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Three Years of Problems with My iMac G5

I’ve been a fan of Apple’s computers every since I started on them in my design classes back in 1997. Around 2000 I bought my first Mac, a Power Mac G4 with a 17″ Graphite monitor and fell in love. This machine treated me well for about 5 years until I finally gave it away to my younger brother. Through the years I added extra hard drives, increased the memory, swapped in a Superdrive, and updated from OS 9.0 to Tiger with every major OS X update in between.

Sometime around 2004 I decided I needed more horsepower to do some video editing. I couldn’t afford a Power Mac G5 so I focused on the iMac product line. I can remember holding out for months waiting for Apple to update from the lamp-shade form factor to the new slim and white design. And then waiting a few more months until they updated these new iMac’s once again, knowing Apple traditionally has all kinds of hardware issues with a new form factor. I really wanted to make sure I got a computer that would last me as long as the G4 did.

In February of ‘05 I finally decided it was time. Went to the Apple Store at the Walden Galleria Mall and looked around. Back in 2005 Apple wasn’t putting Bluetooth modules in the iMac’s as standard option, so I had to pay extra for that. I really hate having a wireless keyboard and mouse since they eat batteries, but I wanted the option of Bluetooth in case I needed to wireless sync my Palm Treo with it. I also had them double the RAM which was stupid since everyone knows it’s more expensive buying memory from Apple. Oh well.

For the next 6 months my new iMac worked fine. The 4th of July was right around the corner and I was super pumped for a nice long holiday weekend. When I went to use my computer that weekend the screen was blank and it was turned off. Weird. I turned it on and the white pulsating light in the right corner flashed and I heard the startup chime. Then the machine died. Ugh.

Tried the obvious stuff like unplugging everything, resetting the PRAM, and rebooting. Nothing worked. Called Apple Care and they had me open it up and check some LED diagnostic lights to see what was up. Ever try to unscrew and open a computer while on the phone with some dude walking you through it? Yeah it sucked. After trying everything the customer service rep suggested he told me to take it to the Apple Store for a look.

Blah. Had to carry this heavy 20″ iMac through half of the mall to get to the store and have an Apple Genius play with it. He determined it was dead and I had to send it away for repairs. Everything would be covered since it was still under warranty and I had Apple Care. But it would take about a week to repair because of the holiday.

When I got it back everything was fine again. I was worried my hard drive would have been wiped but all my data was in check. Turned out they had to replace the display bezel, power supply, and a bunch of other innards. The parts cost close to what I paid for the computer, so they probably replaced everything to be safe.

Flash-forward two years later to my 28th birthday. Go to use my computer on my day off and guess what? Blank screen and it’s turned off. Great. After some troubleshooting I decide to take it back to the Apple Store to have a Genius look at it. No way I was sitting on hold for 2 hours again with Apple Care Support.

It was the middle of the day so no one was in the store except for a few goons who had problems with their iPods and were trying to scam new ones. The Apple Genius looks at my machine and says it’s the logic board and power supply. “Umm I just had those both replaced.” Well whatever, Apple Care was covering it and they could do the repair in store this time so I wasn’t too annoyed. Came back an hour later with a new logic board, power supply, and something called an ambient light sensor installed in my iMac. I guess when they replaced my logic board the first time it was with another bad one and before a recall on that part. Everything should be fine with it now going forward….yeah right!

Yesterday I woke up for work and went to check my email. Walked into my office and noticed my iMac was pretty loud because the fans were going strong. “Uh oh…that funny pixelated pattern flashing on my screen doesn’t look good.” I didn’t panic yet since I thought maybe it was software related and just needed a fresh restart. Force rebooted my machine and the gray Apple logo came up fine.

Then the funny pixels and static showed up again. Tried to run the diagnostic disc that came with Apple Care to see what was wrong, but that wouldn’t work either. Everything seemed to be functioning fine except for the display. Made an appointment with a Genius later in the day and hoped that I’d be eligible for the iMac G5 Power & Video Repair Extension Program since my Apple Care Warranty ran out in February.

Got to the Apple Store early after carrying my iMac through the Galleria Mall for the 3rd time! The Genius Bar was an absolute mess with all these people waiting to have their precious iPhone’s and iPod’s looked at because they did something stupid and broke them. One Genius in particular seemed extremely knowledgeable. All the other Genius’ were asking him questions and for help, so I was pumped when he was going to look at my broken iMac.

Fired up the iMac and he knew right away what the problem was. “You need a new logic board.” Come on are you kidding me? How many times can this stupid part go bad? The worst part was this would cost me around $700 to repair since my machine wasn’t under warranty. He wasn’t even interested in the fact that they’ve replaced the same part twice before. The machine obviously has some major flaw if the same thing keeps breaking.

I refuse to pay $700 to have something replaced that would probably break again. After thinking it over I decided to buy a new iMac 20″ Intel Core 2 Duo and pray it doesn’t have any issues. As much as I love Apple products they really need to figure out these quality control issues. Everyone I know has had a major hardware issue with their Apple products. I guess the days of getting 5+ years out of a Macintosh are long gone. =(

The only thing I’m worried about now is transferring all my data and applications to the new machine. I’ve been running Time Machine to backup everything so it should be a non-issue. But we’ll see just how painless Apple has made this. Since my old machine still turns on I’m going to try and put it in Fireware target mode and see if I can move everything over first. We’ll see…

Testing out Palm’s Native Facebook Application

Well wasn’t that nice of Palm to release a native Facebook application to make social networking easier on your smartphone (Treo and Centro). I’ve been using the mobile optimized Facebook website for some time, but it has it’s limitations. Sure you can do status updates, see what your friends are up to, respond to messages, post to walls, and upload photos (via emailing them from Versamail to a special address). But the mobile site is pretty bland and all of the photos are really small and hard to see.

To download the application just point your Palm’s web browser (Blazer) to http://mobile.palm.com/facebook. Here you can select your device and carrier from two drop down menus and then download the application. After downloading and installing the application you can login into your account by typing in your email and password.

The application has 5 different areas of interest that you can switch between by tapping their icons or selecting them through the menu.

  • Home – The default tab when you fire up the application. Shows all the updates and stuff you’d traditionally see in your news feed in a desktop browser. Status updates, new friend adds, wall posts, picture uploads, etc. Selecting any of these items takes you to the appropriate content where you can view, read, and comment on them.
  • Photos – Shows all of your Facebook photo galleries. Lets you edit captions, respond to comments, see who is tagged, and flip through photos fairly easily. From this view you can upload photos (using the built-in camera or browsing to your saved photos) and create new galleries. Nice!
  • Status Updates - Shows all of your friends’ status updates. Selecting your name (1st entry) allows you to update your own status. Selecting one of your friend’s statuses allows you visit their profile or send them a message.
  • Friends – Shows all of your friends’ contact information and allows you to dial/text message them. Pretty cool feature if you don’t have their current contact information in your phone’s address book.
  • Inbox/Friend Requests – Shows all of your messages. You can read and compose new messages from this tab. Not sure if the tab has an indicator to let you know if you have a new message or not. I didn’t have any new messages at the time to test this out.

For the most part I think this is a cool application. It does the same stuff the mobile website does but presents things much better, especially the photo galleries. Stuff you can’t do is add Facebook applications, see application data on your profile or friend’s profile, and a few other things you only get by browsing with a desktop computer. But if you want to do the basic stuff from your smartphone and don’t want to use Blazer this is a decent alternative.

About Time. Finally Got A Tattoo

Ink heart tattoo idea

It’s been a few years in the making, but I finally decided on some ink and committed to it. For the longest time I’ve flip flopped between designs of leaves, trees, branches, doodles, words, sketches, etc. I knew I wanted something done in only black and for it to look like something I’d drawn in ink…

After a few sketches in my journal I eventually came up with a black heart made up of ink blotches and the words “l’amour fou” (Fr. for mad love or crazy love depending on your interpretation). It fits nicely in the theme of tattoos I plan on getting later, and can hopefully start to make my skin look like pages from my art journal with automatic writing, blind contour drawings, and unfinished sketches littered about. At least that’s the idea for now…

With a finished sketch in hand Wendy and myself went to Rise Above Tattoo on Delaware Avenue a few weeks ago to setup an appointment. Wendy was able to get a tattoo that day while I had to come back the following week. Probably a good idea because it gave me more time to think things over.

When my time came I wasn’t nervous at all. My anxiety had always been with setting up the appointment and walking into the shop. Since that nonsense was done the week before, I was all set to go. Took a few minutes for the artist to setup and off we went.

The entire process took about 45 minutes and wasn’t that bad. Sure it hurt, but the pain went away the second he’d stopped tattooing me (which was every few seconds). The sensation felt like a bug was biting or stinging me constantly and I couldn’t squash him.

Aftercare isn’t too bad. Compared to some of the piercings I’ve gotten over the years, caring for a tattoo is nothing. Wash it twice a day with antibacterial soap and then apply some cocoa butter lotion to it. Done!

Almost a week later and I’m already planning my next one. Like piercings, records, and tech goodies before it…I pretty much knew this would become my newest addiction. =P

Using The Rasterbator

A few weekends ago I decided to cover one of the walls in the office with a large poster. I’ve toyed around with black and white rasterbated images before, but I really wanted to see how well a full color one would look. My office walls are a lime green color and I figured something with dark greens would contrast nicely. Choosing a forest scene with a huge owl in a tree seemed right up my alley and so I was happy about that.

Took some quick measurements of the wall’s dimensions and uploaded the image to the Rasterbator. Got things cropped how I liked and outputted the 120 page PDF file. The next 3 hours I spent trimming the white borders off of each page since my printer doesn’t output full bleeds. I think next time I do one of these I’m going to leave the borders…cutting these pages consistently was pretty hard. I tried using a trimmer with a rotary blade but the pages slide some regardless of the clamp thing. Oh well.

Anyways. After cutting out all the pages I setup my JVC mini-DV camcorder and recorded myself sticking up each page. Figured this would be a fun excuse to use the camcorder since I rarely break the thing out after buying it 4 years ago. Took the 2 hours of footage and imported it into iMovie and made a quick time lapse video by speeding it up. I think it came out good and laugh every time I see my stupid cats walking around watching me in confusion. Check out my video on Vimeo.

Owl print outs a plentyLining things upThat\'s a lot trimmingsFirst rowFirst row in contextAlittle over half...The owl is almost completeOwl closeupAnother view of the owl

Success! My Site Is Now Powered By WP2.5

Migrated the site over to Wordpress 2.5 without any hiccups this morning. Everything looks good and works as expected so I’m happy about that. I have a few things to cleanup (like my tags and image.php template), but for the most part I’m ready to roll. Looks like the fixed the gallery feature too because I was having some problems with that in RC1 and RC2. Yes!