My Mac mini arrived yesterday!! I had been pondering over whether to buy a Mac for over a year now. I almost bought a MacBook Pro in Japan but was put off by the expensive Yen. My latest attempt to get a Mac was almost derailed when I tried to purchase a Mac mini off ebay – well, that never turned up. Good thing for Paypal buyer protection. Eventually I gave in to the temptation and just purchased one from a trusted retailer at a nicely discounted price.
Now there are various models to go for but I had one requirement which was that it had to have 4GB of RAM. If I upgraded the basic model that shipped with a 2.26GHz Core 2 Duo processor, 2GB of RAM and a 120GB hard drive, then this would cost an extra £80 on top of the base model (£480 with Education discount). Interestingly, this bought it to within striking distance of the next model (£622 with Education discount). With 4GB ram as standard, a faster 2.53Ghz processor AND more than double the hard drive capacity at 320GB, it seemed reasonably cost effective to go for this higher model. Given that I had a better hard drive (see below) to put in, I could sell off the 320GB drive for a higher price than the 120GB. So the better Mac mini was ordered, paid for and it arrived next day!
Apple’s packaging has always been impressively clean and simple. Here’s the front:
OK, after lifting out the manual/installation DVD’s, you are presented with the Mac mini, cleanly wrapped in a piece of plastic. It’s now I start to find out how hard it is to take a picture of a white object. So, apologies for my photos not being the best but can’t be ar$ed to photoshop them.
Underneath the mini are the accessories, the power adapter (brick), DVI adapter and…. well that’s it. It doesn’t come with anything else as you’re supposed to bring your own keyboard and mouse. Oh and also monitor.
Here’s the mini out of the box. Hasn’t even been turned on yet!
Now I mentioned above that I wanted to replace the stock hard drive. It spins at 5,400rpm but I wanted a bit better performance so I got a 500GB drive that spins at 7,200rpm. The faster the disk spins, the faster the computer responds, in theory. I needed to upgrade the hard drive so how to go about opening a computer that has no screws?
The Mac mini is one compact machine and Apple didn’t design to be easily modded. Google brings up loads of articles where people have used a putty knife, cooking spatula and even wires!! Well, I had to get in there some how, so after failing with a Swiss army knife (too small) and various credit cards (too flexible and too thick) I dug around in the shed for a putty knife. It was a little bit rusty but it seemed thin and strong enough to be able to pry open my new Mac mini!!
After perhaps 20 minutes of struggling and thinking how on earth is this going to work, I had progress!! Here, my Ikea membership card is being put to good use – it’s holding the front open as I work on the other sides!
After perhaps 30 or 40 minutes, I’m finally in!! The superdrive (CD/DVD) is in the way of everything.
To get to the hard drive, I had to carefully unscrew the 4 corner screws that holds the drive enclosure down and also remove the 3 antennae without losing the springs, peel back 1 sticky tape and also unclip what I believe is the SATA ribbon cable that connects the drives to the rest of the computer.
I can’t believe how small they make things these days. Anyway, here’s the Mac mini stripped bare. The big black thing on the right is the heatsink sitting on top of the CPU. The modules on the bottom left is the 4GB of memory. Rumour has it that you can put 8GB in here though Apple don’t say this officially. Not sure what the middle heat sink is covering, I’m guessing the graphics.
Here’s the drive enclosure (underside). The hard drive is the blue thing on the right and well, the left side is just space to suck out the heat.
After a bit more fiddling and unscrewing, I’ve finally got the hard drive out. Out with the slow Fujitsu drive and in with the new Seagate Momentus 7400.4 500GB hard drive.
As I was piecing it all back together I noticed something soft and odd looking – it’s the internal speaker!! Good thing I didn’t press too hard on it because there was some soft foam around the fan which I thought this was at first. Looked interesting, so here’s a picture of it too:
Quickly plug in the power and check the drive works before putting the lid back on. I formatted it and checked the status. All seems ok!
After re-installing OS X – Voila! My new Mac mini all set up and ready to go (excuse the embarrassing wallpaper my parents put in when I was in Japan).
First impressions? Love it and don’t regret buying it. Need to spend a lot of time with it to get used to it though as I’ve never used a Mac before. Still need to figure out how to transfer my iTunes from my old laptop and slowly move everything across.
Although not directly related to the Mac mini, I also purchased the Magic Mouse at the same time. It’s quite a neat gadget to be honest, featuring the touch sensitivity on the surface of the mouse that you get with the iPhones. It doesn’t do “pinch” but I have a feeling this just requires a bit more programming from Apple. The mouse has only one button yet I can left click, right click and scroll like any regular mouse! Magic!
- Mac mini MC239B/A (Late 2009 model)
- 2.53GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
- 4GB 1066MHz DDR3 SDRAM (2x2GB)
- NVIDIA GeForece 9400M 256MB of DDR3 SDRAM (shared)
- SuperDrive 8x (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW)
- Seagate Momentus 7400.4 500GB SATA hard drive (upgrade)
- Airport Extreme Wi-Fi (802.11n) and Bluetooth
- Apple Keyboard + Magic Mouse


















