Well said, James Stroud!
  May I add that the "MAC- experience" is like walking to Jerusalem with dry 
peas in your shoes? It's possible, you might opt to do it for religious 
reasons, but it is far from the most logical or efficient course of action.
 Just my 2 cents,

Jens




----- Reply message -----
From: "James Stroud" <xtald...@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Jan 22, 2013 10:05 pm
Subject: [ccp4bb] Mac mini advice
To: <CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK>

Get a quad-core. If you have iTunes going, some website running javascript 
without your knowing it, and you have a computational job running, then you've 
used up your dual core and things get sluggish. It happens to me all the time 
on my c. 1996 iMac, which is still (barely) good enough for me.

On Mac v. Linux where calculations come secondary to office-type calculations, 
you have to weigh your level of vendor lock-in. Do you run Libreoffice or 
Microsoft Office? Inkscape or Illustrator? Gimp or Photoshop? Etc. If you are 
locked-in to commercial products and haven't migrated to open source, then you 
may want to think twice about a Linux box. Macs are very seamless for an office 
environment, but I don't know if they are appropriate for heavy-duty 
calculations given that you'll trade horsepower for the Mac experience.

James



On Jan 22, 2013, at 10:59 AM, Cara Vaughan wrote:

> Dear CCP4BB
> 
> I'm thinking about buying a Mac Mini and was looking for advice from people 
> who have used these for crystallography.
> 
> We don't need the computer to do serious number-crunching as we have back-end 
> servers that can do this for us, so it is primarily for running coot for 
> model building, etc. and low intensity crystallography jobs.
> 
> I've seen from the archive that some people do use the Mac Mini for 
> crystallography and I've got two questions:
> 1. Do I need the Quad core or is a Dual core processor enough?
> 2. Is the intergrated Intel HD graphics card OK for crystallography 
> requirements?
> 
> All the best,
> Cara.
> 
> 
> Cara Vaughan
> Lecturer in Structural Biology
> Institute of Structural and Molecular Biology
> Birkbeck College and UCL
> London UK
> 
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