Category Archives: Photography

Mediasonic HF2-SU3S2 4 bay drive enclosure

Recommended, with reservations.

I wrote of my intention to move all my movies from half a dozen external enclosures to one in yesterday’s piece, opting for the Mediasonic HF2-SU3S2 (Amazon – $130). What follows is as relevant to storing photo files as it is to video. Having taken delivery and transferred my movies to 3Tb drives in the enclosure, here are some observations.

  • Very well made and well packed for transit.
  • Near useless ‘Chinglish’ instructions.
  • Front flap opens easily and door can be removed.
  • More flashing LEDs than you can shake a stick at.
  • Auto power-up must be switched off (two presses on top right front panel ‘Sync’ button) or the case shuts down with OS 10.7.4 Lion. This is purportedly a function which works with Windows, something I will never explore.
  • Once the front door is removed a two catchpress retaining plate is removed to gain drive access
  • Drives slide in and need a bit of wiggling to locate the power and SATA connectors. No big deal but side rails would have made this easier.
  • Attachable drive handles are provided to make it easier to remove drives; these attach with screws and a screwdriver is provided. I have found you do not have to use these. If you do not use them, drive installation needs no tools.
  • The box is compact, some 9″ deep x 6″ tall x 5″ wide.
  • The three position fan switch has Auto, Low and High settings. The latter roars, the Auto, which is thermostatically controlled, remains very quiet in practice. Inaudible at 6 feet.
  • The power cable socket is at the side which makes it impossible to abut these enclosures next to one another if you have more than one. Inept design.
  • As shipped it’s set to USB; to switch to eSATA a front panel button must be held for 4 seconds. For eSATA connectivity, see the Update at the end of this piece (Hackintosh only; eSata is not available on Macs).
  • When copying files to a drive the bar aligned with the front power switch dances crazily with an LED show. Bizarre, but irrelevant in practice, unless it’s in line of sight.
  • Rubber feet provide noise and vibration isolation.

To add USB3 capability to my HackMini I installed a two port Western Digital USB3 card in one of the short slots.

The Mini uses a modest Core i3 Sandy Bridge CPU and an equally modest Gigabyte H67M-D2-B3 motherboard. That’s all that is needed for movie playback, and the motherboard used has no USB3 sockets, hence the add-on card.

I then installed the NEC/Renesas driver using TonyMac’s Multibeast application and verified that my USB3 card reader was recognized as a USB3 device when connected with a USB3 cable. All was well.

However, neither my HP100 Hackintosh, the 2012 MacBook Air or the HackMini would recognize the enclosure when connected with a USB3 cable. Research disclosed that the maker is aware of this and claims to be working on it but as the issue has persisted since at least the introduction of Lion a year ago, don’t hold your breath. So if you are doing processing of pictures or video and need the high speed connection offered by USB3, this enclosure is not for you – yet. (See the Update at the end of this piece where Hackintosh users can activate the faster eSATA connection).

Using a USB2 cable there were no issues. After disabling the auto-power feature the enclosure and drives were immediately recognized and everything was ready to go. I popped successive 1Tb drives into the enclosure copying the movies from these to the 3Tb drives inside. The enclosure can be used with software RAID (included in OS X’s Disk Utility) but for my purposes the regular setting as JBOD (Just a Bunch Of separate Drives) is fine.

When I tried to format my first 3Tb drive using a USB2 cradle attached to HP100 Disk Utility could only format 801Gb of space. However, once the drive was inserted in the enclosure, the full 3Tb was recognized and formatted, suggesting that the enclosure drive controller is a lot more current than the ancient one in my drive cradle.

Recommended, with the reservations stated above.

Note also that as hard disk drive manufacturers have consolidated, quality control appears to have fallen judging from buyers comments at Newegg and Amazon. Accordingly, to spread the risk I bought two Seagate and two Western Digital Drives. We will see, though my exerience with these machines is similar to that for all machines – they fail when very young and very old. If you can get through the first few months, chances are pretty good that years of troublefree service will follow.

Updating links in a DVDpedia catalog:

Here’s the code provided by Conor at DVDpedia for v5 of the Bruji app; he shows links to six old drives (‘MyOldMovieDriveTB1-1 through 6’) to two new drives (‘MyNewMovieDriveTB3-1 through 2’). Simply cut and paste this into Terminal replacing the names with the names of your drive(s). I have tested this and it works perfectly. Thank you, Conor!

/usr/bin/sqlite3 ~/Library/Application\ Support/DVDpedia/Database.dvdpd

update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-1’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-1’);
update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-2’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-1’);
update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-3’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-1’);

update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-4’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-2’);
update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-5’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-2’);
update ZLINK Set ZURL = replace(ZURL, ‘file:///Volumes/MyOldMovieDriveTB1-6’, ‘file:///Volumes/MyNewMovieDriveTB3-2’);

.exit

This updates yesterday’s link to the Bruji chat board where the link shown to sqlite3 is now outdated.

Update – use with eSATA:

Macs do not support eSATA connections but Hackintoshes can be readily adapted. If your motherboard comes with eSATA all you need do is install this driver from Tonymac:

Multibeast eSATA driver.

Once installed and rebooted, System Profiler will show the eSATA ports thus:

eSATA ports on the Hackintosh.

My system shows two ports as there’s one on the card and one on the front of the Antec case I use, connected to a header on the motherboard. However, the Z68X motherboard I use does not support port multiplication, so only the first of the four drives in the enclosure is reported in Finder when using eSATA. Read on for the fix.

If your motherboard does not have eSATA, you can add an inexpensive PCIe card which must have ‘port multiplication’. Absent this feature only the first of your drives will mount. This $23 card is known to work.

You will also need an eSATA cable. Happily the enclosure comes with both USB3.0 and eSATA cables, though neither is very long.

I switched the enclosure to eSATA by holding the top right button (‘Interface’) down for 4 seconds, then connected the enclosure to my Hackintosh.

System Profiler now reports the drive:

The Mediasonic connected using eSATA.

I then ran Xbench tests, comparing USB2 with eSATA.

First USB2:

Using USB2 with the SATA3 3TB Seagate drive.

Then eSATA:

Using eSATA.

So the overall speed increase is 55%. Not stellar but handy when copying large files. Further, the larger the data blocks the greater is the gain, with 256k blocks averaging 3-4x as fast. That’s worthwhile.

Update 9/20/2012 – use with MacBook Air 2012 and USB3:

I dropped Mediasonic an email explaining that the enclosure would not be recognized by the MBA when connected with a USB3 cable. I received a courteous reply stating that they would send me an updated circuit board, and asking I return the original. They followed up with instructions for replacement (these were almost right) which requires that six screws retaining the rear of the unit are removed, the fan is disconnected from the circuit board (you must use two pairs of fine nosed pliers to do this or you will wreck the fragile socket or plug) and the six retaining screws for the board and the connecting ribbon cable (a PATA plug, lots of pins on the board – Ugh!) be removed. You also have to pull your drives which connnect directly to the board. Simply yanking the latter out is a prescription for catastrophe. The whole thing took me twenty minutes – one Philips screwdriver and two pairs of fine nosed pliers. And yes, my Border Terrier was in attendance.

The enclosure was immediately recognized by the MBA, but the speeds, measured with Xbench were disappointing, slightly slower than USB2:

Speeds with USB3 and 2012 MacBook Air.

So, a Phyrric victory. It works, but is slower. Still, no complaints about Mediasonic’s customer service. To revert to USB2 simply use a USB2 cable. USB3 cables are blue with blue connector inserts. USB2 cables are all colors with white connector inserts.

Second Update – March, 2013:

I added a second one of these boxes with 2 x 3TB drives. I’ll add two more when needed, as prices keep falling. The price of the box is now down to $120 and one each WD and Seagate drive (Main and Backup) ran $140 each. No issues in setup, and the box, connected with the supplied USB3 cable to a USB3-capable OS X machine was immediately recognized as a USB3 device, suggesting that Mediasonic is fitting the revised board referred to above to new inventory. Nice. Once again, this is not a hardware RAID device for sophisticated backup strategies. It’s simply for use as a simple and effective Main+Backup two HDD (in two pairs if needed) device for mass storage. Ideal for video. If your computer has USB2 only, that will work too, using the supplied cable which is backward-compatible.

Third update – July, 2012:

One year of 24/7 use later and no issues. The box works fine using an Orico USB43 card in my Mac Pro. No fan noise, no HDD failures, no issues.

Six into One does go

Storage changes.

Over half a decade ago I decided it made no sense to own DVDs. Hard to house, ugly to look at and even harder to access. Let me see, is that filed under Actor, Director or Title? Which movies was Bogart in? You get the idea. If ever a product was suited to random access, database storage, it is your movie library.

And movie libraries still make a lot of sense. The much vaunted Netflix, with its 140,000 snail mail offerings, manages to offer only 10,000 of these streamed over broadband and they are some of the worst movies ever made. Even when you find something really good streamed it is as likely as not to have disappeared from your Wish List when you return to watch it later. The Amazon Prime library is near useless and the Apple iTunes one is devoid of classics with content here one day and gone the next.

So I started in a modest way many years ago and ripped my 200 DVDs to a 1tb disk drive housed in a two-drive enclosure with an identical backup clone. As the next 200 came along so did another enclosure and pair of drives, until you get to the mess I have today:

Storage for 1200 movies.

First, you will see that the drive boxes vary. No sooner does a solid box come along than it is discontinued and you are forced to use something else. Second, I do not trust fragile USB hubs so six USB cables make their way to the HackMini which is equipped with no fewer than 8 USB sockets. Third, every box adds a fan and noise is part of the equation. These are still distant enough from the viewing location that noise is not an issue, but you can definitely hear the fans.

So, something has to give. A couple of years ago 3tb drives started coming to market. That means 600 uncompressed movies per drive. But they were costly. Then, to make matters worse, the Thailand floods struck and half of global drive production disappeared. Prices doubled.

Now, drive prices have returned to sanity and there are more good enclosures to choose from at attractive prices. I did the math and concluded the idea of moving what was in six enclosures and twelve drives to one enclosure with four drives made sense, so I plonked down my cash for one of these:

Mediasonic four drive enclosure.

For photographers and cinematographers, there’s a lot that appeals here; it’s not just for movie buffs. While this enclosure does not offer RAID redundant storage, I do not want something I do not remotely understand. A simple clone allows me to switch to the backup if the main drive fails, as it has once during the life of my six separate enclosures. Simple, effective, no nuclear physics involved. CarbonCopyCloner runs incremental scheduled back-ups while I sleep.

The appeal of a modern enclosure like the Mediasonic includes the provision of both USB3.0 and eSata connectors, as well as the ability to take up to four 3tb drives with SATA3 supported. Disk drive buffers are now up to 64mb from 16mb a few years ago and 7200rpm is standard compared with the 5400rpm of yore. If you are moving large volumes of data then USB3.0 and SATA3 are night and day compared to their predecessors. If your purpose is simply data storage and occasional retrieval, as with movies, these technologies add little, but as their incremental cost is near zero, why not have them?

After running the numbers I quickly realized that the $730 spent on the new enclosure and drives (the latter are $150 for 3tb) is less than the $1000 or so the old drives and enclosures command on eBay. A more than ‘free’ upgrade, though I prefer not to think what this hardware ran me over the years. However, in addition to being free, the lower noise, lower heat and power consumption (8 fewer drives means 50 watts less power) and lower space demands make this upgrade a no brainer. Thank you, Moore’s Law. The major potential fly in the ointment here is the relatively unexplored reliability of 3tb drives. Still, with each backed-up, it’s a risk I can accept. I make a living doing other things so that I can watch movies, and do not depend on the movies to make my living. You can read a recent technical review of the 3tb Seagate Barracuda drives I will be using here. The warranty on the (non-XT) drives I will be using is only one year, but drives tend to fail when new or very old. Fingers crossed.

One immediate snag is that DVDpedia, the excellent Mac-only cataloging utility I use for movies, which provides ‘click-to-play’ links to six movie volumes, will now have to have its database rejiggered to point to the two new volumes. Mercifully, DVDpedia enjoys excellent support and the SQL commands which allow an instantaneous batch change of Volume names appears here. (See the following post for updated code). The alternative of manually changing file paths for 1,200 movies is not a realistic one.

The current version of DVDpedia, a mere $18, allows syncing of your home theater Mac catalog with any iDevice so that you can peruse your collection at leisure. You cannot initate play from the iPad or whatever, but it’s a handy feature. Another useful one is the ability to export your collection to the web, which I do monthly, and which you can see by going to the Links at the bottom of this page.

More details when I have converted everything. Here are the current drive performance data for the HackMini which runs a modest Core-i3 CPU and 8Gb of 1333mHz RAM; I also include the Geekbench CPU performance so that you can compare it with your machine:

Xbench disk performance for an external, USB2, SATA2, 1tb Samsung 7200rpm disk drive.

Geekbench CPU performance for the HackMini.

One word of advice. Avoid the Drobo solution. Overpriced with a poor reliability record. Making a capable high volume storage, high speed solution using component parts yourself is every bit as easy and likely to be far more reliable. And it will cost less. Much less.

135 launches

America’s genius writ large.

Click the picture.

Try to watch this on a big screen. It is in equal parts breathtaking and deeply moving.

Today, our small minded leaders, ever keen to do what gets them reelected rather than do what is good, saw fit to cancel this visionary work. A shame on them and a shame on all us voters who allowed this to happen.

When an America president said we would put a man on the moon within ten years, he did not feel it necessary to ask the American people for permission. He was elected to lead and to espouse a vision of possibilities. In the event, America did it in seven years and the world became a better place.

To put this in perspective, once your pulse rate has steadied, once your objective mind has reflected on what ideals can accomplish, watch the following piece on American exceptionalism; you will be crying again, but for different reasons (refresh the page if not visible):

Click to play.

Mountain Lion – don’t rush

Fools rush in ….

The recent history of OS X is as follows:

  • 10.5 Leopard – the last to run on G3/4/5 PPC machines as well as on Intel Macs. 32 bit.
  • 10.6 Snow Leopard – the last pre-‘dumb’ UI, 32 and 64 bit, Intel only, will run PPC apps using Rosetta
  • 10.7 Lion – the current OS with many iOS influences, such as touch gestures and the AppStore. Intel apps only, no PPC, no Rosetta. 32- and 64-bit.
  • 10.8 Mountain Lion – more dumbing down of the UI and 64 bit Intel only

On balance, I would have to say that OS X peaked with Snow Leopard. Robust, no nonsense, no frou frou. We are now in the land of chintz, bells and whistles. Faux chrome spokes will be next.

Before being a pioneer at the bleeding edge and upgrading your OS Lion Mac or Hack to OS Mountain Lion, due out any day now, stop and do this simple test first.

It’s the bold words above that should give you pause. If you recall losing the use of NikonScan or Quicken 2007 (both PPC apps requiring Rosetta in Snow Leopard) when you migrated to Lion, you run the same risk in migrating to Mountain Lion from Lion for all your non-64 bit apps. Indeed, as what follows shows, the risk is potentially far worse.

Apple continues to dumb down the UI of its desktop OS, making it more responsive to touch gestures, which sells more Magic TrackPads I suppose (Magic What? Gimme a break, Apple), while in reality the use of touch gestures with a desktop and traditional keyboard is simply poor design. It may work with a laptop but does not with a desktop, in my experience.

The quickest way to find out what will not run on Mountain Lion is to start up all the apps you use then go to Applications->Utilities->Activity Monitor and sort this screen by clicking on the ‘Kind’ column:

Activity Monitor sorted by 32- and 64-bit apps.

Anything that does not say ‘Intel (64 bit)’ in the ‘Kind’ column will not run with Mountain Lion until the application is updated by the maker. And, in my case, there are some real shockers here:

  • CrashPlan menu bar – cloud back-up. I have emailed the maker who replied “We plan to fully support Mountain Lion by the time it is publicly available.”
  • SteerMouse manager – confers enhanced functionality on my ancient Logitech mouse. I emailed the maker who responded: “ML supports 32 and 64 bit applications, but it does not support 32 bit kexts. SteerMouse consists of a 32 bit application and a 64 bit kext.” This means SteerMouse should work fine
  • LogMeIn – permits remote access and control of any computer. I have emailed the maker and they replied that LogMeIn will work fine with Mountain Lion
  • iPhoto – no problem – Apple has just updated to 10.6.3 which works with Mountain Lion
  • SMARTReporter – menu bar utility which provides early warning of imminent drive failure. I have emailed the maker who replied: “SMARTReporter works fine in 64 bit, and mostly fine under Mountain Lion. There is one issue related to Mountain Lion, the I/O error check doesn’t work there. i’ll provide an update for this in the next days and unless the Mac App Store delays things too long, the update should be released before Mountain Lion is publicly available.”
  • MacaroniTool – excellent UNIX utility which repairs permissions overnight with no attention. I have emailed the maker
  • growliChat helper – pops up a window when something important happens
  • i1ProfilerD2LionEditionTray – deal killer. App for running the i1Display2 colorimeter for profiling displays. I have emailed Xrite requesting an ETA. Don’t hold your breath on this one, as they just replied to me as follows: “We have not established final compatibility with Mountain Lion with any of our products. Apple reserves the right to change the OS up until the day of actual first customer shipment. Our software engineers are testing with pre-release copies of 10.8, but our final testing will only begin when the release version is available.” Meaning if you move to ML, be sure to profile your displays in Lion first as you will be waiting for the ML version for quite a while. Xrite did a similarly poor job of releasing the Lion version despite having 2 years notice that Apple was abandoning Rosetta and PPC CPUs. Bunch of amateurs who care little as they enjoy a monopoly in the colorimeter market – Huey, EyeOne, Spyder – yup, all Xrtite, unfortunately.
  • Dropbox – another deal killer. Replaces MobileMe for me and provides an easily accessed cloud storage space for frequently used files. There’s an experimental Mountain Lion version here of unknown stability
  • Bento – database app owned by Apple used for inventories
  • ccc_helper – used by CarbonCopyCloner – though I believe CCC is on top of 64 bit migration. Used for drive copying
  • Temperature Monitor – the maker has written in response to my question: “Yes, of course. There is no reason why Temperature Monitor should not work. The application also has 32 and 64 bit sensor drivers included to support monitoring of Intel’s “per core” temperature sensors.”

So several of these, once disabled, make my Macs and Hacks unusable. Mountain Lion will have to wait until apps are updated or alternatives become available. Running this simple check will warn you whether Mountain Lion is too early for prime time. I suspect that, for many photographers, the answer is a resounding ‘No thanks’ at this time. Better to stop and wait than to find you have just dropped the anchor through the keel of the boat and that you are out of lifejackets.

Some good news. PS CS5 and LR4 are fine – they have been 64-bit apps for quite a while. If you use three or more monitors with #3 and above powered from a USB2 port using a Newer Technology USB-DVI adapter (excellent) then I am glad to report that the maker has just updated the driver to 64-bit. I’m using the Moutain Lion version with Lion on my third display and it’s fine.

Will my Hackintosh or Mac run Mountain Lion?

You need to check if you are running in 64-bit mode. This is done in System profiler (‘About This Mac’) as follows:

If yours says ’32-bit’ you are SOL with Mountain Lion, arguably no bad thing. Mostly it’s the graphics card that is to blame. Good luck upgrading a Mac, but Hacks are easily upgraded to later cards. The Nvidia 9800GTX+ GPU I use is a 64-bit card. It is discontinued, outstanding and easily found used for $50 or less. Apple has published a list of Macs which will not run Mountain Lion and this is probably the issue. Just about any Mac over 3-4 years old will not run Mountain Lion. The list is somewhere on their site and I’m damned if I care to look for it. If you have to, your next desktop should be a Hackintosh.

Disclosure: Lomg January 2013 AAPL call options.

Photoshop on the 2012 MacBook Air

A few hurdles first!

Adobe allows installation of Photoshop on two computers, and requires that if it is to be used on a third that one of the other two be deactivated. Fair enough. It’s premium priced software and shareholders of ADBE should rejoice at any and all attempts to control theft.

I’m on CS5, having started with CS2 ages ago and progressed through CS3 and CS4. CS5 is a fine product, it’s fast and I have never had it lock up on the Hackintosh it calls home. It is blisteringly fast on that machine, with its overclocked Sandy Bridge i7 CPU.

Given the very speedy technology in the latest 2012 MacBook Air, I determined to add CS5 to that laptop which already runs Lightroom 4.1 very capably. But how to get it on the MBA’s SSD?

Good luck finding CS5 for Mac at Adobe.com. There’s a Windows version but for the life of me I could not locate the Mac option, and all current Mac downloads point you to CS6, which I have not yet purchased. I found my original CS5 disc and cloned it to a flash drive using CarbonCopyCloner on the Hackintosh, some 1.2Gb. Inserting the USB flash drive in the MBA and starting the installation process failed. I was asked to insert the installation disk. So I copied over the installation files to the MBA and launched the installer from the MBA’s SSD. After inputting my bazillion digit serial number all ran smoothly.

But, firing up CS5 I got the ‘Activation limit exceeded – you have already installed this application on two computers. Deactivate one’ message. Well, the snag is that the other installation was on the predecessor MBA 2010 which I had wiped before sale, so there’s no way I could ‘deactivate it’. I called Adobe (866 772 3623, hit ‘3’) fearing the worst and got an exceptionally competent person to whom I explained that they needed to wipe one activation count off their registration database. After ten minutes on hold I was informed that one activation was erased and that I could proceed. I did so and all was sweetness and light! Thank you, Adobe.

Photoshop CS5.1 running happily on the 2012 MBA.

Some usage notes on the 2012 MBA – mine has 4Gb RAM, twice that of the 2010 predecessor.

Start up takes a mere 3 seconds. Opening a RAW file (Panny G3) from Lightroom 4.1 in CS5.1 takes 9 seconds. Selective Lens Blur preview takes 2 seconds, applying the blur another 10. This is a processor intensive activity. It’s faster on the MBA than on my Core i7 Hackintosh. Applying routine distortions to correct verticals and the like is near instantaneous. The 8Gb RAM MBA would probably be even faster.

Bottom line? No excuses need be made for the 2012 MacBook Air as a Photoshop machine. It is perfectly capable of keeping up with the best.

Disclosure: Long AAPL January 2013 call options.