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Lappys died.....The darkside beckons which Mac
cmdrfire:
--- Quote from: mclovin on May 03, 2010, 02:09:18 pm ---Those early Intel iMacs have a pretty much identical layout to the G5 units, so that guide should work just fine for your Mum's iMac.
I have no idea why you are having problems with iTunes and Flash, what OS is it running? Snow Leopard only costs £25, so definitely worth upgrading if you haven't already as that should fix any issues like this. My Mac Mini is of a similar vintage and I have not had any of the problems you describe. As for communicating with the network in your house I fail to see why this is an issue, I can access my NAS from my Mac via SMB just as easily as I can via Windows or Linux??
A "normal" machine would not necessarily have drives formatted as NTFS, they might be FAT, or they might be EXT2 or EXT3 depending on the operating system (Windows or Linux). The only reason you need a bit of software for your PC to read the drive is because Windows does not ship with the ability to read multiple drive formats, only NTFS and FAT. So, you would have to do the same thing even if it was a standard Dell PC running Linux - In other words, this is not a Mac specific issue.
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Cheers for the guide. Doesn't stop it from being a nuisance. But a "normal" machine would be formatted as NTFS primarily because I would've built it and installed the OS myself :P
Think I will upgrade the RAM while I'm in there.
mclovin:
Definitely install Snow Leopard on the new drive when you install it as well, it will probably sort out some of the niggles you mentioned earlier.
For the record, I'm no Mac evangelist, in fact I can't stand Mac evangelists and I have more PCs than Macs at home. However, I don't think changing a drive on an iMac is really that much of a big deal, personally I quite enjoyed the challenge of upgrading my Mac Mini!
cmdrfire:
--- Quote from: mclovin on May 03, 2010, 03:29:26 pm ---Definitely install Snow Leopard on the new drive when you install it as well, it will probably sort out some of the niggles you mentioned earlier.
For the record, I'm no Mac evangelist, in fact I can't stand Mac evangelists and I have more PCs than Macs at home. However, I don't think changing a drive on an iMac is really that much of a big deal, personally I quite enjoyed the challenge of upgrading my Mac Mini!
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Sssh, I need something to argue with Robin about don't I?!
mclovin:
Good point, well made.
:happy2:
RedRobin:
--- Quote from: cmdrfire on May 03, 2010, 04:15:54 pm ---
Sssh, I need something to argue with Robin about don't I?!
--- End quote ---
....Stop being such a drama queen! :evilgrin: :grin:
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