Aw, Meara - that sucks.
Meanwhile, I hooked the vcr up to the cable box and then to the tv (well, to the switcher) and it works!
The only eccentric thing is that I have to have the vcr on to watch the digital cable.
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Aw, Meara - that sucks.
Meanwhile, I hooked the vcr up to the cable box and then to the tv (well, to the switcher) and it works!
The only eccentric thing is that I have to have the vcr on to watch the digital cable.
I fail to see how "damage" to the ethernet port that leaves the thing functional can cause my computer to essentially be a BRICK.
I bet one of their techs spilled a diet Coke into it.
Anyway, the logic of their repair pricing mystifies me.
Yes, although I'd assign it to something higher, like R: or S:, instead of G:
I changed the H: to K: and then activated the drive, and no difference. It won't give it a letter.
The guy I'm borrowing it from is looking for the CD that came with it to see if it has a special driver for Win2K or something, although Windows Update is telling me I have the latest one.
So I came home today to find a package containing the replacement battery for my potentially explosive powerbook battery (which was, in fact, a replacement battery itself for the original potential fire hazard powerbook battery). I was excited for all of 12 seconds until I noticed that the new new battery is damaged.
It seems bad batteries come in threes.
Is it any easier to replace the hard drive of a new MacBook than, say, a G3 iBook? For the iBook it was a PITA, but I thought I head that it'd be much easier for the MacBook.
eta: I suppose I should learn to google before asking: [link]
First on AI: Owners of Apple Computer's new MacBook consumer notebooks will find that upgrading or replacing the computer's hard disk is as simple as adding more memory.
Yay!
I don't suppose anyone wants to buy my Apple Cube and LCD monitor?
There's an Apple store that takes trade-ins - think I'll trade the Cube and monitor for a new MacBook or MacBook Pro, unless someone here wants them.
If you don't tell Andi I asked, how much?
:)
I'm selling:
Cube:
I'm willing to sell for less than what this stuff would go for on eBay, because I'm sure I'd get less than eBay $ on a trade-in.
So, maybe $130 for the monitor, $220 for the cube, plus shipping.
tommy- If Daniel isn't interested, I may be, as my home computer has completely shit the bed.
That would be cool! Let me know if you have any questions - it really is a nice computer system - it was just too expensive and not expandable enough in its day. But now you can upgrade the CPU to 1.7 Ghz G4 dual-processors: [link]