily with a pair of pliers if you have no pride in your work), a thin piece of stout plastic to spread the thermal paste on the CPU and heatsink in the fan base, and a bent paper clip to test the power supply before installation.
Software hacking for Lion OS X:
There are a large number of web fora addressing OS X hacking. Some of the most useful are:
In both cases there is a strong sense of community and helpfulness, so if you derive value from these be sure to try and help others if you can.
Economic risk:
No component costs over $140 here, so if one part blows, your replacement cost exposure is low.
Expandability:
The beauty of using a generously sized computer case is not only that it makes cooling easy (you can get three more case fans in there and a large CPU fan) but also that the computer can be greatly expanded as needs dictate and the budget permits. Some examples:
Further, by not chintzing on the power supply at this stage, there is more than enough current and connectors available to cope with increased power demands.
Total cost:
$814.
$724 if using wired internet and a regular 500gB disk drive.
Add as much as you want to spend for a costlier monitor. Or two.
In Thomas’s case, he had many of the peripherals and OS Lion, needing only the CPU, RAM, motherboard, graphics card and power supply, for a total outlay of $400.
For that price you get performance comparable to a mid-range iMac at half the price and with far better cooling, meaning far greater reliability.
Thanks, FU. FU is building the machine right now and I will run Part II with performance measurements on Photoshop CS5 and Lightroom 3 once it’s up and running.
Click the picture below for a slideshow of how FU assembled the HP10 computer:
Click the picture for the HP10 assembly pictorial. © FU Steve.
Part II on the economy Hackintosh appears here.
The mural at its best.
Spotted in downtown Santa Cruz, CA:
G1, kit lens @ 43mm, 1/400, f/7.1, ISO 320.
The optimal photographer’s build.
The stock market just laid another egg, your investments are down 20% YTD, but you still need a new computer? Build a Hackintosh.
While my Hackintosh continues to deliver high performance and reliability, competitive with all but the most exotic current computers, its components are dated. Today’s Hackintosh builder could no longer buy the same motherboard new nor would he want to, as cheaper alternatives which accommodate newer CPUs and faster RAM are available.
With that thought in mind, and knowing that many readers here would like to screw up their courage and dump Apple’s flaky iMacs for good while not wanting to be hosed down for a new MacPro, I asked expert computer builder FU Steve (the builder of my HackPro) to put together a components list for a Hackintosh best suited to the needs of a photographer who might also want to do video processing. Video needs far more processing power than still pictures.
The design dictates were much the same as for my Hackintosh, meaning:
Here’s what FU came up with.
Thanks, Thomas.
I list the components below with today’s pricing at Amazon US, together with some words on each.
CPU:
Intel Core i5-2500K, 3.3gHz – $220
This is by no means Intel’s fastest CPU. It’s the mid-range model of their latest Sandybridge line with the ‘K’ denoting it’s unlocked, meaning it can be overclocked. Overclocking by 15% to 3.80 gHz is safe and will compete on speed with the $100 costlier i7 in non-overclocked mode. Thomas’s HackPro with its overclocked Core2Quad delivers a Geekbench score of 8,700 – that’s a CPU speed test. You can expect the i5 to deliver that in stock mode, rising to 10,000 once overclocked. The i7 supports 8 simultaneous threads compared to 4 for the i5, but for use with Photoshop and Lightroom/Aperture that adds no value. These CPUs use Intel’s latest 1155 socket fitting, so if you ever need to upgrade to an i7 it’s a plug-and-play replacement.
CPU cooler:
Cooler Master Hyper 212 Plus 120mm Sleeve CPU Cooler, RR-B10-212P-G1 – $27
Intel sold the Core2Quad with one of the worst fan coolers ever. The i5 comes with an equally crappy fan. Don’t mess with success – use the tall Coolermaster 212 with its large array of fins in the radiator and a dedicated fan to keep things cool. This is the same one used in Thomas’s HackPro and fits the 1155 Intel socket CPU fine. Use Arctic Silver paste between the cooler and CPU – $5 – the tube will do more computers than you can.
Motherboard:
Gigabyte Intel Z68 ATX DDR3 2133 LGA 1155 Motherboards GA-Z68X-UD3H-B3​ – $160
This one’s a slam dunk. The Gigabyte board chosen is easily adapted to Mac OS duties, fits the Intel 1155 socket Sandybridge CPU and has four RAM slots, each capable of holding 8gB for a 32gB total. It’s a full size ATX board making assembly easy and will pose no issues with the large Coolermaster CPU cooler which can be a squeeze on smaller boards. Unlike smaller boards which typically come with only one fan connector, this Gigabyte sports four – CPU, two System and one Power supply. There are also more USB and SATA and other connectors on this board than you will likely ever need.
Memory:
Corsair XMS3 4 GB 1333MHz PC3-10666 240-pin DDR3 Memory Kit for Intel Core i3 i5 i7 – 2 off = $60
If you ever see the need to go to 32gB buy one 8gB memory stick to make addition easy, but those are premium priced and it’s hard to imagine even a heavy video processor needing more than 16gB. As 8gB is more than adequate in Thomas’s HackPro I’m using two 4gB sticks here, leaving two slots open. You can add 4gB or 8gB sticks to these when you talk yourself into believing you need them. Why not faster 1600mHz RAM? Because the price-performance equation breaks down. 1333 is the price/performance sweet spot.
Graphics and video:
EVGA GeForce GT430 1024 MB DDR3 PCI-Express 2.0 Graphics Card Video Card 01G-P3-1431-KR – $64
There are faster and far costlier GPUs than this one but this is a tremendous price for an advanced card which will support two DVI-D displays. You can start with one display and then add a second later. If you need more than two do as Thomas does and use an USB-DVI adapter. I’m sticking with EVGA and the Nvidia chip as Thomas has had such tremendous performance from his EVGA Nvidia 9800GTX+ card, which is marginally slower than this card, but cost twice as much. The card comes with its own cooling fan, which is as it should be. On Cinebench, a graphics frame rate test, Thomas’s dated HackPro delivers 35 fps. Expect up to 50 fps from this build. Either is way beyond the needs of any but the hardest core gamers. For video processing these are more than you need.
Computer case:
Antec Sonata III 500 Quiet Super Mid Tower ATX Case – $130
A case, is a case, is a case …. not! This one has stood the test of time in many computers I have built. It’s sturdy, well ventilated, well made and the price includes a 500 watt power supply, more than adequate for a photographer’s needs. There are USB, SATA, and sound ports on the front and room for four internal and five front-mounted drive bays. It’s modestly sized but roomy enough to make assembly easy and comes with two fans – power supply and case. With the GPU having its own fan and the Coolermaster CPU fan this rig will run cool as can be, overclocked or not.
Keyboard:
Kensington K64366 wired slimline USB for Mac – $38 (not at Amazon).
Forget wireless – simply not reliable enough. This keyboard uses mechanical scissor-type key springs and is superior in every way to the execrable ergonomics of the overpriced ones made by Apple. You use a keyboard all the time – why not the best? Get a cover while you are at it – $20 – and keep it clean and long lived.
Disk drives:
Seagate Momentus XT 500 GB 7200RPM SATA 3Gb/s 32 MB Cache 2.5 Inch Solid State Hybrid Drive ST95005620AS-Bare Drive – 2 off = $200
You can get awfully used to the fast boot of an SSD but it comes at a price. As you can leave your HackPro on 24/7 there’s no need for a fast booting costly SSD, so use a good compromise, a hybrid HDD. This uses some internal memory to cache frequent uses (open PS, open LR, etc.) but traditional spinning disks for storage. The price is right. 500gB is plenty; if you need more buy larger traditional drives and consider using a small SSD drive for booting the OS and for loading apps. I’m buying two of these – boot and backup.
DVD and SDXC readers:
DVD: Sony 24X SATA Internal DVD+/-RW Drive AD-7260S-0B – $20
SDXC: Atech FlashPro-55U Internal Flash Memory Card Reader w/ Front USB 2.0 Port for 5.25 Inch Drive Bay – $58
Steve Jobs may be junking the DVD drive but you don’t have to at the price Sony is asking. Forget slimline or slot loading drives – made to fail.
The SDXC card reader is expensive but makes for an elegant fit in the front panel of the Antec case. External USB types can be had for $20.
Mouse:
Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 6000 – White – $23
Bluetooth mice – Apple’s and many others – are plagued with interference problems. Like Thomas once did, I use the Microsoft Mobile Mouse because it’s cheap, comfortable, runs for three months on one AA battery and uses RF not BT. A small dongle is inserted in any available USB port and there’s no pairing or disconnection issues. Instant on, never off. Best of all, the white one has a semi-gloss surface which does not show fingerprints and is $4 less than the shiny black one. Go figure. Download MSFT’s Intellimouse software and you can tailor the two side buttons and the scroll wheel. The latter supports both vertical and horizontal (tilt the wheel) scrolling. A superb product, even if it does say ‘Microsoft’ on the box. The scroll wheel is freewheeling – if that does not work for you look at RF mice from Logitech.
By all means try Apple’s Magic Mouse. I suspect you will conclude, as I did, that the ergonomics suck, leaving you $70 poorer.
Bluetooth:
IOGEAR USB 2.1 Bluetooth Micro Adapter GBU421 – $12
If you need BT, plug this in to any USB port. The mouse used does not need it.
Speakers:
Logitech LS11 2.0 Stereo Speaker System – $18
These will give you sound about a billion times better than the ones in an iMac for very little outlay. They are wired – forget wireless toys. This model has been around for ever, with just cause.
Display:
UltraSharp U2211H 21.5″ 1920 x 1080 1000:1 Widescreen LCD Monitor – $248
With 1920 x 1080 definition this is a photographer’s dream display owing to its IPS panel – a worthy successor to the three 2209WAs Thomas uses (and which are only 1680 x 1050) and at a fantastic price. Comes with DVI-D cable included.
Wireless 802-11n:
TP-Link TL-WN951N 300Mbps Wireless N PCI Adapter – $34
Newer Technology USB dongle from MacSales – $30
Plug and play as it uses the Atheros chip. An alternative and faster solution is the like-priced Newer Technology USB dongle from MacSales for $30. The latest driver works perfectly with OS Lion.
Software:
OS X Lion – $30
The most overrated ‘upgrade’ to an OS ever, but robust, stable and easily made to behave like its awesome predecessor, Snow Leopard. Thomas has written about it a lot on his blog, and it is priced right. Kakewalk will allow you to do a fresh install – no need to have Snow Leopard installed first. Download Lion to your crappy old iMac and, before restarting, copy the installation files to an 8gB flash drive or SDHC card. Once you restart the iMac the required installer files for your Hackintosh will be erased.
Hacking:
Kakewalk – free, but make a $30 donation. Don’t be cheap.
It has never been easier. All the components above are supported by Kakewalk software, the same I used to install Lion on Thomas’s HackPro.
Assembly:
When I built Thomas’s HackPro I made a slide show showing assembly. As the same Antec case is used here and the motherboard is similar in layout, just refer to those original pictures to see how easy assembly is. Those assembly pictures also illustrate how to set up the BIOS (motherboard software) and the setup here is the same. That pictorial shows installation of the stock Intel CPU cooler; as I recommend the larger Coolermaster 212, above, be sure to fit the retainer plate underneath the motherboard before you install the motherboard in the case. Unlike the stock cooler which clips in from above, the Coolermaster is much larger and needs the retaining plate installed underneath the motherboard.
You can see the Coolermaster installed in Thomas’s HackPro here. The clips holding the fan to the radiator have been (mercifully) redesigned and now make attachment of the fan very easy.
Time value:
You will have an up front investment of your time. The times below are for complete novices who have never built or hacked a computer before.
Assembly time – it’s all plug and play. Needs one screwdriver. All components are keyed so you cannot install them incorrectly. 4 hours.
Hacking time – Kakewalk is so easy it’s hard to go wrong. 2 hours includes screwing up a couple of times.
Repair time – When something blows, you don’t have to lug your iMac down to the condescending ‘geniuses’ making minimum wage at the Apple Store. Order the replacement part for modest cost shipped overnight and you are up and running again in 24 hours.
What’s your time worth?
Cost:
Total outlay: $1,347.
As importantly, the single costliest part is the CPU at $220, so you will be out very little money if a component needs replacement.
Mac comparison:
Forget the MacMini – bush league.
Which iMac does that amount of money buy you? The base spec 21.5″ iMac for $1,199 is the nearest comparison. All of the Hackintosh’s components come with 3 year warranties, the iMac with just one year, so add $169 for AppleCare to make it three years, for a total of $1,368. How does it compare?
A fairer comparison may be with the MacPro. Even the lowest spec MacPro uses the Intel Xeon CPU which retails at $1,000 and up, so comparisons are difficult. You can expect the MacPro to outperform on multi-threading benchmarks but for photographic use there is no advantage. Spares are costly ‘Apple only’ even though the parts are stock PC ones, gussied up to rip you off. You can do the math but expect to pay a minimum of $3,600 for a machine with the HackPro’s performance.
Thanks, FU – a timely update.
So readers, what on earth are you waiting for? This is a killer photographer’s computer.
Scared that OS updates will brick your Hackster? Nah! Just keep reading this blog.
A visual feast.
Made in 1988, the Belgian movie ‘Le Maître de Musique’ dispels the oft held belief that there is no such thing as the Belgian cinema. Directed by Gérard Corbiau it is a lush, visual masterpiece. The story of a great baritone who retires and grooms two star pupils to once again defeat an old nemesis whom he himself bested in a singing duel years ago, it is replete with image after image that any photographer will warm to.
It doesn’t hurt that the whole thing is made on Fuji Film and set to Mahler, Verdi and Schubert. As befits the greatest baritone of his day, José van Dam does his own singing and superb acting, the latter understated to a degree that will never capture modern attention spans. But if there’s an overpowering reason to watch this movie it’s for the luminous beauty of Anne Roussel who has one of those faces a camera adores. An exceptionally beautiful woman, and ably supported by the darkly sensuous Sophie Fennec as van Dam’s accompanist and factotum.
The movie has long been out of print but DVD copies are available from Amazon US on a regular basis, which is where I got mine, having worn out the VHS version! It’s in French with available English subtitles, but you really don’t need to understand the words to enjoy the movie.
The cocoon image, the second below, is a straight take on the opening to Ken Russell’s expressionist masterpiece ‘Mahler‘ (1974). Also unavailable. What is it with US movie studios? Those familiar with Andrew Wyeth’s painting ‘Christina’s World’ (1948) will see it in the third picture below. And if ever photographs could be styled ‘Mahlerian’ well, the last two have it in spades.
Best of all, if you are into Mahler and Verdi, you are in for a real treat.