Mac Pro with a broken mic input?
I’ve just confirmed that my Mac Pro has had a broken microphone input since I purchased it over a year and a half ago. Lame! Am I the only one with this problem?
I’ve just confirmed that my Mac Pro has had a broken microphone input since I purchased it over a year and a half ago. Lame! Am I the only one with this problem?
There are issues with the Mac monitor and iSight when running XP.
The monitor sometimes remains on (in a dark glowing mode…?) when you shut the computer down. The switches/buttons on the side were unresponsive. I had to boot back into Tiger to fix the issue.
iSight has terrible lighting. The image quality sucks. I was using Yahoo! Messenger’s video chat feature. (!) 4/10/07 – With some adjustments in the preferences I was able obtain a decent picture. Possible fix occurred when I reloaded XP and Drivers with iSight connected. Initially, I may have installed the drivers without the camera plugged in…?
When I switch from XP to OS 10.4.8 the time clock on Mac it wrong. It is easily fixed by going to the preferences window…
4/9/07
This is still an issue. However, it appears to be intermittent which is an improvement…
4/10/07 – This definitely appears to be an issue with peripherals and or applications. When everything is unplugged (for example, my iPod) sleep mode works just fine.
Reinstall didn’t fix the issue. Word for the older version Office X works just fine. I will just use this for the time being.
I’ve successfully loaded Windows XP with Boot Camp (Beta). It appears to be working like a charm (very fast, very snappy). I haven’t used any memory intensive programs on the Windows side yet but I’ve read that it’s performance is outstanding. Initially, I was going to install parallels but decided to return the software because it doesn’t support DirectX. I have no need for DirectX but I’m not convinced that Parallels VM will produce an exact replica of the Windows XP environment.
Jack (our resident Mac tech at work) tells me that VMWare will be all rage in the next year or so. It enables a computer to run multiple operating systems (and or servers) simultaneously and yet they remain completely independent of one another. There are many advantages to this. For example, if one of several systems crashes – the stability of the others is completely unaffected. It’s so simple – almost stupid it hasn’t been done before.
And now for the real reason I started this category, to document the differences (issues) between the older (G4, G5) Macs and the new Intel Macs.