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aaphid
October 17th, 2009, 08:13 PM
I've just loaded Snow Leopard onto a newly formatted drive and then installed Boot Camp.

Whenever I hold Alt at startup and then select Windows the computer seems to freeze for about a minute and then starts loading windows. While it is frozen I can't move the mouse cursor and nothing seems to be happening.

Is it normal for it to take so long?

Here's what it looks like...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2WuSJIrKmU

aaphid
October 24th, 2009, 11:52 PM
Any ideas?

djackmac
October 25th, 2009, 12:51 AM
I've seen it with machines that have bad RAM, HDs, optical drives, and bad logic boards. Its really hard to put a finger on. If it only happens when booting to the windows partition I wouldn't worry too much about it. You can always put in your original disk 1 installer and power on holding the D key to run Apple hardware test.

aaphid
October 30th, 2009, 08:40 PM
Thanks djackmac

I tried running the Apple Hardware Test and it says everything is A OK.

Satcomer
October 31st, 2009, 03:20 AM
Well then try to use System Preferences->Startup Disk and see if the windows partition shows up. If It does just select that. Then when in Windows and want to go back to OS X (if you installed the Boot Camp drivers into Windows) just go to Control Panel and the Boot Camp drivers should have installed a Control panel called Startup Disk (in Windows 7 it is in the BootCamp Control Panel).

After selecting the Startup disk, just restart and it boot to that selection you made. Clever isn't it?

aaphid
November 1st, 2009, 05:07 AM
Thanks Satcomer but I think I'm narrowing this down now.

I took the Mini to an Applestore Genius Bar and when we started it up there it was fast and started loading Windows in 7 seconds as against 40 seconds before. Bring it home and it's taking 40 seconds again.

The only difference that I can see is that at the shop the Airport bar on the lower part of the screen doesn't show up. And on the demonstrations that I have seen and the YouTube videos I have seen this is not there either.

So I suppose the question now is:-

Why is the Airport network bar coming up at home and not elsewhere and how do I stop it?

cassianorabelo
November 6th, 2009, 04:49 PM
Hello aaphid. I saw that you posted your problem in a few other boards. I'm facing the same issue with both my MBP. Did you find a solution to your problem?
Thank you.

aaphid
November 6th, 2009, 06:23 PM
Hi cassianorabelo. No answers yet but I'm still trying.....

DeltaMac
November 6th, 2009, 10:32 PM
What do you mean by "Airport network bar"?
Do you mean the wireless network icon in the Windows Task bar?jj

Please describe what that looks like, and when you see it -
Do you see it when you hold Alt at boot, and it's on your Boot drive select screen? - and is one of the icons that shows up? Does it look like a world globe?

aaphid
November 6th, 2009, 11:41 PM
What do you mean by "Airport network bar"?


Good question. I don't know what else to call it but if there is an official name for it I would like to know.

Basically if you hold down the option key at startup the Mac will take you to a screen where you are presented with a row of icons for the different drives and bootcamp partition that you can boot from. This is the screen I'm referring to. Underneath this row of icons is a bar and to the left of the bar is the airport/wifi icon. There is a dropdown menu that appears when you click on this bar. So that's it. It appears before you actually start loading any OS stuff. You can see it on the video.

When I take the Mac away from home, like the local Apple Genius Bar, I don't have this bar appear. Bring it home and it's there again.

djackmac
November 7th, 2009, 10:04 AM
Just because it wasn't connected to your wireless network when you were at the Apple store has nothing to do with it. But if you want to test the theory and not take my word for it you can click on the airport status icon on the toolbar and select "turn airport off" then restart to see if it makes a difference, which I doubt it will because this is happening in EFI. Just to make sure its not a problem with your Windows partition you can put in your installer DVD to boot through using boot picker and see if it does the same thing booting to an installer DVD.

DeltaMac
November 9th, 2009, 07:26 AM
Maybe a simple PRAM reset will help this.

When you click on that dropdown, so you see other wireless networks, besides your own?
Does the boot happen faster, or is there any change, if you choose your wireless network at that time? Seems like that would be too early in the boot process to make a difference, but it might be interesting to try it...