ne0ngenisis
ne0ngenisis
Morgan LaFey
6 posts
iBook obsessed transgender lesbian writing shitty books in coffee shops on outdated as fuck laptops since like, May 2023 || 25, she/her, 15/01/21 ||
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
ne0ngenisis · 7 months ago
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Uhh...
Film photography.
It's kinda badass. I've gotten into long philosophical discussions with my girlfriend about the... I guess the symbolism of having a physical impression of the universe, captured in chemistry, as a one of a kind object that you can touch.
It's so unlike digital photography in many ways, but I suppose the fundamental variables are the same.
After getting into cameras a bit with a Sony Mavica FD-92 because a friend of mine named Emma had one and made me want one, I started buying accessories for a 13 year old Samsung point and shoot I've had sitting around for a while, and then decided that film photography was the direction I wanted to go in.
Luckily my birthday was coming up and my girlfriend was kind of NOT hyped about the idea of getting me another laptop because I already have nearly a dozen of them, so we looked into some film cameras and settled on a true legend, the Canon EOS 650.
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A piece of history from Canon, this was the first ever EOS camera, and introduced the autofocus capable EF lens mount in 1987. It was shortly followed by the EOS 620, which had an intentional double exposure mode instead of a focus depth mode, and then the EOS 600 which had a number of preset shooting modes. It stayed in production until 1989.
This particular example was imported from Japan for the pretty reasonable sum of $35, and it's in perfect working condition and a good cosmetic condition as well. Pair that with an incredibly versatile, but slightly heavy, Tamron 28 to 200mm lens, a cute bag with trippy patterns on it, and a strap with embroidery of flowers, and I've got myself a pretty decent set of kit. Oh, and a 2CR5 battery. Can't forget that.
My original plan was to shoot some expired trial-size 12 exposure rolls of Kodak black and white film to get some experience under my belt before I went for the full-length rolls of Ilford HP5 Plus but those would have taken too long to arrive (and turns out these are C41 black and white film rolls???), so I decided I was gonna go walk around my neighborhood and shoot some film with my little brother. But my first subject would be Midnight, a sweet outdoor cat that lives in our neighborhood.
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As we continue, I shoot a fire hydrant, the reflections in a puddle, and some shots of a bridge that's about a quarter mile from my house.
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I took some pictures of my little brother too. One is a portrait of him, which turned out very well, another is a shot of him from behind walking towards this bridge, one with him looking contemplative looking off the bridge, and another was him walking across the street in front of our house like the classic bigfoot photo.
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There were more, but I haven't scanned those negatives yet because my scanning setup is my phone and, well, this...
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ne0ngenisis · 9 months ago
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I've become a typewriter enjoyer 📃
One Smith-Corona Super Correct XT and a Silver Reed 7200, which I believe is a variant of the Royal Mercury that Seiko sold directly.
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(yes they both have their cases, thankfully)
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ne0ngenisis · 1 year ago
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🔨 🚗 🔥
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ne0ngenisis · 1 year ago
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Mmmmm thinking about Macs again. Adding some new stuff to the collection soon, and I've got more stuff for my wanted list >:3
Current Collection, in order of acquisition:
2001 12" iBook 500MHz
2003 13" iBook G4 1GHz (Soon to be gifted to a loved one)
2004 15" PowerBook G4 1.33GHz
2006 15" MacBook Pro 2.16GHz
2009 13" MacBook 2.13GHz (deceased)
2009 13" MacBook 2.13GHz (living)
2012 13" MacBook Pro
2014 11" MacBook Air (Soon to be received from the same loved one)
Ghost, my G4 iBook, is gonna go to a new home soon. A lovely puppy is gonna take it and give it a good home in her collection once I give it a few upgrades, like more RAM, some solid state storage, and a WiFi card, and I'm gonna take the 11" MacBook Air that she "rescued" from her workplace's recycle pile. Which is a 2014 model with the i7-4550U and 8GB of RAM. Should be a pretty sweet little machine.
I may sell the dead 2009 for parts. I'm not gonna get much use out of it the way it is now.
Those That Remain™, in order of release,
Titanium PowerBook G4 (not picky on spec)
2015 15" MacBook Pro (with dedicated graphics)
2021 14" or 16" M1 Pro MacBook Pro (not picky on spec or color)
So of course I gotta have a TiBook on here, right? I'm a Mac laptop collector, that's gotta be one of them, right up there with a clamshell G3 for some people. I'm not personally interested in a clamshell G3, though.
The 2015 15" MacBook Pro with the R7 M370 graphics is just like... the highest end Apple laptop that was made before they switched to a USB Type C-only port arrangement and got rid of the function keys and used a fragile shitty keyboard. It's right at the end of that gap between "the old Apple" and "Apple is back". These hover around $200 right now.
The M1 Pro MacBook Pro is my Holy Grail right now. They're still pretty expensive to pick up secondhand of course, $1100 for one that's pretty beat up on eBay, with lots of little nicks and dings, a scratch in the trackpad, and no included charger. But that's a laptop with an M1 Pro, 16GB of RAM, and 512GB of storage. Apple still wants over $2000 for these in the refurbished store, and $1100 is also what Apple charges for a base model 13" M2 MacBook Air with 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD.
It's not gonna happen soon, I'm still saving for a car, but maybe somewhere down the line, it'll be a little bit easier.
Updated Feb 3rd:
I decided to snagg a 2009 MacBook Air because I'm a little impulsive, I got a discount offer from an eBay seller, and I saw it was supported by OCLP and had INCREDIBLE morbid curiosity about how the machine would handle Big Sur through Sonoma. We'll see how THAT goes.
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ne0ngenisis · 2 years ago
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I feel called out, you can't just do that to me.
every time a trans girl infodumps me abt something they're passionate about i cant help but i fall in love a little bit
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ne0ngenisis · 2 years ago
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Let's talk about my BABIES
(in order of acquisition)
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Number One! ThinkPad T440p! (Not actually named)
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This was a bit of an impulse purchase, as all of my laptops have been in the last threeish months. I knew of the trans girl stereotype of ThinkPads and Linux, and I wanted that. Especially because my laptop at the time was a crappy HP Stream (pictured underneath the ThinkPad) that couldn't run Windows without crashing constantly.
So I did some research and found out that this was the last model with socketed processors, and just kinda went for it! It arrived in much better condition than the pics suggested so I imagine the seller picked the wrong laptop out of the pile, but I'm not complaining.
It truly was nothing special when it was new, but I've upgraded it quite a bit since then! A 2C/4T 2.4GHz i3-4000M to a 4c/8t 3.7GHz i7-4800MQ, 16GB of RAM, and a 1TB SSD! It took me about five hours to install and configure Arch Linux on here, and that was with the guidance of friends who are a lot nerdier than me and I actually cried like, twice, out of frustration... BUT, it's been a solid performer ever since.
It cost me about $170 after everything I've done to it, but I still need to replace the screen on it with a 1080p IPS model, because the 768p TN panel is now literally the worst laptop screen I own. Apple seriously had better ones 12 years before this.
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Number two! 12" iBook G3/500, "Baby"
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Baby features in my current profile banner, as it's the laptop I carry around with me all the time to write on the go. The battery life is still pretty fantastic for its age, and it's super cute and small (the same depth as my ThinkPad not including the thicc battery, but about 2" narrower due to 4:3 aspect ratio).
I also picked this one up on a whim, because I was taken by an Apple hyperfixation, and also the image of a coffee shop hipster writing on an iBook. This one isn't a clamshell, love it or hate it, but I love it.
It's the very earliest model from 2001, with a 500MHz G3, 64MB of built-in RAM, and a CD-ROM drive. The original 10GB hard drive was missing so I went through the painstaking process of digging down to where it belongs and installing a 40GB IDE laptop drive I LITERALLY found in the trash.
I also spent $17 on a pair of working batteries and ended up with one that lasts for a good 4.5 hours when all you're doing is word processing, which I was and generally still do. Very close to factory battery life. I also spent about $16 on a charger because I didn't have one yet.
At first, I put Mac OS 9.2.2 on here, because it didn't have enough RAM for OS X as far as I could tell. Once I got the RAM upgrade (now 576MB, 64MB built-in + 512MB module), I installed OSX Tiger on here as well.
It's got some old OS9 games like Diablo II, Quake, Warcraft II, and I actually still own a physical copy of Riven on CD, so those all work on there. And I'm also using it to write, of course. However! It could not run Halo: Combat Evolved. Which led me to more purchases, lmao. I have considered doing a logic board swap to a faster CPU but that would be a daunting task...
It ended up costing me about $90, after the laptop, ram upgrade, charger, and working batteries.
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Number three! 14" iBook G4/1.07, "Ghost"
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Ghost is a funny one. Also driven by impulse, in this case, to have an old Mac laptop that could play Halo. I actually received it on the same day as the next one on this list. This is a 2004 1.07GHz 14" iBook G4 with 256MB of built-in RAM and a 256MB module for a total of 512MB, and a combo drive, I believe. This one actually came with a 1GB module in it, and an Airport card, but I swapped some parts around to make my G4 PowerBook more usable.
It was incredibly cursed, including weird freezing and crashes, refusing to install updates and to mount USB devices, and then it just stopped seeing the hard drive all together. I took it apart twice, once to take the hard drive out to discover it was the original 40GB Apple branded hard drive, and another to put it back in once it started booting in my PowerBook G4 (number 4 on the list), and all the cursedness went away somehow!
I still named it Ghost in honor of the cursedness.
I don't have a good battery for it at this time. Right now the only working 14" iBook battery I have (which I paid like $35 for) lasts about an hour, and the 12" battery I have in there now dies at a seemingly random percentage around 60% because the battery isn't reporting its capacity correctly. I did design and order a 3D printed adapter bracket thing so maybe I can stop using fucking masking tape to hold the battery in. It may become more used than my 12" once I get the battery, entirely due to the larger screen and faster processor.
I did have to replace the F12 key, because the original one was missing. This was made a lot easier by having the PowerBook G4 which we'll go over next. Now it's like an accent escape key for a fancy mechanical keyboard, or a gold tooth!
This one actually cost me the least out of all of them, at $69, including the battery I'm not even using, and it came with a second charger, which is good! Though, I guess with the 3D printed battery adapter you can up that price to $80. Or lower it to $44 if the battery doesn't count!
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Number four! 15" PowerBook G4/1.33G, "Alice"
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Alice was purchased just days later than my iBook G4, but showed up on the same day. And boy, she was a basket case. I have named her Alice because of "Al" being the elemental symbol for Aluminum, as she's a 2004 Aluminum PowerBook G4, with a 1.33GHz processor and 1.5GB of RAM. It originally came with 512MB of RAM in two modules, but I put in a 512MB stick I found in the trash, plus the 1GB module and the Airport card from the iBook G4 to make it a more usable laptop in the modern day.
The problems were immediate when I got it plugged in for the first time, as there was seemingly no display, until I noticed the dark screen started to change colors. There was a picture... there was just no backlight. To my surprise, the sketchy looking aftermarket battery actually worked fine still, and it was good for about 3.5 hours of use.
Getting it hooked up to an external display, I started to notice that the trackpad button didn't work either. It's a good thing these parts were cheap.
I actually tried fixing the backlight inverter myself, as the issue was there was a coil that had detached itself from the board. My jank soldering work lasted about 15 minutes before it made a buzzing sound and one of the little wire stubs came detached from the side of the coil. RIP.
A week or so later, the backlight inverter and trackpad cable show up, and me being able to actually use the laptop properly shows even more problems. It won't sleep when it's plugged in. But only when it's plugged in. I can't get into the boot picker. Five of the keys on the keyboard also don't work. As it turns out, all of these problems are keyboard problems, and that fixed all of them.
Basket case-ness is different from cursedness. I knew what parts needed replacing on the PowerBook. The iBook just misbehaved until it suddenly stopped misbehaving.
It cost me about $95, including the laptop itself, the backlight inverter board, trackpad ribbon cable, and a glorious (pure sex to type on) new-old stock keyboard.
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Number Five! Late 06 15" MacBook Pro, 2.16GHz C2D, "Dolores"
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My MacBook Pro. As with the others, it was an impulse purchase, though it's required the most extreme repairs of any of these laptops so far. It's a Late 2006 15" model, with a Core 2 Duo T7400, and pre-upgraded to the maximum of 3GB of RAM and a 120GB SSD. It came with all sorts of goodies, including an 85-watt MagSafe charger, copies of iWork and iLife 2009, the original recovery DVDs for 10.4.8 Tiger, and a hard copy of OSX 10.6 Snow Leopard. What it did not include was a battery.
Initially I tried booting it up from nothing, and it would get stuck on a white or blue screen sometime after the Apple logo disappeared, and the same would happen when I put the Snow Leopard DVD into the drive. When I put the Tiger DVDs in, it would install the OS fine, but the resulting install wouldn't boot either. And then I noticed the artifacting.
I knew that this was a possibility with basically any model of pre-unibody MacBook Pro. All of them have graphics issues, though the '07 and '08 models have it a lot worse than the '06 models. I end up complaining about this on a Discord server, and another queer nerd tells me that the boot failure is probably because of the GPU being marginal, and since it's an ATI Radeon GPU instead of an Nvidia GPU, a reflow might help it.
So... I take it apart for the second time that day, after the first time to repaste the CPU, Northbridge, and GPU, and I bathe the GPU in 350°C air from my rework station for about 6 minutes, letting the board rest for 20 minutes before I reapply thermal paste again and reassemble it. Now it boots into MacOS fine. I installed Snow Leopard and updated to Lion, and it's been fine since, though the 32-bit EFI firmware has caused some issues with attempts to get Linux working on the damn thing, though I'm told the GPU could just be playing nice with MacOS but still not good enough to work in Linux.
I tried getting a battery off of eBay, a cheap replacement battery, but it only half works. It powers the laptop, but it won't show up in the OS to show any percentage or capacity, and it won't charge either. So I bought a single-use battery. I'm trying to message the seller and get my money back right now.
It has cost me about $74 including the cost of the crappy essentially single use battery. I'll probably get an actually good one from OWC eventually, because I want to be able to use this laptop as a daily at some point.
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Well, that's it! For now. I also have my eyes set on a mid 2009 white MacBook but that will be a later kind of thing. Not right now, while there's still work to be done on my other laptops.
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