Sunday, March 29, 2009

A COMPLETE TRANSFORMATION


Did a complete transformation of my MSI McWindtosh to a Macbook Nano. Had been searching high and low for a laptop sticker cover with an Apple logo. Yesterday, went to the supposedly IT Centre at level 3, East Coast Mall, Kuantan, Pahang. The supposedly called IT Centre is just two or three shops selling mainly PC accessories. Other things are just boring. Just browsing the accessories and stumbled a good looking Apple laptop sticker. Bought is for RM15 and did the complete transformation that night.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

PLAYING MOVIES IN MAC


My McWindTosh is so small and portable. With 500GB hard disk around, it would make a great DVD player. Playing DVD movies, need you to have an external DVD drive. However you can also use Handbrake to convert your DVD movies to either MP4 or AVI. To play the movies, you can either use VLC media player for Mac OSX or Quicktime. However, quicktime has a limitation on playing MOV format only. Installing Perian, called the swiss army knife for quicktime solved all these. With perian installed, quicktime can play AVI, MP4, FLV and etc. Now, where did I put all my DVD collection. Need to convert them all to fill up my hard disk. Hehe!!

SUBSPECIALTY IN MEDICINE. IS IT WORTH ALL THE TROUBLE (OR TROUBLES)?

Continuing education never ends in Medicine. Learning is a life long process. The day you finish your first degree be it MD or MBBS, you have to think about postgraduate education. The day you finish your second degree or masters, you have to think about subspecialty or fellowship training.

Subspecialty training or fellowship training is a different ballgame if you want to compare to masters programme. At this point of time, most of us is settling down with many commitments either personal or family.

To even start thinking of a subspecialty training is already a major decision. You have to start looking for training centres either locally or in other foreign countries. Usually in many centres, there will be at least 2 or 3 years of waiting list, unless you have close contact to the training consultant. Even after you have secured the place, it might be difficult to secure a working visa for you in the particular country for you to work. Even after you have secured both the training centre and working visa, some of you may not be able to secure any scholarship for the fellowship training. I have a colleague who took a MARA loan to do her fellowship. She is still paying the loan now.

After all these troubles, then it came to the time for you to go for your fellowship. The scholarship is usually not enough to cover your living expenses for the whole duration of the studies. You need to fork out your live savings for the studies. Sometimes you have to spend your credit card up to the limit and do the payment later. One of my colleague spend to the limit, two of his credit cards while doing his fellowship. The credit card payments were only settled after 2 years later on. Comparing to a non medical personnel who did masters or PhD overseas, we don't have the luxury to do odd jobs to cover for our living expenses overseas. This is because you usually work the whole day and sometimes doing on calls, without pay. If you compared to your colleague in Singapore, they were usually given a bigger scholarship. Their scholarship were given by the Ministry of Human Resources. As a comparison, 5 years ago, our scholarship to France is Euro500, whereas their scholarship is Euro1500, a Euro1000 difference. Now, if you go to Europe, you will get around Euro1500 per month if your bring your whole family together (maximum 4 children will be paid allowances).

Then, your wife or husband may have to take unpaid leave or resign from his or her job. This is another loss of income, which will deprive you of your spending power while you study. Then, your children, who need to go to school in a foreign country. It is fortunate for them, if you are doing your fellowship in an English speaking country such and UK or Australia. They can go to the country's public school. The fees are usually cheaper or free. If you are doing your fellowship in a non English speaking country, you may have to opt for International School. With the current scholarships that were given to us, we can never afford International School. Only if you work with Malaysian Embassy, you can afford International School. If you can't afford it, would your children miss school for a year?? That is for you to decide.

After the long one year of fellowship, you came back to your current employer or university. With it, you were confered a Fellowship or etc, etc. But with it, you also carry unpaid credit card bills, bank loans, your children missing school in Malaysia and your wife not working for a year. Your house would surely be in a mess, after leaving it for a year.


One year gone, you missed the CLA5 (Penilaian Tahap Kecekapan 5) and you miss the boat for your promotion. Your colleagues who graduated the same year with you got the promotion earlier since he didn't missed the CLA5. Will you get any extra increament?? NO. Will you get recognition for the work you have done?? NO.

So, the question is, is it worth all the troubles???? This is a difficult question to answer. For me, a big YES. However since I dare not sacrifice my children's education and I can't afford to spend a lot of money for overseas fellowship, I have done my fellowship locally. I still need to spend a lot of money for weekly traveling from Kuantan to KL and also spending for the house rental. The scholarship of RM1000 (RM900 + RM100 extra COLA) is not enough to cover it all. You have to sacrifice something to get something else. The extra amount of money I spent is peanuts if compared to others who had spent doing fellowship in France, Turkey, UK or Australia.

Why do doctors still go for their fellowship, with all the troubles and suffering for them and their families?? I can list some and others can add more.

a. Personal satisfaction: If you like to do something, you will go for it, no matter how big the obstacle is.

b. To be better: In a more challenging world now, being a generalist is not an option. In the past, when you passed as a doctor, you resign and opened your GP clinic after 3 years. Your clinic will be prosperous. However now, you may not survive 2 years if your open a clinic.

c. For promotion purposes: As I mentioned above, you won't get your immediate increament or extra allowances after you finish your fellowship. However, it could become a platform for your promotion. In a university setting, if you planned or decided to apply for a Professorship (VK7) in 5 years time, it would be easier for a subspecialist. You will receive specific cases for your subspecialty. From there, you can collect and have a database of your specific patients and cases. With the databases, you can conduct trials, studies, publish papers, give talks, conduct conferences, conduct courses, becoming consultants to other centres and etc. All of these will give you extra points for your promotion.

d. To start a new service in your current centre: No subspecialists in your current area of expertise is available in your current centre and you want to give something to the public. It is quite noble I think.

d. Greener pasteure (not sure if it is a correct spelling): Some people use this as a platform to go to private. In a competitive world now, being a subspecialist increase your value in private hospitals. You can command more salary and cover more hospitals and doing specific cases if you are a subspecialists. However after saying all these, please remember that the public is paying for you subspecialty training. Please give them at least 5 years of wonderful service and then resign. The 5 years will increase your skills, add value to your work ethics, satisfy the public service. Lastly, please still do come and give 'amal jariah' to the public hospitals after leaving.

Lastly, please make sure you pay your WIFE and CHILDREN handsomely after all these troubles. They are the ones who suffered a lot when you did your training, doesn't matter whether it is locally or in another country.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

CLONING THE HARD DISK


Cloning your hard disk is good for two reasons. First is as a complete backup of your hard disk. The second reason is to migrate to a bigger hard disk. For windows, there are a few softwares available such as Acronis True Image or Norton Ghost. I used Norton Ghost 14 to clone my Windows XP partition and both my data and backup partition to my new 500GB hard disk. For OSX, Norton Ghost won't work since it is a HFS partition. For Mac you can use either SuperDuper (Shareware) or Carbon Copy Cloner (Donationware). I used Carbon Copy Cleaner to clone my OSX partition, since I felt very lazy to do a complete reinstallation of the OSX to my new hard disk.

Since I have already put in the 500GB hard disk in the MSI Wind, I booted my OSX partition on my old 160GB hard disk via USB. It booted well and my new Dell 1390 miniPCI wifi card was immediately detected. Opened the network configuration. Added a new network configuration with Airport and the icon came out and it began to search for any wifi network. My home wifi network was detected immediately. Punch in the WEP key and I began surfing wirelessly. I open the Mac OS Device info, the card was detected as a third party wireless card. No other information available.

Then started the cloning process using Carbon Copy Cloner to my new 500GB hard disk which was already installed in the McWindTosh. It took about one hour for it to complete. After completion, I restart the computer again. It failed to boot!!!! No problem. Ubuntu Live 8.04 USB stick is available with me. I used it to boot the notebook and put the Win XP partition to boot instead of the OSX partition. With the Darwin bootloader I managed to run both Win XP partition and OSX partition.

However I noticed that there is a slight slownees in the booting of both Win XP and OSX partition in the new 500GB hard disk as compared to the old 160GB hard disk. Maybe it is due to the bigger size of the new hard disk. *** EDITED: I also noticed that the clock in the McWindTosh becomes very slow. Playing movies in Quicktime is also slow. Searched the forums for solution. Found it. I installed the old Chameleon EFI. I am supposed to install the new Chameleon DFE for hard disk. I downloaded it, which is about 10MB and reinstall the DMG file. After that, there is a slight change in the Darwin bootloader. However everything goes back to normal. No more lagging clock. Movies in quicktime is also much faster.

Now I have a MSI McWindTosh with a megasize hard disk with working wifi, bluetooth, vga out, ethernet, sound, webcam and 3G (with Huawei USB modem). The VGA out to external monitor or LCD projector works only with extended desktop mode. The mirror display doesn't work unless you install the new GMA950 video driver. However with the new GMA950 driver, there will be a severe lagging and mouse trailing seen when you use any Microsoft Office products. So I decided to only use the extended desktop mode for the VGA out and not to install the new GMA950 driver.

Next project is to do an upgrade to Leopard 10.5.6, for me to use ILife 09. This is slightly more difficult since you have to use many Kernels and drivers. But for now Leopard 10.5.4 is good enough.

UPGRADING THE MSI MCWINDTOSH


My hands are getting itchy for the last few weeks. Really satisified with the Leopard installation in my MSI Wind, even though it is only version 10.5.4. Browsing ebay Malaysia to look for a mini PCI Dell 1390 which should work for both Windows and Mac OSX. I am not very keen on using the Realtek driver for the stock mini PCI card in MSI Wind, since you don't get the wifi icon when you are using Leopard. Found from a few sellers from Hong Kong which gives free shipping to Malaysia. One of the seller is selling here. I got it at around RM65 from a different seller. The package arrived within less than 2 weeks. Since I will be opening the MSI Wind to change the mini PCI card, why not upgrade the Hard Disk too. So, for this upgrading, I bought myself a 500GB Western Digital Scorpio SATA hard disk at Digital Mall PJ. The price is the same with my current portable Western Digital Passport 320GB Hard Disk which I bought 6 months ago.

The surgery is quite simple. I just need to remove 9 screws from the bottom of the MSI Wind. Then remove the screw from the mini PCI wireless card. Then remove the Wifi miniPCI card first. Then remove the screw under the Wifi miniPCI card. Then lift up the hard disk and pull it out of the socket. Turn the Hard Disk over, and remove the bracket which is attached by 2 screws. Put the bracket back onto the new hard disk. Put it back into the socket. To insert the new Dell 1390 miniPCI wifi card, i had to remove the extra bracket from the motherboard. This is because the Realtek Wifi miniPCI card has a flat back, whereas the Dell 1390 miniPCI card has a slightly elevated back. The extra bracket can be removed using a plier easily. Then put the new Dell 1390 miniPCI card into the wifi slot and screw it. Make sure you put back the 2 wires for the antennae, which are grey and black in colour. After finishing all these, you can put back the back cover and put in all the 9 screws back in.

Restart your computer and pres DEL a few times to go to the setup menu. Check the IDE part to confirm that your new Hard Disk is detected. Mine was detected immediately, as a 500GB hard disk.

Before installing the hard disk, i managed to copy the Windows XP partition and both my Data and Backup partition into the new hard disk using Norton Ghost 14. It was so easy, much easier than using Acronis software. I didn't copy the OSX partition since I don't think Norton Ghost can do it well. With a 500GB Hard Disk, I have a lot of space. I gave OSX a 265GB partition, since I want to keep all my patient datas for Osirix in the hard disk. Windows gets 50GB, Data gets 60GB, Backup gets 60GB. I also reserved a 40GB partition for movies, music and etc.

Upon installation of the hard disk, I immediately start using Windows XP. Norton Ghost 14 did a good job of completely copying all the Win XP partition into the new hard disk. The new Dell 1390 miniPCI wifi card was detected immediately. However it cannot find the driver. So I downloaded the driver using my 3G line. It took around 15 minutes to finish downloading the driver since it is a 52MB file. After unzipping the file, using device manager, I reinstalled the driver from the folder and the card was detected as a Dell Wireless 1390 WLAN Mini Card. However the only disadvantage of this Dell 1390 as compared to the stock Realtek mini card is the absence of 802.11n. Dell 1390 card only support B and G only. This is not a major problem for me now.

Next step is to do a new installation of Leopard using the MSIWindOSX86.iso using the Leopard HD install method. Since I have already done a last backup using Time Machine, I hope I can do a fast restoration after the installation. This is for the next writeup.