Climbing Mount Everest with a MacBook Pro and iPod
#9
Posted 08 May 2009 - 09:13 PM
Yes, the article says they are shooting on solid state cards, probably P2 cards, so they're probably shooting on a Panasonic HVX200a or something like that. But then it says they're transferring the footage to a MacBook Pro, which Apple doesn't sell with a solid state storage option.
#11
Posted 09 May 2009 - 09:18 AM
ToddBradley said:
Yes, the article says they are shooting on solid state cards, probably P2 cards, so they're probably shooting on a Panasonic HVX200a or something like that. But then it says they're transferring the footage to a MacBook Pro, which Apple doesn't sell with a solid state storage option.
...uh, yes they do:
http://store.apple.c...?mco=MTkzOTI0Mg
I think they've been selling MacBooks/Pros with optional SSDs since last Fall.
#12
Posted 09 May 2009 - 11:06 AM
It'd be interesting to know for sure. Hard drives don't break the instant you take them out of the range of situations where the manufacturer will replace it for free so, although the laptop's at a base camp 17,000 ft up, it could well be a hard drive based model.
Properly seated, well made mechanical drives work in places you wouldn't expect. Even quite modern aeroplanes use hard drives - the P-8A project uses spinning hard drives for recording. You'd think the military would splash out on an SSD but apparently in 2006 they thought it was fine.
Am I saying Apple use "military spec" hard drives? No. But it doesn't have to be an SSD just because it's on a mountain.
Properly seated, well made mechanical drives work in places you wouldn't expect. Even quite modern aeroplanes use hard drives - the P-8A project uses spinning hard drives for recording. You'd think the military would splash out on an SSD but apparently in 2006 they thought it was fine.
Am I saying Apple use "military spec" hard drives? No. But it doesn't have to be an SSD just because it's on a mountain.
#14
Posted 12 May 2009 - 04:06 PM
Prhaps Rather than instant failure at high altitude, perhaps it?s just the statistical reliability (MTBF) and vibration resistance that suffer. To the extent that drives use air bearings, it?s only reasonable to expect some consequences from exceeding the design altitude.



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