Swapping MacBook hard drives, including Boot Camp partition
Sigh. I use Parallels and Boot Camp because I like having options. Unfortunately, wanting options means that my life is quite complicated. Today's problem: swap out the failing hard drive in my MacBook for a new one without losing any of my Mac OS or Windows XP data. Well, it's actually this month's problem, but whatever. Judging by the amount of search results I get when looking for help online, lots of people want to move their Boot Camp partition to a new drive or to back it up. This should solve both those problems. Here's my setup:
- MacBook 2.0 GHz Core Duo
- 160GB internal drive (brand new; Leopard cloned my Mac OS disk partition from the old drive to the new one)
- 145GB Mac OS X partition (running fine)
- 15GB Boot Camp partition (formatted FAT32 by Boot Camp Assistant; empty)
- 160GB external drive (used to be internal, now in a case and attached via USB)
- 130GB Mac OS X partition
- 30GB Boot Camp partition (formatted FAT32 by BCA; runs fine)
- Parallels 3.0
- Winclone
- Windows XP SP2
And here's what I did:
Convert the external drive's Windows partition from FAT32 to NTFS:
- On the external Windows drive, go to Start - Run - and type
cmdto get the command line - At the prompt type
convert c: /fs:ntfswhere "c:" is the drive you want to convert to NTFS - Answer "No" to the first question - forcefully unmount the drive
- Answer "Yes" to the second question - convert on restart
- Restart your drive
I did all of that using Parallels so I could work on other stuff at the same time. When you restart, diskcheck will run a few times to convert the drive, and then it will restart in NTFS.
Once you've successfully converted your Windows drive to NTFS, you can clone it using Winclone. Winclone's site has good instructions, but here they are just in case:
- Make an image of the Windows partition you want to clone
- Store that image on your internal Mac OS partition (where you have Winclone installed)
- Restore the Winclone image to the empty Boot Camp partition
Questions
1. Why convert from FAT32 to NTFS?
I tried a number of ways of migrating my FAT32 drive (dd, Acronis True Image), and they all failed. Winclone works for NTFS drives and is a snap.
2. Won't converting from FAT32 to NTFS mean I can't write from my Mac to my Boot Camp drive or cause other problems?
Nope. The conversion happens without harming your data, so that's not a problem. As far as writing from Mac OS to NTFS, you can do so through Parallels. That's good enough for me, and NTFS adds protections and features that FAT32 can't offer. See Microsoft's site for more information about FAT32 vs. NTFS
3. How long does this take?
About two and a half hours from start to finish (18GB partition)
4. Winclone warned me about something happening to my partition; what should I do?
Winclone's just making sure you know that if you disconnect any of the partitions it's using while it's working, bad things will happen. As long as you leave everything connected while Winclone runs, you'll be fine.
5. Winclone thinks my Windows drive is FAT32, but I converted it to NTFS. What do I do?
Restart Winclone or click "Refresh" next to the Source drop down in the Backup tab. It should recognize your drive as NTFS then.
6. Will this work with Vista?
I have no idea. I bet, but I don't use Vista so can't be sure.
7. Where can I get a good deal on an external hard drive?
Try Amazon!
New Media consulting
Yes, I am available for hire. I've received some email inquiries about whether I'm available for contract work. I am indeed. If you're looking for help
- Setting up a wiki, blog, or intranet,
- Analyzing wiki or blog traffic and use,
- Writing surveys and interview protocols, or
- Analyzing survey and interview data,
send me email. My recent work focuses on improving collaborations and facilitating organizational knowledge sharing. I also have 8 years of web development experience (ASP, SQL Server, PHP, MySQL, JavaScript) and 5 years of research experience (interviews, surveys, statistical analysis). I have installed blogs and wikis in a variety of organizations and environments and have run workshops for individuals interested in setting up their own. I can give workshops to large and small groups about what new media technologies are, how they can be used, and what pitfalls they present.
Thank you for your interest!
Beer project update
I've been asked a couple times lately about my 365 Beers in 365 Days Project. Well, folks, that was an overly ambitious goal. I have until April 15 to complete the project, but that's not going to happen.
Here are today's summary statistics:
Total beer count: 144
Beer drinking rate: 0.503 beers/day
Number of watery domestics consumed: 5
Number of different breweries: 96
Number of beer styles (e.g. pilsner, IPA): 19
Brewery with most beers on list: Tie between Brown’s (Troy, NY; thanks, Ann, Lisa-Joy, and Dan for your help!) and dillon DAM Brewery (Dillon, CO; Thanks, Mom!)
Favorite brewery: Stone (I'll be visiting the Stone Brewery in February. Stay tuned!)
I don't mind that I won't get anywhere near my 365/365 goal. This little project has helped me figure out what I like in beer (hops, and lots of it) and what I don't like (stouts, ew). I now know what I want with a hamburger (lager) or on its own (IPA). I've learned quite a bit, and that's good enough. I'll keep updating you on my progress; this project may become a drinking approach rather than a drinking project. Sometimes one just wants to drink a beer one likes, a familiar friend in a bottle or pint glass; this crazy 365 thing made that pretty hard, and I just couldn't keep up.
Ink well?
So I borrowed my friend's Uacom padh do a little teshmg. I'm Using A to write this post.Sv far , It's not doing SO weU.Some Of you owtthere May want toArgue that this lS a PEBKAC issue,but I know better.What I dm'd know Is how toInsert spaces .Ov hew to preventthem from be,. ngInsert ed.there's a settingthat asked about tWspa e1ng M my handwriting, and£ shouldplay with that.I should also Work on picking up my pen betweenletters H see Ms.OK .Eng ouchvvtt` ng In Ink .
So there you go, my first blog post written using Inkwell, Apple's built-in handwriting technology (strangely, they have no page about it that I can find). Thank you, Cory, for loaning me your Wacom pad. I can see how I might grow to love such a thing but think that maybe my interview subjects will not. Of course, when I'm interviewing people who like new technologies, they may get excited about using the pad to draw and sketch for me, and that would mean more data. More data is my favorite kind. Well, maybe not my favorite, but you know what I mean.
Here's a translation of what that paragraph should have said:
So I borrowed my friend's Wacom pad to do a little testing. I'm using it to write this post. So far, it's not doing so well. Some of you may want to argue that this is a PEBKAC issue, but I know better. What I don't know is how to insert spaces or how to prevent them from being inserted. There's a setting that asked about the spacing in my handwriting, and I should play with that. I should also work on picking up my pen between letters. Ok. Enough writing in Ink.
I guess the lesson here is that, on first use, Ink and Wacom work well enough that I can decipher what I wrote but not well enough to capture it all on the first pass. Not bad for a first time, I guess. Oh, and PEBKAC = Problem Exists Between Keyboard And Chair (i.e. user's fault). It's (almost) never the user's fault. Stuff should just work.
A white background is irresponsible
I wish I could balance energy usage with easy-to-read text, but I just can't. I like big contrast, I like blank space. And so, libbyh.com has gone back to white. I'm sorry, world, for using more energy. I really am. I will try to find a color scheme somewhere between the black of earlier this week and the white of today; an intermediate gray might do the trick.
To learn more about how much power display colors use, visit EnergyStar's informative site. Right now, if you're reading this on my blog and not in your reader (whose color scheme I don't know), you're using 74 Watts when yesterday at this time, with the old black background, you would've used only 59 Watts. Please turn off some other light. We can work together to lower our energy consumption.
New and Useful: Google Sync for BlackBerry
In December, Google released a new application called Google Sync for BlackBerry that automatically sync's your device calendar with your Google Calendar. For anyone else using the clunky Google Calendar mobile version in their BlackBerry browser, this is quite exciting.
To download, visit http://m.google.com/sync from your BlackBerry browser.
If you'd rather not have another app on your device, but you want an easier way to get to your Google Calendar, try texting GVENT (48368). You'll get an SMS back with your calendar information: "nday" = next day's calendar; "next" = next event; "day" = today's events
Getting that article you need right this second
I will save a rant about my frustrations with end-user library systems for a future post. For now, I'll stick with staying positive. This post describes the process my lovely reference librarian friends have helped me establish for identifying, locating, and downloading electronic versions of articles I really want to read. It's cold and snowy in Michigan, parking near central campus is a nightmare, and I just don't want to wait for physical copies to come to north campus. I want my articles now!
Ok, anyway, here's what you'll need:
- A Google Scholar window
- A UM SearchTools window
- (if you're off campus) A CoSign session so you can access the library's UM-only resources. Login at http://weblogin.umich.edu
And here's what you do:
- Use Google Scholar to search for an article on a specific topic (ex. social capital)
- Click on an article title to get the details page; make sure you can tell from the details where it was published and when
- In SearchTools, click "Find e-Journals"
- Search for the publication that published the article you want (ex. Academy of Management Review)
- Click on the journal in your search results
- Use one of the online databases to "browse" for your article using the volume, number, date, pages, etc. information from the Google Scholar results (I use Proquest ABI/INFORM if it's available; it's the easiest one to browse and offers HTML text and PDF view options.)
Tada! You can have that article right now. Well, unless you, like I was, are looking for an Academy of Management article from 2002. We don't have those online apparently. Argh. I'll have to go out in the cold.
Drafting a teaching statement (still)
I'm still working on my teaching statement for my Rackham Outstanding Graduate Student Instructor nomination. I can't seem to get it right, and it can be only one page long. What do you think about this?
Teaching in a professional program such as the School of Information Master’s degree program forces me to balance goals of helping students develop skills specifically for their future work and encouraging them to analyze theoretic material so they may adapt to changes in their careers. The course I have the most experience teaching introduces students to social theories of information, and so my emphasis is on challenging students to critically engage material. This skill, critical thinking, is invaluable for a broad range of occupations; the ability to examine concepts provides students a foundation for meeting new challenges. By understanding the essence of some aspect of information, students become better prepared to adapt to changes in their careers – changes one could not anticipate and for which one cannot specifically train.
Critical thinking transcends disciplines, and using it as a cornerstone for my approach to teaching enables me to adapt to a variety of teaching and learning environments from classrooms to one-on-one sessions with students and GSIs. Respect for intellectual diversity and collaboration are compliments to a focus on critical thinking and cornerstones of a successful SI education. The kind of learning environment that best facilitates critical thinking relies on the diverse intellectual contributions and approaches of others. I use a variety of large-group discussions and small-group activities in my teaching; this allows me to use case-based exercises to help students develop abilities to analyze information in work contexts and in collaboration with others. For example, students analyzed the Open CourseWare initiative while learning about intellectual property and social learning theory. Case exercises help bridge the potential gap between the course’s focus on analyses of theories and the students’ needs to prepare for professional practice.
It is my responsibility as an instructor to foster learning environments where students are encouraged to call upon a variety of ways to view a particular situation and in which students come to value multiple perspectives. One important way I foster such intellectual diversity is by taking neutral stances on controversial or disruptive material. Our students call upon a variety of backgrounds, including systems design and library services, and I encourage students to discuss cases such as Google Book Search from those various perspectives. These exercises emphasizing intellectual diversity prepare students to explore future problems from a variety of perspectives and encourage them to develop innovative solutions to problems such as online book searching and digital preservation.
Respecting intellectual diversity also requires that I take into account the varieties of ways in which students learn. Providing material in a variety of formats and using a range of teaching styles – including class discussion, role playing, and individual engagement – produces a positive learning environment in which all students can feel safe and supported. I use a variety of aptitude measures so that students have opportunities to demonstrate their skills and to develop new ones. For example, when teaching Social Systems and Collections, I used classroom participation, short essay tests, and long paper writing to check for students’ understanding. When training GSIs authoring assignments for their courses, I’ve helped create short answer, concept mapping, and essay assignments. Using a variety of methods to check for understanding caters to different sets of intellectual strengths and challenges students to develop skills where they have weaknesses.
In addition to helping students develop critical thinking skills in an atmosphere of intellectual diversity and collaboration, I believe remaining a student myself is paramount to being an effective teacher. I don’t mean that I should always take courses, but I believe that good teachers continually evaluate their own teaching. Serving as a GSM helped me develop skills to evaluate my own teaching. Observing and helping other GSIs, reading student feedback on my teaching, and developing GSI training sessions all helped me examine my own teaching. Taking time to consider students’ feedback and learning to articulate teaching methods to other GSIs were invaluable in helping me improve as an instructor. Talking with other experienced teachers, engaging with students, and utilizing resources like CRLT all help me continue to improve as a teacher.
In conclusion, I believe that encouraging critical thinking, respecting intellectual diversity, and facilitating collaborative learning are keys to successful teaching. Doing so creates a learning environment in which students can learn the skills to reasonably process and generate information and to develop habits of using those critical thinking skills. Such an environment helps students learn to be precise and logical, to communicate effectively and respectfully, and to analyze information. These skills are invaluable to our students whether they enter careers in information policy, library services, or another information field. My focus on learning, both my students’ and my own, prepares me to effectively teach a range of courses to a diverse student body.