Symptoms
The prohibitory sign shows up on startup and it stay that way. I've done
all I've could based on the apple support docs eg:
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106464
But nothing works. Zapping the NVRAM/PRAM didn't change the situation at
all. I can't get the CDROM tray to
I have a two-week old G4 iBook and I ordered AppleCare for it (mucho
dineros) over the internet from the Apple Store and got the emails that
indicate that it has been shipped.
My first new Mac in about ten years.
What exactly do I get ???
Will there be there anything besides papers in this
I saw something on eBay made by Macally that looks like a plastic
holder for iBooks and PowerBooks that holds the computer up in the air
so that it cools nicely. The one I saw does not raise the computer a
few inches but holds the computer almost vertical.
The picture showed an iBook in it
On Feb 29, 2004, at 8:45 AM, Michael Shaw wrote:
I have a two-week old G4 iBook and I ordered AppleCare for it (mucho
dineros) over the internet from the Apple Store and got the emails
that indicate that it has been shipped.
My first new Mac in about ten years.
What exactly do I get ???
Hi Folks-
I need to swap out a friends TiBook display. I've done many swaps on
Wallstreets and 190's in the past, but never to a TiBook. Anybody with any
experience doing this? How much time, difficulty etc? Also, any hints,
how-to's etc...would be appreciated.
Thanks!
Scott
--
G-Books is
On Feb 29, 2004, at 8:45 AM, Michael Shaw wrote:
I have a two-week old G4 iBook and I ordered AppleCare for it
(mucho dineros) over the internet from the Apple Store and got the
emails that indicate that it has been shipped.
My first new Mac in about ten years.
What exactly do I get ???
I have had Applecare on both my previous macs and will be buying it for
my Powerbook in March.
With Applecare, you get a 2 year extension on your warranty to bring it
to a total of 3 years and this includes 3 years of phone support. When
you first buy a Mac, you get 90 days of what they call
Michael,
On 29-Feb-04, at 6:03 AM, Michael Shaw wrote:
I have never opened my new iBook any further than it takes to see the
screen.
How far can they be safely opened???
I looked through the iBook literature for a picture showing the limits
of mobility of the screen but there aren't any.
I have had Applecare on both my previous macs and will be buying it
for my Powerbook in March.
With Applecare, you get a 2 year extension on your warranty to bring
it to a total of 3 years and this includes 3 years of phone support.
When you first buy a Mac, you get 90 days of what they call
The Applecare service is definitely well worth the money and one
additional benefit that I forgot to mention in my initial response was
that it can be a great selling point when you are attempting to sell
your used Mac 2 years from now. If you still have 6-12 months (or
more) of Applecare
On 29-Feb-04, at 9:00 AM, Andrew wrote:
Is it valid overseas? I will be moving to Korea and just bought a new
PowerBook, Applecare is only worthwhile if I can claim against it in
Korea.
Andrew
I am not sure from your e-mail where you are currently residing but you
should call Applecare in
When I hit Send using Mail (panther 10.3.2 on G4 iBook) the computer
makes a strange sound, in stereo, of the message whizzing off into the
great void.
Thiis is the only souund effect I've ever heard from this program.
Are there any other sounds in the Mail program ???
M
--
G-Books is
Yup, when you download mail there is one sound, and if you check mail
and there is none, you get another. The sounds are subtle, and rather
cool.
Andrew
--
The lord's our shepherd says the psalm, but just in case., WE'D
BETTER GET A BOMB!
© Tom Lehrer, 1965
On Feb 29, 2004, at 9:27
Speaking of Mail, it is a terrific program. I'm a long-time Windows
user and really do like Outlook 98/2000/XP for Windows. When I bought
my PB last week, of course I added Office v.X and imported (rather
difficult from Outlook) everything into Entourage.
Well I also started playing with
On Saturday, February 28, 2004, at 09:14 PM, Seeker wrote:
Today I installed an Airport Base Station M5757 (Graphite) and, in
my
Dual-USB iBook, an Airport Card 8.2001 and also added a Linksys BEFSR41
Router, v.3.
This has been followed by some very unusual behavior when I am
Hi I have blown a chipset on my external firewire enclosure. Do you
know where I ca get a replacement?
I had a couple of old SCSI enclosures and after buying a FW enclosure
noticed it was exactly the same thing, except one had a FW board the
other a SCSI. So off to the web I went searching
This sounds what bedeviled my G3/250 WS which I bought in June 1998.
The problem had exhibited itself by Jan 2000. I only found out later
that Apple would repair this at their expense, including overnight shipping
to/from Dallas (they provide the box). Perhaps the offer is still
valid (I didn't
On Feb 29, 2004, at 9:57 AM, Ray Sleeva wrote:
On Feb 29, 2004, at 8:45 AM, Michael Shaw wrote:
I have a two-week old G4 iBook and I ordered AppleCare for it (mucho
dineros) over the internet from the Apple Store and got the emails
that indicate that it has been shipped.
My first new Mac in
My iBook has a modem but my BW does not. I
thought that I could just check internet sharing
on the iBook and get the BW to connect through
the iBook. However, I can't get it to work. The
BW picks up an IP address but I can't access the
internet.
Both computers are running 10.2.8. I have
On 29-Feb-04, at 9:29 AM, Andrew wrote:
I'm in the United States, and sometimes companies chintz on their
warrantees once you cross a border.
Andrew
That is true for some companies but this is why you want to call
Applecare and maybe also check their website for international coverage
Actually I now see I'm backwards in that it's a low profile, which of
course means it would work in both, so does that means we could have
two 512s and have a wallstreet recognize both?
On Feb 29, 2004, at 5:45 PM, john slavin wrote:
I see that OWC is showing a memory module for the top slop
With desktops, well, there it's a toss-up. In my experience (non
Powerbook) Macs either break right away (within the 1 year warrantee),
or don't do so for years and years, and things that do break are
reasonably cheap to replace (primarily HDD's and optical drives).
This is not completely
On Feb 29, 2004, at 5:51 PM, AKR wrote:
With desktops, well, there it's a toss-up. In my experience (non
Powerbook) Macs either break right away (within the 1 year
warrantee), or don't do so for years and years, and things that do
break are reasonably cheap to replace (primarily HDD's and
on 29/02/04 16:53, Mark D. Chapman at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My iBook has a modem but my BW does not. I
thought that I could just check internet sharing
on the iBook and get the BW to connect through
the iBook. However, I can't get it to work. The
BW picks up an IP address but I can't
on 29/02/04 08:29, [EMAIL PROTECTED] at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Not sure what more I can do other than going to the local Apple shop. I
can't recall the last time when my mac unusable like this. I think my
applecare has expired. I'm stuck using a XP box :( If anyone has any
insights/wisdom
At 5:45 PM -0600 2/29/04, john slavin wrote:
I see that OWC is showing a memory module for the top slop in the
512 MB size that they say fits the Wallstreet. I didn't realize
that the Wallstreet would take a 512 and recognize the whole thing.
Is it possible to have a combination of 512 and 256
Hi, Folks!
Please forgive my intrusion into this conversation.
I've been receiving contradictory opinions about whether I can use a matched
pair of low profile OEM 256MB SODIMMs from a Titanium G4 in a Wallstreet
233, and have them recognized and be usable as 512 MB of ram by that
machine. Their
Laurent proclaimed:
Thanks, Gavin! I tried getting to the IP addresses directly, but they must
have done something because they are also blocked.
I'll see if I could use VNC, but I doubt it will work. If you know Fannie
Mae, you understand that they are very sensitive to the outside world and
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