FastEddieB
Touchdown! Greaser!
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2013
- Messages
- 11,576
- Location
- Lenoir City, TN/Mineral Bluff, GA
- Display Name
Display name:
Fast Eddie B
I've been a Mac user since about 1985 when I bought my first 128k Macintosh. Since then, I've owned maybe a half dozen Macs. Most recent has been a 2014 Mac Mini, which replaced a MacBook Pro. It had a 2TB "Fusion" drive, which was 1TB SSD and 1TB HD, integrated to appear as one disk. Over the 10 years or so I've owned it, it's performed flawlessly, until recently it's hesitated a bit waking up from sleep.
I was pretty impressed with the new Mac Mini and decided to order one. It took a few weeks, but arrived on Dec 24. I ordered the base model, since my computing needs are pretty modest, but I did spring for 2TB of storage - more on that later.
I set it up Christmas day, choosing to use a Time Machine backup. That required a USB-C to HD cable, which I had the foresight to order. I also ordered a dongle to use older hardware, and a new Apple Extended keyboard with TouchID*. I was nervous, but the whole transfer was fairly seamless. At first it said it was going to take 21 hours to transfer the roughly 1TB of data and applications, but that stepped down to about 6 hours once it got rolling. Almost all of my preferences transferred just fine, and just a tiny bit of tweaking was required, such as getting DropBox to work on the new machine.
My setup has a 2TB external HD as a Time Machine backup, one monitor driven by the HDMI port on the back and one driven via the dongle attached to one of 3 Thunderbolt ports, also via HDMI.
Coming up on 2 weeks, and I'm favorably impressed so far.
Pro's:
1) Naturally a bit faster.
2) TouchID is handy when a password is needed, and for logging in.
3) My Apple Watch also signs me in if I'm wearing it.
4) I can now mirror my iPhone to the Mac Mini screen - though that seems of limited utility so far.
5) The tiny size makes it just a tad easier to travel with.
Con's:
1) Apple was a bit stingy with ports. No USB-A, which I guess I can understand - if you need one or more that's what dongles are for. Similarly, no SD card slots.
2) Price. At $599 the base model seems to be a screaming deal, albeit 256GB of storage. But Apple seriously overcharges for add'l storage - going to 2TB took the price to $1,399 (!). I researched options of using much cheaper external storage, but in the end I like the simplicity of having that much onboard storage, and amortized over the typical 10 years I seem to keep Macs, its not that bad.
*I had to Google the Model # of my old keyboard, and it turns out it's a Bondi Blue iMac keyboard from 1998! It was Apple's first USB keyboard and was still soldiering on without complaint!
I was pretty impressed with the new Mac Mini and decided to order one. It took a few weeks, but arrived on Dec 24. I ordered the base model, since my computing needs are pretty modest, but I did spring for 2TB of storage - more on that later.
I set it up Christmas day, choosing to use a Time Machine backup. That required a USB-C to HD cable, which I had the foresight to order. I also ordered a dongle to use older hardware, and a new Apple Extended keyboard with TouchID*. I was nervous, but the whole transfer was fairly seamless. At first it said it was going to take 21 hours to transfer the roughly 1TB of data and applications, but that stepped down to about 6 hours once it got rolling. Almost all of my preferences transferred just fine, and just a tiny bit of tweaking was required, such as getting DropBox to work on the new machine.
My setup has a 2TB external HD as a Time Machine backup, one monitor driven by the HDMI port on the back and one driven via the dongle attached to one of 3 Thunderbolt ports, also via HDMI.
Pro's:
1) Naturally a bit faster.
2) TouchID is handy when a password is needed, and for logging in.
3) My Apple Watch also signs me in if I'm wearing it.
4) I can now mirror my iPhone to the Mac Mini screen - though that seems of limited utility so far.
5) The tiny size makes it just a tad easier to travel with.
Con's:
1) Apple was a bit stingy with ports. No USB-A, which I guess I can understand - if you need one or more that's what dongles are for. Similarly, no SD card slots.
2) Price. At $599 the base model seems to be a screaming deal, albeit 256GB of storage. But Apple seriously overcharges for add'l storage - going to 2TB took the price to $1,399 (!). I researched options of using much cheaper external storage, but in the end I like the simplicity of having that much onboard storage, and amortized over the typical 10 years I seem to keep Macs, its not that bad.
*I had to Google the Model # of my old keyboard, and it turns out it's a Bondi Blue iMac keyboard from 1998! It was Apple's first USB keyboard and was still soldiering on without complaint!
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