Mac Geek Gab Podcast
MGG 213: When Hardware Acts Bad But Isn’t… Is it?
August 4th, 2009 at 10:14 PM - Podcasts by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
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This week a series of seemingly unrelated questions came in all with issues related to bad hardware... or at least seems so on the surface before your two favorite Mac Geeks dissect them and help get to the answer! Then John and Dave have some follow-ups from recent shows discussing screen sharing and DVD ripping. All this and more in episode 213! Subscribe today for free!
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Show Notes and Items Mentioned:
Note: Shownotes are complete!
Stuff mentioned:
- Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS)
- Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP)
- Dave's Interview on Fox Business (be patient waiting for it to download and seek right to Dave's segment)
- SILK – Super Wideband Audio Codec
- John's First Mac Roundtable Episode
- Peripheral Vision (last release)
- FireWire (IEEE1394) bus interface pinout
- Resolve startup issues and perform disk maintenance with Disk Utility and fsck
- Startup Manager: How to select a startup volume
- Macintosh Family: Batteries and Part Numbers, Part 2
- Macintosh Family: Batteries and Part Numbers
- Apple Contact Info (ask for Customer Relations for tough issues)
- Screenjelly
- twitpic
- twitvid
- 360 Video
- iShowU HD & HD Pro
- Drive-In
- Mac OS X: Do not remove or modify SyncServices folder
- Fairmount
- Ripit
- BusyCal
- Tuning Adapter for TiVo HD DVRs (via Cablevision/Optimum)
- Cisco STA1520 Tuning Adapter (pdf)
- Switched Digital Video
- You're downloading today's show from CacheFly's network- BackBeat Media Podcast Network
- MacGeekGab AAC Enhanced Feed - Thanks to of iPhone Alley.
Email .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) (even an audio comment, if you please!), post in the comments below, Skype your message to “macgeekgab”, or call and leave a voice-mail at 206-666-GEEK!
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This podcast is recorded on an iMac (Core 2 Duo Mid 2007) using Audio Hijack Pro and routing courtesy of WireTap Anywhere. As for equipment, John is using a Heil PR-40 microphone going through a Behringer Eurorack UB1222FX-PRO mixer, monitored with Etymotic ER-6i Isolator earphones, then straight in to his Mac. On Dave’s end, a Heil PR-40 microphone is also used, and the whole show is mixed “live” through a Mackie Onyx 1220 FireWire-enabled mixer before being pumped back into the Mac (via FireWire, of course), and is monitored with Westone ES2 custom-fit earphones. When PilotPete is in the house, he’s usually talking through a Heil PR-30. Each microphone is run through a channel on a Behringer Autocom Pro-XL MDX1600 compressor, a touch of reverb is added with an ART FX-1 processor, and the whole thing is then compressed in software on the Mac. The show is recorded to AIFF, and then converted and uploaded with an Automator script. Michael Johnston from iPhone Alley then goes through and enhances the show to provide you with the AAC version. You can hear more details of the setup and how it’s mixed on Episode #32.
Theme Music: “The Answer”, written by Jeff Steblea and Brian Ayles, as performed by Go Figure. “Made On A Mac” bumper by Mark Fleser
6 Observer Comments
Thanks to the Audio Engine guys for sponsoring this show. We were having an audio problem at our church that was not easily fixed, or was it. We purchased an aw1 system and presto magico it’s fixed.
Thanks again to Audio Engine for sponsoring this show, I would have never found this product if I wasn’t listening to this great show
Hi Guys,
Your kudos to BusyCal concerning its handling of recurring To Dos was a bit over the top, IMHO. I installed BusyCal and have since uninstalled it because I was very disappointed in the way it handles To Dos.
With respect to To Dos, It really doesn’t do anything you can’t do with iCal. For instance, I have a calendar named To Dos, in which I can create recurring To Dos. If I wish to have my To Dos listed in the To Dos Item list, I can just drag them into that area. So…BusyCal handles To Dos pretty much the same as iCal.
Two things I’d like to see:
—Recurring To Dos that list the To Do just once that regenerate to the next date when completed…as in Entourage.
—I’d like to see a separate To Do listing carried over to the iPhone. Neither iCal nor BusyCal does this.
Lew
Wait, what? You create recurring To Dos in iCal? Based on the years of hell I’ve been through…
In BusyCal you can create repeating To Dos that immediately appear in the To Do Items list at the right side of the window. In iCal you need to create repeating events in a calendar and then drag those events to the To Do Items list.
Are you saying that BusyCal will autoforward To Dos? If so, I missed that completely. Perhaps I should reinstall and check that out. For me it just created multiple instances of the same To Do with different due dates.
This is for the emailer Scott’s problem at 38:12 with his first gen macbook pro that shuts down randomly when it’s starting up. Mostly on battery power, but once while plugged in. This exact problem started happening to my first generation 17” macbook pro. I tried all sorts of troubleshooting and was just about to the point of just reinstalling the whole OS in hopes of solving the problem.
The Friday before I was planning on the reinstall that weekend, I noticed the macbook was not sitting flush to the desk anymore. It turned out that the battery was starting to bulge and visibly come out of the case. I called apple and they told me to just bring it in to the genius bar and they will replace it. The symptoms Scott is describing (along with touchpad flakiness when the battery begins to bulge) is exactly what was happening when my battery shorted out. It was replaced at no cost even out of warranty due to it being a known issue with some first gen macbook pro batteries.
I’m not sure what Scott can do if the battery is not showing symptoms of bulging, but I suspect he might be in the early stages of the same problem I experienced.
Hope this helps,
Ken Fair
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