Low End Mac Reader Specials
Memory To Go Special: MacPro 8 Core 8GB kit $232 / 4GB kit $116 / 2GB kit $72. New Macbook 2GB DDR3-$65. HARD DRIVES available -- Free shipping / LIfetime warranty.
Download Typestyler, still the Ultimate Styling Tool for Internet, Print and Video Graphics. Works great in Classic with a Native OS X Version on the way. Free Tryout: www.typestyler.com
LA Computer Company: Specials on AppleCare, iMac's, Apple Batteries and Apple A/C Adapters. Also Great prices on Used Apple Computers. Call 1-800-941-7654 Click Here.
Mac users can finally play Party Poker for Mac. Not only that, they can also learn how to play PokerStars for Mac.
Laptop Hardware Provided by TechRestore - Overnight Mac & iPod Repairs.
Compare products like desktop computers, laptops, and LCD TVs side by side! All the information and reviews to make the best purchasing decision for a new cell phone GPS products or MP3 players. The Ciao network makes searching products easy for you.
Miscellaneous Ramblings
Miscellaneous Ramblings Mailbag
What Is a 'Reconditioned' Laptop?, Finding Tiger for an iBook, Pismo Burning Through CPUs, and More
Charles Moore - 2008.02.18 - Tip Jar
- What Does Apple Do When It 'Reconditions' a Laptop?
- Where Can I Find Tiger for My iBook?
- Pismo Processors Burning Out
- Political Discussion on Low End Mac
- Regarding Politics on Low End Mac
What Does Apple Do When It 'Reconditions' a Laptop?
From James:
Hello,
Has LEM ever featured an article on what, exactly, goes on when Apple "reconditions" a laptop?
I ask this because I'm wondering if LCD replacement is done automatically as part of the "reconditioning" process.
Much to my embarrassment, I recently misread an email I received concerning a "reconditioned" laptop. In my usual crushing stupidity, I mistook "reconditioned" as "refurbished." And I'm afraid I've always been of the understanding that "refurbishment" for consumer electronics is little more than the unit in question receiving a shpritzing with Formula 409.
(Well, not quite that minimal, but nothing all that extensive either.)
Any roads, I would appreciate any light you and the LEM staff could shed on this mysterious (to me) process.
Best,
James
Hi James,
Not to my knowledge, but I don't have encyclopedic recall of the LEM archives.
There is no rigid universal definition of what "refurbished" or "reconditioned" means, and it would vary widely anyway in individual instances depending on the condition of the machine when it entered the process.
However, LCD replacement would not be done unless there was an obvious defect.
For example, this PowerBook G4 I'm typing on was an Apple Certified Refurbished unit and showed no detectable evidence of ever having been used at all. I expect that everything from machines returned with defects, to open box demos and perhaps even some unused remaindered older models enter the Apple Refurbished channel.
Apple Certified Refurbished Products are pre-owned Apple products that undergo Apple's stringent refurbishment process prior to being offered for sale. These products have been returned under Apple's Return and Refund Policies. While only some units are returned due to technical issues, all units undergo Apple's stringent quality refurbishment process.
Each Apple Certified Refurbished Product: is fully tested (including full burn-in testing). is refurbished with replacement parts for any defective modules identified in testing. is put through a thorough cleaning process and inspection. is repackaged (including appropriate manuals, cables, new boxes, etc.). includes the operating software originally shipped with the unit and the custom software offered with that system. See each products "Learn More" for more details. is given a new refurbished part number and serial number. is placed into a Final QA inspection prior to being added to sellable refurbished stock.
Refurbishment procedures follow the same basic technical guidelines as Apple's Finished Goods testing procedures.
However, "reseller refurbished" or "reconditioned" units sold through other channels may have entirely different criteria of what constitutes refurbishment or reconditioning.
Hope this helps,
Charles
Where Can I Find Tiger for My iBook?
From Jeff:
Hi Charles,
I ran across your site and am glad someone's doing this.
I have a white, G3, 600 MHz, dual-USB iBook that's, well, old. But I like it! No motherboard problems, ever. The hard drive tanked once, but I survived, and now it's better than ever. 12 compact inches of portable goodness.
But now I need to run applications that use Tiger, and I understand that I can run Tiger on my iBook (after I max out my RAM; currently 384 MB, and 10.2.8). Since I can't buy 10.4 anymore from a Licensed Apple Retailer/Distributor (LARD), I have to get it from someone else (non-LARD).
Am I correct in thinking that the Install disks for an eMac won't work for my iBook? The Install disks aren't created equal, are they? So, what should I be looking for if I go to eBay or elsewhere? Do you know of a source for what I'm looking for?
Thanks,
Jeff
Hi Jeff,
My wife's 700 MHz G3 iBook is running Mac OS X 10.4.11 beautifully, so I expect you will get very satisfactory performance on your 600 MHz machine.
I do recommend upgrading your RAM to the maximum 640 MB supported. RAM is pretty cheap these days.
Regarding Mac OS X 10.4 install disks, the eMac install disks almost certainly won't work with the iBook (Apple puts a software block in software restore disks), but you should be able to find remaindered generic Tiger install disks on the Web fairly easily - eBay perhaps. However, I'm assuming that your iBook, like ours, has only a plain-vanilla CD-ROM drive, and therein lies a problem. The Tiger install disk is a DVD. (Of course, if your iBook does have a combo drive, you're laughing.)
The workaround for CD-ROM equipped iBooks is to mount another Mac that does have a DVD drive via FireWire Target Disk Mode and use the drive in the other Mac to mount the Tiger install DVD. Just choose your iBook's hard drive as the destination disk for the installer and proceed as normal.
I actually did this "backwards", mounting the iBook from my Pismo PowerBook and installing Tiger that way. It worked out fine, but I now recommend the more orthodox method.
Charles
Editor's note: Low End Mac publishes biweekly price trackers for the Classic Mac OS, OS X 10.0-10.3, Tiger, and Leopard. dk
Pismo Processors Burning Out
From Michel:
Hi,
Here's a bit of advice to those that have a Pismo and want to upgrade their batteries: don't buy them cheap on eBay.
I have just replaced my burnt processor, and a couple of days later, it died again! I have read somewhere that those cheap batteries would be refurbished (which is okay with me), but instead of changing the chip on it, they use the old one. I don't remember why, but because of that, they would damage the computer.
I have used this battery for a few months before it killed my processor.
I just thought the others should know.
Mike
Hi Mike,
Thanks for the cautionary advice.
I had not heard of an issue like this before.
Are you certain that it was the battery that killed your processor (again)?
Charles
Certain? No. But that is the only explanation I can come up with. I have just bought two 400 MHz processors on eBay. I'll test them without my new battery....
Do you know any processor killers? Dead PRAM battery maybe, bad RAM, etc.?
Thanks,
Mike
Hi Mike,
Dead PRAM would not kill the processor. Bad RAM would only if it shorted out.
My guess is that there must be some sort of electrical short in your computer that is destroying the processors. Pismo processors are normally very reliable.
Charles
From Mike,
Hi Charles,
How about lack of thermal paste on the processor. I'm working on this theory right now. I have played with those processors many time over the years, and I have never paid attention to the thermal paste....
By the way, would you know any cheap G4 upgrade for Pismos? I would not pay $300 to upgrade a PB that is that old. Like many Pismo users, I love mine too.
Thanks,
Mike
Hi Mike,
While using a sparing amount of thermal paste is advisable, overheating to a degree that would destroy the processor should be noticeable.
To the best of my knowledge, the least expensive Pismo G4 upgrade is the one offered by Wegener Media, which starts at $199 I have one of these in one of my Pismos and it works great.
Charles
Political Discussion on Low End Mac
From James:
Hello,
I am writing in regards to the thread running thru LEM in the vein of "Lib's are this, Rep's are that..." You had said that only one person had objected to the politics on the site. So I thought I would throw my hat in. I do not believe that being in one camp or the other makes you more inclined to buy a certain computer, drive a certain car, or drink a certain overpriced coffee than the other.
If there is one thing that should unite us in the face of everything else we believe to be our morals and ideals is that we love Macs. Simple. Why find more differences in other people on something that should bring us together. It's bad enough when I hear the stereotypes people give Mac owners if they are not into them. "Oh, they are so high priced, only rich art majors use them."
Baloney, I'm a lower middle class black guy who scrapes his pennies to get my hands on a used Mac every couple years. Not because I think it sets me in a better class of people. It's because I love the interface and stability of the platform. Because I love the sense of community I get when I find other enthusiast in my day to day workings. And to see others trying to segregate and declare that more of one type of people use the platform than another... To tell the truth, it makes me a bit sad. There is no way we can foster open discussion and exchange tips and info if we alienate people before they even get a chance to put their toes in the water so to speak.
Sorry I ran on so long, but I have read your page and this site for a long time. Most of the hardware I have bought have been on recommendations I have seen on this site. But I can't see how these kind of discussions contribute to the site.
James
Hi James,
I agree with you that political persuasions are not determinant of one's choice of computer platform, and that was essentially my argument in the column that initiated this discussion.
It's undeniable that demographic categories that tend to be liberal are strongly represented on the Mac, but so are an awful lot of conservatives Mac-users, and a lot of liberals use Windows PCs.
I use the Mac because it's a great tool that does what I need it to do more elegantly than I think Windows or Linux would, not as a political statement.
However, the "Macs are liberals' computers" trope has been out there for a long time and seems to show no signs of going away any time soon. And, of course, Steve Jobs is self-described as a liberal Democrat, and Al Gore is on the Apple board. Those matters, as well as the market research study I was addressing in my column, are topical in the Mac community, and I think fair ball for discussion on LEM.
Even within a single party context, the Mac vs. PC dialectic has a way of showing up. Check out this New York Times piece: Is Obama a Mac and Clinton a PC?
Charles
From James
I agree with you on all points. My contention is that we know these things are going to happen more frequently, since we are in a political season in this country, and we will be bombarded everywhere we go for the near future with things like the link above shows. I was just saying I would hope it would not take up too big a space in the mailbag in this site. Course I'm not helping by replying, but it would be rude of me not to.
Hi James,
I appreciate your courtesy and I agree with you that neither LEM nor the Mailbag should become routine political debate forums. (Horrors!)
However, what does one do with Mac-relevant and topical stories like Rush Limbaugh's public appeal to Steve Jobs last week? ;-)
Charles
Regarding Politics on Low End Mac
From Brian:
I respectfully disagree with Adam's email about politics on Low End Mac. Although politics and political discussions usually make my eyes glaze over and have me ready to hit the back button on Safari, I applaud you for your efforts to introduce more than just the "normal" commentary regarding Macs and Mac users.
There's always a place on Low End Mac for these and other kinds of unique discussions, as they will always center on us, the Mac user. My hat's off to you, even when I cringe when I see the labels "liberal" and "conservative" :)
Keep up the great work!
Brian
Thanks for the vote of confidence, Brian!
Charles
Charles Moore has been a freelance journalist since 1987 and began writing for Mac websites in May 1998. His The Road Warrior column is a regular feature on MacOpinion, and he is a news editor and columnist at Applelinks.com.
Recent Miscellaneous Ramblings
- Blackouts and Web Access, Death of a Kanga, the Future of PowerPC Macs, and More, 01.07. Also another email client suggestion and whether a G3 iMac can handle a 7200 rpm hard drive without overheating.
- Adventures with an Overheating PowerBook, the 10.5.6 Update, and Other Things, 01.06. After three years of reliable service, the PowerBook began to run so hot that the fan was almost always on. What was causing the problem, and what would fix it?
- Pixelmator 1.3.2 Gains Some Cool Enhancements, 12.22. "Pixelmator works so well now that I've been finding myself using it more and more instead of Photoshop Elements 6."
- Love My MacBook Pro, Excellent Upgrade Advice, Unexpected Opera 10 Alpha Behavior, and More, 12.18. Also Firefox 2 and 3 as processor hogs, almost no chance of Snow Leopard for PowerPC Macs, and Eudora withrawal woes.
- More in the Miscellaneous Ramblings index.
Links for the Day
- Mac of the Day: 15" 'TiBook' PowerBook G4, Jan. 2001 - A new 1" thin PowerBook design with a titanium case, 15" widescreen display.
- Group of the Day: PowerList for those using Power Computing Mac clones.
- January 9 in LEM history: 01: Macworld keynote - 02: The new iMac - Redefining Apple's market - 03: Safari shows off the Apple difference - Impressions of Safari beta - 04: The colored iPod mini - 06: Installing 'Tiger' on unsupported Macs - Time to replace 5-year-old PowerBook - 07: iPhone and Apple TV - Axiotron Modbook - Mac vs. PC price comparisons are never fair - Backup to the rescue - 08: 2008 Mac Pro value equation
Recent Content on Low End Mac
- Thanks for the IBM PC, Dad, L. Victor Marks, My First Mac, 01.09. Dad, thanks for bringing home that first IBM PC way back in 1981.
- What a Legacy: The Origin of the IBM PC, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.09. IBM introduced its PC on August 12, 1981, shaking up the entire personal computer industry. Today even Apple makes its computers IBM compatible.
- Our Debt to the IBM PC, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.09. A Mac user looks at the legacy of the IBM PC.
- Heat Management for 'Books and the Last Mac to Run OS 9.1, Phil Herlihy, The Usefulness Equation, 01.08. Tips on keeping a first-gen MacBook Air from throttling back with CoolBook, using G4FanControl with a G4 PowerBook, and the fastest Mac that can boot Mac OS 9.1.
- Surprise, Average Broadband Throughput Is Lower than Maximum Throughput, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.08. If a service is advertised as 8 Mbps maximum, it shouldn't surprise anyone that the average speed is below that number.
- A History of Apple's Lisa, 1979-1986, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.08. Originally envisioned as a business computer to replace the Apple II, the Lisa brought the mouse and GUI to the computer market - only to be felled by the less costly Macintosh.
- Lisa's DNA Is All Over Modern Computing, Ray Arachelian, Apple Seeds, 01.08. Those who label Apple's Lisa a failure are ignoring the computer's legacy that shows up in every personal computer sold today.
- The Innovative Lisa, Dan Knight, Online Tech Journal, 01.08. Apple's Lisa and how it paved the way for the Macintosh.
- The Lisa Legacy, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.08. We should always remember how Apple's innovation paved the way for all future computers.
- Waterfield First with SleeveCase for New 17" Unibody MacBook Pro, Charles W. Moore, 'Book Value, 01.08. Waterfield has a reputation for top quality bags at appropriate prices, and it's already designed a sleeve for the new 17" Unibody MacBook Pro.
- The 17" Unibody MacBook Pro Value Equation, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.07. The new model is a bit faster, a bit smaller, a bit lighter, and has an incredible 8-hour battery life.
- How Netbooks Impact Microsoft and Apple, Tim Nash, Taking Back the Market, 01.07. Netbooks are keeping Windows XP alive, which may slow adoption of Windows 7, and perceived value keeps the Mac market share growing at the expense of Windows.
- Apple's Worst Business Decisions: Another Perspective, Dan Knight, Mac Musings, 01.07. Apple's poor business decisions predate the Macintosh. Let's hope they learn from their mistakes.
- The Ill-Fated Apple III, Jason Walsh, Apple Before the Mac, 01.07. "...not only was the Apple III mind crunchingly expensive, it was made with none of the passion of the Apple II or Macintosh."
- 2 Apple Failures: Apple III and Lisa, Tom Hormby, Orchard, 01.07. Apple's two not-so-great product lines between the Apple II line and the Macintosh.
- Apple III Chaos: Apple's First Failure, Joshua Coventry, Cortland, 01.07. Apple had known nothing but success with its Apple II product line, but when it tried to enter the business world with the Apple III, the learned the cost of failure.
- More links in our archive.
Recent Deals
- Best Apple TV Deals, 01.08. Refurb 40 GB Apple TV, $199; new, $220; refurb 160 GB, $279; new, $320. Prices include ground shipping.
- Best Mac Pro Deals, 01.08. New 2.8 GHz 4-core, $2,099 after rebate; refurb 8-core, $2,399; new, $2,589 a/r; 3.0 $3,398 a/r; refurb 3.2, $4,099; new, $4,099 a/r.
- Best 12" PowerBook G4 Deals, 01.08. Used 867 MHz Combo, $490; 1.33 GHz, $548; 1.5 GHz SuperDrive, $595.
- Best 17" MacBook Pro Deals, 01.07. Used 2.16 GHz Core Duo, $1,190; 2.33 Core 2, $1,400; 2.4, $1,799; refurb 2.33, $1,799; 2.5, $1,899; new, $1,900; refurb 2.6, $2,299.
- Best Power Mac G5 Deals, 01.07. Used 1.8 GHz single, $500; dual, $629, 2.0, $700; dual-core, $929; 2.3, $999; 2.5 dual, $900; 2.7, $1,089; 2.5 Quad, $1,399.
- Best iPod shuffle Deals, 01.07. Refurb 1 GB '07, $39 shipped; new, $43; '08, $45; refurb 2 GB '07, $59 shipped; new, $58; '08, $63.
- Best 15" MacBook Pro Deals, 01.06. Used 1.83 GHz, $900; 2.16, $1,090; 2.33, $1,295; new 2.4 Penryn, $1,350 after rebate; 2.5, $1,485 a/r; 2.6, $1,649; new 2.4 Unibody, $1,824 a/r.
- Best G3 iMac Deals, 01.06. Used 350 MHz CD, $42; 500 MHz, $59; 450 MHz DVD, $60; 600 MHz CD-RW, $200 shipped; 700 MHz Combo, $379 shipped.
- Best Mac OS X 10.5 'Leopard' Deals, 01.06. Mac OS X 10.5, single user, $104 shipped; 5 users, $148 shipped; 10.5 Server, 10 users, $363 shipped; unlimited users, $752 shipped.
- More deals in our archive.
About LEM | Support | Usage | Privacy | Contacts
