Yes, it's the battery on the motherboard.
Here is a pdf from Apple on how to replace it: [link]
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Good lord...this computer has already had its graphics card and logic board replaced this year. At this point Apple should just give me a whole new machine.
How old is it?
Just over a year old.
We have Applecare, but getting it to an Apple store is a huge PITA.
And the PDF that Tom linked to above has a warning that improper installation may "cause an explosion." So I'm thinking I may just live with it until something else goes wrong.
No, really, it's just a $5 watch battery. As long as you can tell the "+" from the "-" you should be fine.
Just over a year old.
If I had a computer that had the logic board, graphics card, and battery (which was probably replaced along with the new logic board) all fail within a year, I'd be looking mighty suspiciously at the power supply.
eta: The batteries that failed on my Macs took a couple of years or more to fail.
So, the other day, I was on a random website when I just closed my laptop. when I opened it the next day, the screen was all wierd and pixilated. I restarted, it seemed fine. I ran a virus check with Symantec, and it found an "unknown detection [device]" (can't remember if it was device or software), but it didn't flag it as dangerous. "detection" strikes me a spyware, but Symantec let it go. Should I be worried?
Is Laura in this thread? She and her colleagues might get a kick out of this: [link]
Thank you, Tom. I feel much better about my issues now. I'll save that for the next time my people think they suck.
Okay, you know the bit where I can torrent something, throw it at iSquint, add it to iTunes, and then watch it through Apple TV?
FUCKING GREAT.