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#1
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| You know one of those bad energy days when everything goes horribly wrong... when you hit your head or toes getting out of the bed, burn yourself with the coffee, break your car and miss the bus and have your computer fail, and when you get back home your Mac fails too...? Those days. When you should clearly switch off all electronic equipment and go fishing or do something as non-computer related as possible. What's the worst computer karma day(s) or weeks you've had so far? I think I'm having one of the worst weeks ever now. Last Sunday, I installed 10.4.10 on top of 10.4.10, hoping it would resolve a number of underlying issues (before being able to clean the data from the hard drive to an external hard drive, and then do an erase and install). After the install was nearly ready, it asked for a reboot... and it's not been working since. It could not boot, and I could not install even 10.5 on it. Fair enough, I found it has a piece of RAM gone suddenly bad, but it's stuck in it (blame the ones who repaired it..) and can't be solved without force (I don't really fancy breaking the logic board of it). So that's out of the usable ones now. Can't get that piece of RAM out, can't boot it, doesn't have a system as erasing went fine but 10.5 fails to collaborate in installation. All that gone bad after that 10.4.10 update. Okay, fast forward to Saturday. I was then using my dad's Mac mini, not the newest and not the fastest, but it was my dad's and I bought it one day for him so he could get to the internet and skype for me for cheaper than calling. Now that he's dead, it's one of the Macs that actually has some more sentimental value to it, so I don't mind using it, and hey, it was working. My dad didn't do all the incremental updates for it, so it had 10.4.2, and as it was working fine, why bother... except two softwares that I needed to use now would require a newer version of OS X and Java so after doing all the precautions of quitting all unnecessary apps and fixing permissions, I installed the 10.4.11 combo update on it. It installed fine, and asked to reboot after it as usual, only that after the reboot it was black, loud, did something for a few minutes, rebooted, was loud... after a number of restart attempts and resets (pmu) there is not a sign of life left - no startup chime, no sound from the thing when switching it on, no lights in front. So after this 10.4.11 update.. I'm without a working Mac ![]() After this I'm afraid to even touch the work Dell. But there is nothing else I can use home now... (and at least if something goes horribly wrong with it, I can always ask the IT people from work to fix it. So I don't have to deal with the worst service provider of the planet for it). And not on the best mood... In the fairness, after repairing a not so small number of Macs, and doing installs and updates on hundreds of them, I've seen very few instances where the update goes this horribly bad. And they've all been on not my own ones (excluding 10.2 update install on 10.1.5.. no Finder) so not that much of personal attachment to it. And never before have I seen two consecutive updates I've done anywhere gone this wrong... ---- edit: after no signs of life after PMUs, it should have been either a fried MLB or adapter. I tried with a housemate's Mac mini adapter downstairs, and it got the chime. And then with his adapter upstairs on my location and it got the chime again. And then with my adapter again, and it got the chime again. This does not make any sense.. PMU reset was properly done, I had retried with the adapter last night, I had tried with different power outlets too. I don't get it... using it with his adapter nevertheless got it to boot up again, and it works again with mine. One less thing to worry. Pheoow.
__________________ MacBook Pro + Mac mini | Newton 2000 | @Work : Dell D620 & 2x20" + a lot of Macs | Workstation, VC & Fusion Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do. ~ Samuel Clemens | Rants | Photos Last edited by Giaguara; March 2nd, 2008 at 06:14 AM. |
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#2
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| Reading your post ![]()
__________________ Intel Mac Mini 1.83 1GB 10.5.4 PowerMac G4 833Hz 768MB 10.3.9 Education is when you read the fine print - experience is what you get when you don't. Pete Seeger |
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#3
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| As everybody.... I once in my life regretted not to have a discipline doing my back-ups !
__________________ My current machine is an iMac Core 2 Duo 2.16 GHz 24" with MacOS X 10.5.1. My Apples are here. My oldest Apple was born in 1977. Surf my .mac web site. GS/P/>SS d-(++) s+: a+ C+(C) U* P L+ E--- W++ N- o+ K? w O-- M++ V PS+ PE+ Y- PGP t+ 5 X+ R tv-- b+++ DI++ D+ G e+++ h---- r+++ y? Time is not changing, I'm just traveling through time. |
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#4
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| Same here. Those backups before TimeMachine. MacBook (white). I installed a harddrive, put all my files on it and worked off it for a couple of weeks without backing up. Suddenly the drive went dead. I've got 7 years of E-Mail correspondence, minus two months. I somehow was proud of having that archive. Now I'm thinking: It's not complete. Should I get rid of it and live on gmail.com starting now? Well: I'm currently backed up and have three Macs. I sure hope they won't die _all_ on me in the same timeframe. (I actually hope none dies, of course.)
__________________ MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 Hackintosh Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 iPhone 2G 16 GB (v2), AppleTV 1G 40 GB (v2) Mac user since 1987, Apple Product Professional 2007, 2008. |
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#5
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| Well... I guess should add mr Giaguara's one day with a 17" PowerBook in this bad karma day. He was chatting with me, and spilled a 14 oz mug of green tea on it, all over the keyboard. Piffff.... what everyone else that I know would have done would have been a huge panic or a heartattack etc after unplugging the power cord. Well - unplug the power cord, take it apart, dry it... two hours later online, on that same PowerBook. I'm still blown away. (Having no sugar in the tea helped for sure). I guess the tea/coffee/wine/anything liquid on a laptop isn't something that anyone wants to experience on theirs... |
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#6
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| As an IT virgin in 1998, I write a 3,000 thousand word thesis on a PC and failed to back it up. The rest is history ....
__________________ Intel Mac Mini 1.83 1GB 10.5.4 PowerMac G4 833Hz 768MB 10.3.9 Education is when you read the fine print - experience is what you get when you don't. Pete Seeger |
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#7
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| Giaguara did you ever fix any of these problems?
__________________ PowerMac G5 Dual 1.8(Rev A.), , 7 Gig RAM, Pioneer DVR-110, ATI X800XT, OS X 10.4.11 & 10.5.3, 23'' HD LCD Mac Book Pro Core 2 Duo 2.16Mhz, SuperDrive, ATI X1600, 2GB RAM, OS X 10.5.3 Tibook 400Mhz, DVD drive, 1024 RAM, ATI Rage, OS X 10.4.7 1TB Time Capsule 5g iPod 30Gig White |
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#8
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| Those on mine? Yea... different power supply resurrected the Mac mini. And the MacBook... need to still get a new RAM for it. I've seen all sorts of interesting things on other people's Macs, from RAM gone "missing" to something having dropped to PowerBook keyboard (physically breaking several keys while happened), all sorts of parts fixed wrong (no sound when the sound cables are forgotten under the logic board, gee why..) or iPods gone thru the washing machine - I just prefer when those things don't happen on my own Macs ![]() |
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| Tags |
| bad energy, karma, mac accidents |
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