iMac question. I have one of the old-style all-in-one-pastel-package types (this is how hi-tech I am, despite working in QA - I don't know what kind of iMac I have) and the disc drive is acting wacky. At first, it didn't seem to be working at all. I made the mistake of pushing the disc all the way in and it was stuck - I even got it in so that it could be played, but it wouldn't eject. I managed to get it out by manipulating a blank disc until part of the one that was in came partly out. Now it's making the proper noises I would expect when I try to put a disc in, but it's not grabbing it to pull it in. Does this mean the disc drive is frelled, or is there something I can try (aside from rebooting, shutting it down, etc. which I've tried) before I assume to worst.
William ,'Conversations with Dead People'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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I'm lusting after a flat-screen monitor, but I'm wondering if my Matrox Graphics Millennium G200 AGP video card can handle it. Are flat-screens fussy about what systems they work with?
Not really. The G200 should have enough vram (8 mb) for a normal sized monitor. We swapped out many crts with flat screens at work. What size are you thinking of?
Now it's making the proper noises I would expect when I try to put a disc in, but it's not grabbing it to pull it in.
Does the CD drive ave a pinhole? Perhaps pushing a straightened paper clip into the pinhole will move the mechanism into full receive position.
I'm lusting after a flat-screen monitor, but I'm wondering if my Matrox Graphics Millennium G200 AGP video card can handle it. Are flat-screens fussy about what systems they work with?
Worse Case: [link]
You might even find one less expensive with a bit of looking.
My caffeine hasn't taken effect yet. I was thinking, "What would be the 'worse case' - one that has bits of broken glass embedded in it?"
basically, I'm trying to avoid setting up the desktop. I was hoping that I could just connect the laptop to it in some way and transfer the files, like using the desktop like a giant external drive.
Sorry, there's not any way to do it without doing something with the desktop. If the files were already in a shared directory, then you might be able to get away with just plugging the desktop sans monitor, keyboard and mouse into a router and getting the files off the share.
If the files were already in a shared directory, then you might be able to get away with just plugging the desktop sans monitor, keyboard and mouse into a router and getting the files off the share.
Except when you turn the computer on without a keyboard attached, it usually halts during post to tell you that there's no keyboard attached. And you can't press the any key if there's no keyboard.
A blast from the past: [link]
Sears Video Arcade Cartridge System. (Re-branded Atari) From the Sears Christmas Wishbook 1979....
We had one of these. I remember epic, three-hour long games of Space Invaders....
Oh, and Night Driver! Indisputably the coolest computer game evah!
Atari 400: [link] With the awesome membrane keyboard.
We had one of these Sensor Electronic Word Games: [link]
eta:
Merlin: [link]
Electronic Touchdown! [link]
Ew. Membrane keyboard. Those things got really gross over time.
I have an ATARI 400 right here. Okay, it's a pen and pencil holder now, but the keyboard is clean.