![]() I thought my fingers would stop reaching for the non-functioning keypad, but they wouldn’t. With my right hand on the mouse, and my left on the Nostromo, I’m an editing machine.īut the software for the Nostromo refuses to work with the Mac Pro.Īt first, I wondered if I could live without it. Using the software that came with it, I set up keys for Copy, Paste and all the useful shortcuts one is likely to use. That’s why I’ve been using a little gaming keypad, the Nostromo N52 by Belkin. While one’s fingers can always find the right keys to form words, there’s something different about multi-key combinations. While my odd keyboard is great for typing, it’s singularly awful for key commands, like Copy, Paste and Undo. Nevertheless, it produces the correct letters every time. On restarts, the computer asks me to confirm the keyboard layout, suspicious that I’ve swapped in a Klingon model. The Mac Pro isn’t thrilled with my keyboard, which connects through a serial-to-ADB dongle. It looks impossible to use, but I’m actually much faster typing on it than a traditional keyboard, with the added bonus that my arms don’t go numb in the middle of the night. ![]() ![]() Unfortunately, I’ve had some hiccups with my input devices.Īs I’ve blogged about, I have a strange keyboard. The new computer is great, and almost all of my software works perfectly on it. I deserve to throw some of my Hollywood money around.As a writer, I needed a quieter computer.My G5 was actually slower than my laptop.(In truth, I only did one effect in the final cut.) I’m doing effects for The Movie, and Motion runs much faster on it.I recently upgraded to a Mac Pro, which I justified to myself thusly:
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