Mac Problems

It's no secret that when I got my Powerbook there were a lot of people telling me it would break. Well it did. And now it's fixed. In about five minutes, most of which involved me not being aware that it was broken.

For a few minutes there my old LappyG4 was refusing to boot, giving me the message that I needed to reboot or power off (in several languages). So I did. And it continued to refuse to boot. A short Web search later I discovered that that particular message is associated with a kernel panic, which you would be right to assume is not a good thing for a kernel to do.

This is the bit of the story which, if I was using Windows or Linux, would take up a good chunk of the rest of the page to tell. The bit where I describe how I fixed it. As it happens, it's quite easy to describe. I held the shift key down for a moment during the boot process. This sent OSX into safe mode, wherein it automatically ran a disk repair utility. Then I rebooted.

From kernel panic to perfect working order in a single keystroke. That's why they cost a little more than a Dell.

Comments:
Wed, 26th Oct 2005 (11:59)

My Dell's never had a Kernal panic. That may be down to sheer dumb luck, and obviusly other things have broken, but it seems worth noting.

I'd still rather have the powerbook…

Wed, 26th Oct 2005 (12:08)

Liar. I've seen your Dell bluescreening.

by Rory
Wed, 26th Oct 2005 (14:04)

I didn't think windows had a kernel. Just a lump of bad code lodged in the OS…

Fixing a kernal panic in linux is just as easy, simple reboot and select the old kernel that was there before your associates re-compiled it and fucked it up.

Thu, 27th Oct 2005 (15:07)

I didnt know that pop-corn had enough emotional awareness to suffer from acute anxiety attacks but I guess we learn something new every day.

by Ronan Lowe
Thu, 27th Oct 2005 (15:33)

Shamelessly stolen from a comment on Jamie's haiku post:

Chaos reigns within.

Reflect, repent, and reboot.

Order shall return.

by Rory
Fri, 28th Oct 2005 (07:00)

07:56am …. too early for Haiku. On the subject of windows versus MacOS - does anyone have a contact who works directly for microsoft? I'm currently handling their security access but I'm a contractor so I dont get the benefit of the cheap software purchases. In the interest of going "legit" I need to get XP Pro, any ideas?

by Ronan Lowe

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This piece was posted on Tue, 25th Oct 2005 at 14:00.

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