At 3:41 PM -0600 4/06/2005, Geno wrote:
>Hi Tom,
>
>So is it an OS 10.2 install disk with a 10.3 upgrade disk?
>
>I've never used 10.2 so I don't know what utilities it came with.
>
>If you do end up doing a fresh install I suggest you create an emergency
>boot CD with Disk Utilities on it so this won't happen again.
>
>Sorry I couldn't be more helpful.
>
>Good luck.
>
>Geno


That's what it is, Geno, a 10.2 installer CD, and then I have a set of 10.3
updater CDs, and after that more updaters downloaded from Apple.

Thanks for trying to help.

Tom


>
>on 04/06/2005 1:55 PM, Thomas Baker at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> Thanks Geno. My OS-X install disk, which I bought from OWC, is for 10.2 and
>> it doesn't have any Disk Utilities on it. It has a Utilities Folder, but
>> the only thing in it is Disk First Aid. So I tried running Disk First Aid
>> on the drive that has OS-X on it, and it kept finding problems, but not
>> fixing them. Every time it says the disk is repaired, if I run it again it
>> reports the same problems.
>>
>> I don't see any way to reset prefs on the boot drive either with this
>> install CD. Is my install disk a weird one, then, since it doesn't offer
>> these things? It says eMac on it, but OWC assured me that it would work
>> with any OS-X-capable Mac. I thought I was buying typical OS-X install
>> disks, but it sounds like I got shorted.
>>
>> Tom
>>
>>
>> At 12:27 PM -0600 4/06/2005, Geno wrote:
>>> Man you wrote a book!
>>>
>>> Try putting in your install cd and open disk utilities. Reset the
>>> preferences on your boot drive.
>>>
>>> That's worked for me in the past.
>>>
>>> Good luck.
>>>
>>> Geno
>>>
>>>
>>> on 04/06/2005 11:22 AM, Thomas Baker at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>>>
>>>> I've been running X (10.3.8 now) trouble-free for months, but today I
>>>> decided to change the cables on my video converter box (which I use to
>>>>feed
>>>> analog video into Final Cut), and I thought it would be safer to shut down
>>>> the computer before switching FireWire or video cables on the box (I
>>>> especially worry about switching FW cables hot). So I chose Shut Down and
>>>> waited for the Mac to shut down. The monitor screen turned blank-blue
>>>>as it
>>>> usually does during shutdown, but then it just hung there, frozen. No
>>>> shut-down.
>>>>
>>>> After waiting awhile, I decided to go ahead and shut the Mac down the rest
>>>> of the way by just hitting the Off button on my APS power backup, which
>>>> cuts off the power to the Mac. Dumb! Doing that apparently broke OS-X!
>>>> (Unless it was already broken when the shutdown screen froze).
>>>>
>>>> Now when I try to start up the Mac, instead of going to the OS-X desktop,
>>>> it goes to a login box with my name on it, but only for a couple of
>>>> seconds. Then that box vanishes and I get a blue screen with a terminal
>>>> command line in the upper left corner: a login prompt asking for name and
>>>> password. So I give it those, and I get "Welcome to Darwin!" Who's Darwin?
>>>> Charles Darwin the naturalist? Anyway there sits the prompter or whatever
>>>> it is waiting for commands, and I don't know any commands to give. The
>>>>only
>>>> command I know is "exit," which starts the whole broken startup thing over
>>>> again: the glimpse of a login box followed by the terminal command lines
>>>> asking for name and password again.
>>>>
>>>> I looked into Pogue's OS-X book for help, and he says to boot into single
>>>> user mode in such a situation and type in fsck -y to get a repair routine
>>>> running. So I did that, and I get
>>>>
>>>> "Checking HFS Plus Volume
>>>> Invalid number of allocation blocks (-1,0)
>>>> **volume check failed"
>>>>
>>>> Hitting exit from there takes me right back to "Welcome to Darwin"
>>>>again. A
>>>> vicious circle! No way out!
>>>>
>>>> Pogue suggests that when everything else fails like this, reinstall OS-X.
>>>> So I put my OS-X CD in the superdrive (Pioneer 107) and restart while
>>>> holding down the C key, but it hangs at the gray screen with the apple on
>>>> it. I have to force a restart.
>>>>
>>>> Fortunately this is a dual-boot G4 (733 DA), so I can drop back into OS
>>>> 9.2.2 by re-starting and holding down the D key. That gives me the OS-9
>>>> desktop (and I am sending this cry for help to the G-list from it) and I
>>>> can see all my drive icons, and open them up to see that everything on
>>>>them
>>>> is present and accounted for (three internal and IDE three external
>>>> FireWire drives), and the OS-X System folder is sitting there on one
>>>>of the
>>>> drives as normal.
>>>>
>>>> While on the OS-9 desktop, if I choose the OS-X Install disk as the
>>>>startup
>>>> disk, and restart, all it does is hang again at the gray screenfd, and I
>>>> have to force a restart.
>>>>
>>>> So, I'm stuck! I can't get my OS-X desktop back, and I can't reinstall
>>>>OS-X
>>>> either! What do I do now?
>>
>> Art website at http://www.ThomasBakerPaintings.com
>> Archaeology website at http://www.nmia.com/~jaybird/AANewsletter/

Art website at http://www.ThomasBakerPaintings.com
Archaeology website at http://www.nmia.com/~jaybird/AANewsletter/



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