Adam

PowerBook G3s seem to be built like tanks. Mine is as mint as the day it was 
made (thanks to Jeff Hurst) and it gets put through its paces.

My two and a half year old has taken to my laptop and now wants to visit the 
Teletubbies games website everytime I get it out, yet it still holds out 
against half an hour of 'wheres the rabbit' and a very excited little girl.


Simon


--- Sent from my Nokia E71 using Nokia Email Beta
-----Original Message-----
From: Adam Vaughn
Sent:  14/11/2008 09:27:55
To: [email protected]
Subject:  A testament to the Pismo's durability, or despite my massive 
stupidity...


Hopefully, I'm not jinxing myself here, but here goes...

I was attempting to use my Pismo for recording audio from a small  
mixing board, to which was connected a number of vintage keyboard  
instruments. The board's output was plugged into the Pismo's input  
jack, as I'd done a few times before, and a pair of headphones was  
plugged into it's headphone jack. I had just opened Audacity when I  
saw a bright blue flash come from the back of the Pismo, accompanied  
by a loud *BANG!* I immediately shut down my equipment, and unplugged  
everything from the back of the Pismo, after which a lovely burning  
smell permeated from it's audio ports.

Miraculously, the computer was still running via battery power, though  
an ominous crackling/hissing sound could be heard through the  
speakers. I quickly shut it down, waited a few minutes, and then  
cautiously started it back up. The crackling had gone away, the  
starting chime occurred as normal, and the computer booted up just  
fine. Nothing seems to have gone awry with the power board or AC  
adapter, since the battery seems to be charging fine. Both the  
speakers and internal microphone seem to be working as well as they  
did before the incident, as does the headphone jack. The input jack  
may be a different story, since a quick test with an old-fashioned  
microphone connected to it produces a softer sound than expected,  
along with an annoying humming noise; however, I wouldn't call that a  
scientific test, so who knows.

I'm not quite sure what happened; I think one of the connectors got  
pinched, causing a short which made one heck of a spark from one of  
the audio ports. I think I'm going to retire the Pismo from recording  
duties after this, especially since it seems to be allergic to my  
Behringer F-Control Audio FCA-202 Firewire audio interface (attempting  
to select it as an input source in the Sound control panel causes an  
instant kernel panic), and consider myself lucky that the Pismo was,  
as a whole, able to survive my little episode of stupidity. Hopefully,  
it'll continue to operate as normally as an eight year old notebook  
can be expected to work. Anyway, I figured I'd share this with the G- 
Book community as a testament to the durability of the venerable  
Pismo, as well as a tip for those who might try to use it's input jack  
for something other than a simple microphone or some-such...
-Adam

--
Adam Vaughn
Collector of old computers, video game systems, radios and other  
electronic
equipment...
Visit my page at
http://www.electronixandmore.com/adam/index.html








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