Many thanks Peter. 



I never do any repairs on my own, the nearest one to me is Next Byte on Stiling 
Highway. Was thinking of taking it to the Perth Apple store, but dont think 
they do repairs there... 



Worse comes to the worst, ill just have to replace ol' trusty. 



Regards 

Lynn 




----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Peter Hinchliffe" <hinch...@multiline.com.au> 
To: "WAMUG Mailing List" <wamug@wamug.org.au> 
Sent: Monday, 31 January, 2011 8:56:18 AM GMT +08:00 Beijing / Chongqing / Hong 
Kong / Urumqi 
Subject: Re: macbook late 2007 problem 




On 31/01/2011, at 7:33 AM, lynn...@westnet.com.au wrote: 





hi 


Before I take ol' trusty - laptop that is - to the cleaners and before getting 
a new one - just wanting people's input/suggestions. 


Ol' trusty has had a hard drive replacement just before the original warranty 
expired, mid 2008. 


Before Saturday, ol' trusty has been making the weird sounds again, the ones 
like ol' trusty is about to die on me. 
Then on Saturday, ol' trusty died. When i tried booting her up again, she did 
not give me any chime sound, but she did give me a folder icon with a question 
mark in it. I tried booting her up a few times. A few times, she did ask me to 
select the hard drive to boot up from. I selected the only hard drive she has 
and then she freezes on me (blank light blue-grey screen). 


If i take her into the cleaners, would they be able to get stuff off her? I do 
have my backup, but its a couple of weeks old and I dont have my emails on 
there. 


Would a replacement hard drive do or do i have to replace an all new trusty? 


Ol' trusty's specs: 
Bought her mid to late 2007 - July/August if memory serves me correct 
13" white macbook 
80GB hard drive 
just updated OS 10.5.x a couple weeks ago 


Please ask if you need more information about ol' trusty. 


Many thanks and regards 
Lynn 



The folder with question mark fundamentally means that the computer cannot find 
a startup disk. It doesn't necessarily mean that the hard drive is completely 
dead (just extremely ill!). Try booting from the System Startup disk that came 
with your computer (You do have one, don't you?!)) and running Disk Utility 
from it. If it shows that the hard drive is available then you still have 
hope. Do not attempt to repair the drive without professional help if you're 
not sure of what you are doing. 


Certainly, a replacement drive is a viable option, and of course much cheaper 
than a new computer. It's also easy to do (at least it's not an iBook!). You 
must at all costs attempt to back up the data on the drive if at all possible 
before attempting any sort of repair. 





Peter Hinchliffe        Apwin Computer Services 
FileMaker Pro Solutions Developer 
Perth, Western Australia 
Phone (618) 9332 6482    Mob 0403 046 948 
-------------------------------------------------------------------- 
Mac because I prefer it -- Windows because I have to. 




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