Possibly, but reloading your operating system isn't going to fix corruption in your disk structures. That's like replacing the groceries that spoiled in you faulty refrigerator without fixing the refrigerator.
> On Mar 26, 2016, at 6:30 PM, Michael <keybou...@gmail.com> wrote: > > At $120, it's not worth that much :-). > > I'm wondering if I could get a reinstall from the genius bar. > > On 2016-03-26, at 4:33 PM, Macs R We <macs...@macsrwe.com> wrote: > >> If you have disk warrior, boot from it and try to repair the drive. If you >> don't have it, it's really, really worth getting. >> >>> On Mar 26, 2016, at 3:59 PM, Michael <keybou...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> I have an iBook G4, running 10.5.8. Today, it rebooted on me, at "random". >>> >>> During startup, it complained about problems with the root file system, and >>> said that an fsck would be forced at next startup. So, I forced a reboot >>> from the login screen. >>> >>> Naturally, it did not do the fsck. So, a reboot into single user mode. >>> >>> Fsck -f tells me the following: >>> >>> Checking Journaled HFS plus volume >>> Checking extents overflow file >>> Checking catalog file >>> Keys out of order (4, 704) >>> Rebuilding catalog B-tree >>> The volume could not be repaired >>> Exited with signal 8 >>> >>> What do I do at this point to recover? I have a full time machine backup. >>> >>> --- >>> Entertaining minecraft videos >>> http://YouTube.com/keybounce >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> MacOSX-talk mailing list >>> MacOSX-talk@omnigroup.com >>> http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk >> > > --- > Entertaining minecraft videos > http://YouTube.com/keybounce > _______________________________________________ MacOSX-talk mailing list MacOSX-talk@omnigroup.com http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk