Which Mac Are You?
Posted 09/26/2008 at 1:56am
| by Mac|Life Staff
The Mobile Blogger
All you need is a light-as-air laptop and reliable Wi-Fi.
The Basics.
When you’re chasing inspiration, it helps to travel light, and the 3-pound MacBook Air makes sense for anyone who works with lots of small-ish files (text documents, email, Web-ready images) or perhaps utilizes some Web-based apps. We’d spring $200 above the $1,799 base price for a 1.8GHz processor, but stick with the stock 80GB Parallel ATA hard drive instead of the $599 64GB solid-state disk—that price still has to come down or capacity come up, and most bloggers don’t need SSD speeds.
Aside from the Air’s svelte exterior (Apple barely ever mentions this, but it’s actually quite thin), highly mobile techies benefit from its backlit keyboard, which uses an ambient light sensor to illuminate the letters just right. It’s as handy as it is chichi in dim cafés and airplanes. Likewise, both useful and gee-willickers is the extra-large multi-touch trackpad, which recognizes iPhone-like gestures such as pinch, rotate, and swipe, that speed up some tasks when you don’t have a mouse handy. The built-in iSight can be used with iMovie or even Photo Booth for quick vlogging (video-blogging) sessions.
Spare your Air from dings with a soft sleeve like the luxurious Marware CEO Envi ($89.99, www.marware.com), and save a little room in your laptop bag with the Microsoft Notebook Mouse for Mac ($49.99, www.microsoft.com/hardware)—it’s Bluetooth, so it won’t use your Air’s precious USB port, and its 2 AAA batteries last quite a while. Speaking of that one lonely USB port, give it some friends with Belkin’s Swivel Hub ($29.95, www.belkin.com), which has four USB ports and stays out of the way of other cables.
The shockproof Corsair Flash Voyager (www.corsairmemory.com) flash drives range from 4GB to a whopping 32GB—which lists for $399 but can be found online for as little as $135—can handle the abuse of the road. Your home base needs an external drive for backups, too. We like the size, style, and price of the Western Digital My Book Studio ($299.99 for 1TB, www.wdc.com). Illustrate your blog posts with the Nikon Coolpix P60 ($229.95, www.nikonusa.com)—you can shoot 8.1-megapixel stills, tag them with voice notes to yourself, and even try time-lapse photography and video.
For software, you can do a lot with what you’ve got—TextEdit, iPhoto, GarageBand, iMovie, all packed in. Web apps like Google Documents (docs.google.com), Photoshop Express (www.photoshop.com/express), and Backpack (www.backpackit.com) let you work and store documents online, keeping your Air’s 80GB hard drive relatively uncluttered. (If you miss those dozens of gigs of music, there’s always Pandora.com.)
Extras.
Since bloggers rely so much on the Internet, IOGear’s Wi-Fi Finder ($34.95, www.iogear.com) can detect wireless hotspots anywhere. If you can’t find an open Wi-Fi network to join, a wireless broadband card can get you online through a high-speed cellular data connection. We like the USB-based Sierra Wireless Compass 597 ($49.99, plus $59.99 per month for service, www.sprint.com) from Sprint.

Raise your screen to a comfy height with the super-portable iRizer.
While it’s currently experiencing some growing pains, Apple’s MobileMe service ($99 per year, www.me.com) is a handy way to keep an online backup of your work, host websites and photo galleries, and access your calendar, contacts, and email.
If you work at a desk often, invest in a stand and keyboard to prevent backaches. The Matias iRizer ($39.95, www.matias.ca)
folds flat to stow in your laptop bag, and the ultra slim Apple Wireless Keyboard ($79, www.apple.com) is easy to tote and uses Bluetooth. Also check out the $99 external SuperDrive (www.apple.com) for ripping and burning discs. And since the MacBook Air comes without an Ethernet port, an AirPort Express ($99, www.apple.com) is an easy and affordable way to set up a new wireless network from an existing wired connection.

Apple’s Wireless Keyboard won’t hog any of your precious USB ports.
Once Your Blog Takes Off...
If you’re one of those lucky bloggers whose site pays the rent—or even allows you to throw money around like it’s nothing—tear out this list of handy (but not necessarily cost-conscious) add-ons for your Mac-centric blogging rig: Apple’s Time Capsule ($499 for 1TB, www.apple.com) works with Time Machine to keep your MacBook Air backed up wirelessly and automatically, and you can attach your external drive to it to offload files to the network as well. Pick up a MagSafe Airline Adapter ($49, www.apple.com) if you’re the kind of high roller who flies in the expensive seats with the power hookups.
Upgrade your point-and-shoot to an Olympus E-420 ($599.99, www.olympus.com). Billed as the world’s smallest DSLR, it packs pro features into a compact, 13.4-ounce package. Want to record in-person interviews, start podcasting, or just make notes to yourself? The Zoom H2 Handy Recorder ($199, www.samsontech.com) includes a 512MB SD card that can hold nearly 6 hours of audio if you record as MP3.
For software, Photoshop Elements 6 for Macintosh ($89.99, www.adobe.com) is a good middle step between the free online Photoshop Express (www.photoshop.com) and Photoshop CS3 ($649). Scriviner ($39.95, www.literatureandlatte.com) can help organize your research, notes, ideas, and in-progress blog posts, with special features to encourage creativity and beat writer’s block. But, of course, it’s impossible to buy what every blogger really needs—more time to blog.
Zen and the Art of Blogging
Name: Leo Babauta
Occupation: Blogger behind zenhabits.net
Gear: Aluminum iMac and MacBook Air
Minimalism is Leo Babauta’s credo—and the driving force behind his blog, Zen Habits (zenhabits.net), which is in Technorati’s top 50 and has been around since early 2007. Author, freelancer, runner, father of six, and devoted Mac user, Babauta walks the talk, keeping a clutter-free Desktop on his iMac. “Basically, I have a very simple setup,” Babauta says. “No icons on my Desktop, Firefox for almost everything, TextEdit for some very focused writing, and Quicksilver to access anything. I also have a MacBook Air, which I bought for its coolness, but also to get out of my house, where I work, and to be able to do some work at a library or coffee shop.”
Babauta’s unflagging dedication to living a simple life extends to dreaming about the Mac he’d buy if suddenly he could have any Mac he wanted. When asked how his Mac setup would change if money were no object, he simply says, “It wouldn’t. I have the perfect setup. I’m a very simple person. I just need a text editor to write, and Firefox to do everything online. My whole world is online, including all of the software for my blog and business. And, of course, Quicksilver. So my iMac and MacBook Air are more than enough for me.”
Babauta keeps his Desktop totally free of icons (but he does rotate his background image), and he eschews the Dock altogether to use Quicksilver instead.
”I have the Dock on auto-hide, to keep my workspace as simplified as possible.”