Elliott Price wrote:
The best and safest way to eject the optical drive is to hold Opt. while 
booting, and then either press the EJECT button on the keyboard, or Apple+E if 
a dedicated eject button isn't present. ( I think this is what Christian was 
suggesting, but I wasn't sure?) Sticking a paperclip randomly around in the CD 
drive can be a potential hazard... If you don't know where exactly the button 
is, you could break something, or scratch the disk. I've never had much luck 
finding the button, and while some drives have the hidden button, some just 
don't.
Sticking credit cards in won't work; when the drive pulls a CD or DVD in, it seats in on the spindle, and locks two arms around the CD, between it and the opening. Forcing these arms and/or forcing the CD off the spindle will probably damage the drive, so I would NOT recommend this method. If worst comes to worst and the drive won't eject, the best way is to take the top off of the optical drive, and pop the CD off the spindle. (Just like you would a tray-loading drive)

As for how to determine if it has an Airport card, it should be easy; Just turn the little knob and open the RAM/Airport access panel. If there's an Airport card, you'll see it; if not, you won't. :)

No, just hold down the mouse button on boot-up.
--
Sincerely,
Dennis B. Swaney

"Windows is a command-line OS with a GUI shell while Mac System 10 is ... oh, never mind."

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