Categories
Technology

A Manual Fusion Drive

Mac mini apart

This past Friday a package from Amazon was delivered for me and this is what I found inside (all Amazon affiliate links):

So. Cool.

That’s a lot of speed and quite a bit of work up there. The overall project, from start to finish took over a day, but it was split into three different parts.

Part One: Wife’s 2009 MacBook

  1. Swap wife’s 500 GB “spinning rust drive” for the 500 GB Samsung 840 Series SSD.
  2. Install old 500 GB drive into 2.5″ USB enclosure.
  3. Boot off of old 500 GB drive in USB enclosure and use SuperDuper! to create an exact copy on the new 500 GB SSD.
  4. Boot from new 500 GB SSD and confirm that things are working.
  5. Start and complete Time Machine backup before moving on.

That all went pretty smoothly. The longest step was #3 above as I copied everything over from the old hard drive, over USB 2.0, to the SSD. After the Time Machine backup was completed, then it was time to move onto Part Two.

Part Two: Work’s 2011 13″ MacBook Pro

  1. Take the “old” 500 GB drive in the external enclosure and hook it up to my work laptop.
  2. Clone current drive to the 500 GB drive.
  3. Take apart the external enclosure and swap the newly cloned drive for the 500 GB WD Scorpio Black that was currently the internal drive for the MacBook Pro.
  4. Boot off of the now-internal-old-drive-from-MacBook and verify things are working.
  5. Start a clone of the now-working drive to the new 750 GB external drive I had just received from Amazon.

When it was all said and done, the original drive for my 2011 MacBook Pro was back inside and being used as the boot drive. It is slower (the Scorpio Black is a 7200 RPM drive and the standard Apple-supplied drive is 5400 RPM), but I’m anticipating moving to an SSD at work soon too. This is just a preemptive strike in that direction.

Once the clone was started, I moved onto the main event.

Part Three: My 2012 Mac mini

  1.  Create a new clone of the Mac mini to an existing 500 GB USB 3.0 external hard drive.
  2. Take apart the Mac mini … completely.
  3. Use the OSB Data Double to install the 250 GB Samsung 840 Series SSD.
  4. Swap the standard internal 2.5″ 500 GB hard drive for the 500 GB Western Digital Scorpio Black I had just take out of the 2011 MacBook Pro.
  5. Put the Mac mini together … almost.
  6. Find that you forgot a single screw for the power supply.
  7. Take apart of the Mac mini … completely … again.
  8. Put the Mac mini together.
  9. Boot off of the new clone you made before you took the Mac mini apart.
  10. Create a new Fusion Drive using the command line version of Disk Utility.
  11. Clone your system onto the new Fusion Drive.
  12. Boot off of your new Fusion Drive and confirm things are working.
  13. Start and complete a Time Machine backup.
  14. Breathe.

If I wouldn’t have forgotten that screw, things would have gone a lot smoother. Luckily, it wasn’t a huge deal and I did get everything back together again without causing any damage. The Mac mini really is quite the dense piece of hardware and quite a bit of fun to take apart. Not for the novice, but if you have taken apart a laptop, the Mac mini is no more difficult.

Setting up the Fusion Drive using the SSD + HDD was quite simple once I dropped down to the CLI and just followed the directions. Cloning was quick over USB 3.0 and then things, really, just worked.

I was, however, not done.

Part Four: Clone, Clone, Clone

After it was all done, I had three external hard drives all sitting on my desk, but they did not currently have the appropriate machines cloned onto them. So I started SuperDuper! on each machine and hooked up the drives the following way:

  • 2009 MacBook – Former boot drive from Mac mini in USB 2.0 external enclosure
  • 2011 MacBook Pro – Old 500 GB WD My Passport USB 3.0 external hard drive
  • 2012 Mac mini – New 750 GB WD My Passport USB 3.0 external hard drive

Each machine attached to a drive of the proper size. I now have a clone of each machine along with Time Machine backups to my Time Capsule for the 2009 MacBook and 2012 Mac mini and CrashPlan online backups of all three.

That is really nice.

Conclusion

Fusion Drive

Was it worth all of the time and effort?

Absolutely. The oldest device, the 2009 MacBook, now feels like an entirely new machine. Adding an SSD has bought me some time, hopefully at least a year, until I need to seriously consider getting a new device for my wife to use. The biggest “win” is for Aperture, as it now loads after only a bounce or two and is much more usable than before.

That is really cool because that is the one application causing my wife the most trouble.

For the Mac mini, the Fusion Drive has been great. Having a 256 GB SSD means that everything is currently stored on the SSD. As I add more media, I will see if the performance is the same, but it is really nice to be back on an SSD and have the added storage of a “spinning rust” disk.

If you are getting a Mac and need a huge amount of storage, I would recommend looking at a Fusion Drive. If you don’t want to pull your Mac apart, just have Apple give you one and be happy. Be aware that YOU NEED TO BE BACKING UP EVERYTHING BECAUSE IF ONE DRIVE DIES EVERYTHING GOES AWAY. With that said, the speed increase is amazing.

However, if you have the technical acumen, feel free to do it yourself. It is not a big deal and can be quite a bit of fun.

Categories
Business Technology

More on IT Partnerships

My friend, Nate Beran, just posted a great article about his views on IT partnerships. I recommend you go and take a look yourself if you have any interest in the seemingly endless talk about shipping more and more things away from internal IT departments to 3rd parties.

Here is the salient paragraph for me:

So what does a partnership mean to me now? It is a relationship where an MSP/vendor provides me services I need AND assumes enough of my risk to create a vested interest in my success and growth.

Very good. Very, very good.

Categories
Technology

HP Moonshot

I don’t deal with server hardware a ton, but these past two weeks have seen me installing a few RAID cards and working with XenServer quite a bit so the latest server offerings from HP caught my eye.

moonshotProdImg_471x292

So cool. So dense. I’m hoping that we see more and more work done to bring low-power-multi-core computing into the server room.

Categories
Technology

CocoaDocs

If you use CocoaPods for iOS or Mac development (and I am going to be trying to do this soon), then you might want to take a look at this new site trying to compile together Cocoa and Cocoa Touch documentation.

Looks cool.

Categories
Life Technology

Trying App.net

I’ve been a member of Twitter for a few years now and it has been very good to me. Recently, however, my curiosity has been piqued by App.net.

I’m not going to rehash what App.net is or why it even exists because I really don’t think it matters all that much. The fact is that it started off as a Twitter-like service in the wake of one of the developer agreement changes from Twitter. It is also extremely limited in number of users compared to Twitter.

With the recent introduction of free accounts, the opportunity arose for me to try out the service without having to pay for the privilege.

Riposte

So I grabbed an invite from someone offering one on Twitter (that’s funny) and then headed over and setup my account. I also went ahead and tried out a bunch of different applications from the App Store. Right now the main way I consume App.net is using an app called Riposte on my iPhone. Currently Riposte is not available on the iPad, so I’m still bouncing among a few apps on the iPad (including Netbot, which is good … but doesn’t feel quite as “at home” with App.net as Riposte does).

So, how is it going overall?

I, surprising myself at least, really like the service. I’ve been able to stay under the 40-follow mark for free accounts, but I’m already getting to the point where I could see myself paying for a year just to see how things go. The discussion has been cordial and high-concept so far, and I’m following people on App.net that I might not have followed on Twitter.

Can it replace Twitter? Probably not, but I do find the smaller audience to be a nice change. With fewer people, seemingly, come fewer problems. There are issues around a self-selecting group being on App.net because in the past there was only a paid-tier to have entry and it also is HIGHLY developer-centric (I mostly follow Apple developers on App.net at the moment), but maybe those aren’t bad things overall.

I tend to think that the Internet is big, but that smaller groups can form on the greater internet to more-easily keep in touch with each other. Not every service needs to be all-inclusive because the Internet is all-inclusive. Being a part of many different services and groups is a good thing.

Besides, you want diversity of thought, right?