Use a GSM Phone as Mac OS X Modem
Here’s how you can get your Mac on the Internet using your GSM cell phone (T-Mobile, etc). If you have a CDMA cell phone (e.g. Verizon Wireless, Sprint PCS), see instead How To Use Your CDMA Cell Phone as a USB Modem in Mac OS X. The instructions on this page assume you’re using Bluetooth to connect your phone to your computer. Link.
Once we were in the air and received our username and passwords to access the Wi-Fi network on the plane, I quickly tested all the applications I could. Skype: called another Skype user, and called using Skype out to a real phone number. It worked perfectly.
Here’s the video I shot with Tim Vinopal, Director, Service Delivery Engineering from Connexion, Boeing’s Wi-fi service for aircraft. I was on their experimental test plane, an interesting glimpse of the future of communications in-flight. The video is really noisy (we were in the engineering section, sorry about that) but you can hear some/most of it.
Amazing past and present mods: the latest are Battlefield 2 cases. 35 year-old German architect Oliver König aka Butterkneter enters the fray with a series of cases with a Battlefield 2 theme. But before we check them out, let’s look at Oliver’s modding portfolio to date…
Google Moon is Google’s commemorative site for the anniversary of the first manned Moon landing — an interactive, zoomable map of the moon’s surface with waypoints set for the six Apollo landing sites. Nice Easter-egg if you zoom all the way, too. [
MacMod.com today announced “The Great MacMod Challenge 2005 Sponsored by dealmac.com,” officially designating August as Mac Mod Month. The Challenge pits Mac users against one another in a battle of creative wits to modify (“mod”) their Apple Macintosh computers by improving performance, appearance, and functionality — for example, painting the exterior, adding bright color LED lights, and overclocking or water-cooling the processor.