Re: IDE/ATA Hard drives

2009-10-23 Thread Michael G.M.



On Oct 23, 8:56 am, dc  wrote:
> Jump over the the LEM Swap List quickly, there's a nice SATA PCI card
> for only $45!!!

I don't think I trust the Acard adapter. I've not read many
encouraging reviews of it.
If I don't get the Firm Tek, I'll get the adapters.
Are the adapters as reliable as a SATA PCI card? I think I'd rather
get the PCI card over the adapters if I can use larger
drives.

-M
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Re: Easy on/off internet sharing shortcut?

2009-10-23 Thread Clark Martin

Jeffrey Engle wrote:
> 
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 5:06 PM, Clark Martin wrote:
> 
>> Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>>> I use iChat quite frequently and find myself making the mad dash to
>>> shut down "internet sharing" and or turning it on all the time... is
>>> there a keyboard shortcut for doing this? or I wonder if there is a
>>> "fix" for having to do that all the time? Jeff
>> What does Internet Sharing have to do with iChat?  And why the mad  
>> dash?
>>
>> Internet Sharing is for turning the computer it's on into a router.
>> This let's you share your Internet connection with other computers.
>>
>> It may be possible to set up an AppleScript to do this which could  
>> then
>> be put in the dock.
>>
> 
> first, Ichat, for some lame reason will not work if internet sharing  
> is turned on (pain)
> Second, I'm a little short on wireless routers at present.
> third tell me about that applescript? never done that before  
> willing to learn. Jeff

I don't know how to do it in AppleScript, only that it might be 
possible.  The other option is to look around for some utility that 
would do it.  A search for "internet sharing dock mac" might do it.


-- 
Clark Martin
Redwood City, CA, USA
Macintosh / Internet Consulting

"I'm a designated driver on the Information Super Highway"

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Re: Kernel panic? why?

2009-10-23 Thread dorayme

> Date: Thurs, Oct 22 2009 5:15 pm
> From: Bruce Johnson
>
> On Oct 22, 2009, at 2:47 PM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>
>> On Oct 22, 2009, at 12:51 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:
>>
>>> If it *STILL* KP's after that, you have a hardware fault.
>>
>> I wonder when Apple will make a computer that "just tells me" what's
>> the matter with it?
>
> Seriously, it's because of the nature of a Kernel Panic, which happens
> when some process accesses memory it's not been allocated. The Unix
> kernel is a pretty simple thing; at it's heart it's a traffic cop and
> supply clerk: it tells processes when thye can use the CPU and what
> memory they can use.
>
> When some process steps out of line and writes to memory that doesn't
> exist, or is not it's own, the kernel essentially pulls the big red
> switch and kills everything, because letting the errant process
> continue can produce more data corruption than just immediately
> shutting down.

But surely *just* before it does this, it knows it is going to do  
this and so this could trigger some information, perhaps worded much  
like your explanation here, perhaps even suggesting things like to  
look in logs etc to the machine user or at least to name the last  
instruction in plain English that is causing it to pull the plug.  
Even the Rain Man used to say things before a big panic: "Uh oh, uh oh!"


>
> 
>
> The OS doesn't KNOW why it crashed, only that the panic condition had
> occurred. We won't get the kind of information you want until
> thiotimoline based interface circuitry is developed.
>

--
dorayme




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Re: IDE/ATA Hard drives

2009-10-23 Thread iJohn

On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 7:54 PM, yawg  wrote:
> I use these adapters:
>
> http://www.nowthatsit.nl/?itemtype_id=4233&categorie_id=61
>
> Regards, Jörg.

I think Jörg meant to include a link pointing towards something like this:
http://www.nowthatsit.nl/categorie.asp?categorie_id=629

The advantage of SATA <-> PATA converters ... when they work ... is
that it works at level so low in the hardware that the operating
system isn't really aware that it is there. So you shouldn't ... in
theory ... have to worry about whether firmware is compatible with
your MAC or not.

I've had good luck using converters to continue using PATA drives with
a SATA motherboard. Whether or not the ones to convert a PATA socket
for use with SATA drives would work for you I can not promise. But you
might want to consider trying it. (Or not).

-irrational john

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Re: Easy on/off internet sharing shortcut?

2009-10-23 Thread Jeffrey Engle


On Oct 23, 2009, at 5:06 PM, Clark Martin wrote:

>
> Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>> I use iChat quite frequently and find myself making the mad dash to
>> shut down "internet sharing" and or turning it on all the time... is
>> there a keyboard shortcut for doing this? or I wonder if there is a
>> "fix" for having to do that all the time? Jeff
>
> What does Internet Sharing have to do with iChat?  And why the mad  
> dash?
>
> Internet Sharing is for turning the computer it's on into a router.
> This let's you share your Internet connection with other computers.
>
> It may be possible to set up an AppleScript to do this which could  
> then
> be put in the dock.
>

first, Ichat, for some lame reason will not work if internet sharing  
is turned on (pain)
Second, I'm a little short on wireless routers at present.
third tell me about that applescript? never done that before  
willing to learn. Jeff

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Re: Easy on/off internet sharing shortcut?

2009-10-23 Thread Clark Martin

Jeffrey Engle wrote:
> I use iChat quite frequently and find myself making the mad dash to  
> shut down "internet sharing" and or turning it on all the time... is  
> there a keyboard shortcut for doing this? or I wonder if there is a  
> "fix" for having to do that all the time? Jeff

What does Internet Sharing have to do with iChat?  And why the mad dash?

Internet Sharing is for turning the computer it's on into a router. 
This let's you share your Internet connection with other computers.

It may be possible to set up an AppleScript to do this which could then 
be put in the dock.


-- 
Clark Martin
Redwood City, CA, USA
Macintosh / Internet Consulting

"I'm a designated driver on the Information Super Highway"

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Re: Easy on/off internet sharing shortcut?

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 4:36 PM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:

>
> I use iChat quite frequently and find myself making the mad dash to
> shut down "internet sharing" and or turning it on all the time... is
> there a keyboard shortcut for doing this? or I wonder if there is a
> "fix" for having to do that all the time? Jeff

Why do you have to do this? Does iChat not work if you're sharing the  
internet?

Why do you ned to share the internet from your computer? This is work  
much more suited to devices like wireless or wired routers.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: IDE/ATA Hard drives

2009-10-23 Thread yawg

Hi,

> > How long do you guys think PPC Mac users with IDE/ATA hard
> > drives have as far as being totally obsolete and finding SATA PCI
> > cards will be nigh impossible.
>
> Jump over the the LEM Swap List quickly, there's a nice SATA PCI card
> for only $45!!!

You should just get an adapter, I use two of them to connect cheap
1.5TB drives, they work like a charm. They should cost around 10
Dollars. ATA-drives are mostly 500GB max. and cost the same as much
bigger SATA-drives.

My SATA drives connected via the adapters are quieter than my ATA
drives and as fast if not faster. I use these adapters:

http://www.nowthatsit.nl/?itemtype_id=4233&categorie_id=61

Regards, Jörg.
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Re: IDE/ATA Hard drives

2009-10-23 Thread yawg

Hi,

> > How long do you guys think PPC Mac users with IDE/ATA hard
> > drives have as far as being totally obsolete and finding SATA PCI
> > cards will be nigh impossible.
>
> Jump over the the LEM Swap List quickly, there's a nice SATA PCI card
> for only $45!!!

You should just get an adapter, I use two of them to connect cheap
1.5TB drives, they work like a charm. They should cost around 10
Dollars. ATA-drives are mostly 500GB max. and cost the same as much
bigger SATA-drives.

My SATA drives connected via the adapters are quieter than my ATA
drives and as fast if not faster. I use these adapters:

http://www.nowthatsit.nl/?itemtype_id=4233&categorie_id=61

Regards, Jörg.
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Easy on/off internet sharing shortcut?

2009-10-23 Thread Jeffrey Engle

I use iChat quite frequently and find myself making the mad dash to  
shut down "internet sharing" and or turning it on all the time... is  
there a keyboard shortcut for doing this? or I wonder if there is a  
"fix" for having to do that all the time? Jeff

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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Clark Martin

Ralph Green wrote:
> Howdy,
>   The higher RPM drives are definitely faster.  It does not always make
> sense to use them.  They have two negatives.  They usually draw more
> power. And, they are hotter.  The extra power is rarely a problem, but
> it does come up.  The heat is the real killer.  You should look up the
> specs on your old drive and compare them to the new faster drive.  If
> the bearings or motor efficiency have been improved, it could be that
> the new drive won't put out enough extra heat to be a problem.  And, you
> may be prepared to live with the drive dying sooner, in order to get the
> increased speed.  I am not saying to always go with the slower drive.  I
> just say consider the factors and make the decision that is best for
> you.

Power and heat go hand in hand.  All the power that goes into your drive 
turns into heat.  So if it draws more power it will generate more HEAT 
and that means it will get hotter.


-- 
Clark Martin
Redwood City, CA, USA
Macintosh / Internet Consulting

"I'm a designated driver on the Information Super Highway"

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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread iJohn

On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 5:14 PM, Ralph Green  wrote:
>  The higher RPM drives are definitely faster.  It does not always make
> sense to use them.

Another aspect of upgrading a hard drive that is usually overlooked is
the bit density of the platters. Roughly speaking the newest drives
with the highest densities will usually net you better performance
even at "only" 5400 RPM. The reason being that the drive platter
doesn't have to be moving as fast in order to read/write a large
quantity of data when the bit density of the platter is higher.

Within reason, I would always recommend going with the latest drive
technology with the highest platter bit density that you can get and
worry about 7200 vs 5400 as a lower priority. You'll get more
performance bang for the buck with a higher density platter. And if
you get a large drive that only uses a single platter it is also
likely to use less energy.

Just some thoughts for whatever their worth. I realize that since
you're (I assume) looking a for a PATA 2.5" drive your options are
more limited.

-irrational john

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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 2:14 PM, Ralph Green wrote:

> If
> the bearings or motor efficiency have been improved, it could be that
> the new drive won't put out enough extra heat to be a problem.


Which for drives older than a few years old than a new one is commonly  
the case.

So far (only a few hours of use) my new Hitachi 7200 RPM drive seems  
to run about as cool as my old 5400 RPM Samsung one...which is to say,  
pretty warm, actually :-/

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 2:01 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:

>>
>> When you install the Developer tools, it's in the /Developer/
>> Application/Utilities folder.
>>
>
> Just as an FYI ... After installing XcodeTools.mpkg today, I see its
> 2.41GB in size.


You can reduce this remarkably by doing a custom install. If all you  
want are the applications, which have a lot of useful stuff in there  
you can forego everything but that applications, which brings it down  
considerably.

Leave out Documentation (which is all available online) and you get  
back almost 700 megs.

Or use something like Pacifist and just extract the utility if you want.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bill Connelly


On Oct 23, 2009, at 5:01 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:

>
>
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 4:19 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:40 PM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:22 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:
>>>
 I believe its called USB Prober.app.
>>>
>>> Looked at what's in the XcodeTools.mpkg on my Leopard install disk
>>> and
>>> there was no USB Prober.app there? ideas?
>>
>> When you install the Developer tools, it's in the /Developer/
>> Application/Utilities folder.
>>
>
> Just as an FYI ... After installing XcodeTools.mpkg today, I see its
> 2.41GB in size.
>
> First attempt to find USB Prober.app with Pacifist failed, but at
> least Pacifist works under Leopard ... was hoping to be able to direct
> how to get to it that way.



If you know how to use Pacifist,  an alternate way than to install all  
the XcodeTools.mkpg (2.41GB) ...

Using Pacifist > Open Package

Navigate to

Optional Installs > Xcode Tools > Packages > DeveloperTools.pkg (click  
Open)

Then Drill Down to

Applications > Utilities > USB Prober.app

and Extract.





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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Ralph Green

Howdy,
  The higher RPM drives are definitely faster.  It does not always make
sense to use them.  They have two negatives.  They usually draw more
power. And, they are hotter.  The extra power is rarely a problem, but
it does come up.  The heat is the real killer.  You should look up the
specs on your old drive and compare them to the new faster drive.  If
the bearings or motor efficiency have been improved, it could be that
the new drive won't put out enough extra heat to be a problem.  And, you
may be prepared to live with the drive dying sooner, in order to get the
increased speed.  I am not saying to always go with the slower drive.  I
just say consider the factors and make the decision that is best for
you.
Good luck,
Ralph

On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 10:21 -0400, Tray Stephenson wrote:
> My question is  
> whether more RPMs makes a lot of difference in overall computer speed  
> (5400 RPM vs. 4200 RPM).  I would think that the 5400 RPM drive would  
> be faster, but don't really know.



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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bill Connelly


On Oct 23, 2009, at 4:19 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:

>
>
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:40 PM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:22 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:
>>
>>> I believe its called USB Prober.app.
>>
>> Looked at what's in the XcodeTools.mpkg on my Leopard install disk  
>> and
>> there was no USB Prober.app there? ideas?
>
> When you install the Developer tools, it's in the /Developer/
> Application/Utilities folder.
>

Just as an FYI ... After installing XcodeTools.mpkg today, I see its  
2.41GB in size.

First attempt to find USB Prober.app with Pacifist failed, but at  
least Pacifist works under Leopard ... was hoping to be able to direct  
how to get to it that way.

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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:40 PM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:

>
>
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:22 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:
>
>> I believe its called USB Prober.app.
>
> Looked at what's in the XcodeTools.mpkg on my Leopard install disk and
> there was no USB Prober.app there? ideas?

When you install the Developer tools, it's in the /Developer/ 
Application/Utilities folder.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Jeffrey Engle


On Oct 23, 2009, at 12:22 PM, Bill Connelly wrote:

> I believe its called USB Prober.app.

Looked at what's in the XcodeTools.mpkg on my Leopard install disk and  
there was no USB Prober.app there? ideas?

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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bill Connelly


On Oct 23, 2009, at 2:39 PM, Clark Martin wrote:


>
> There is a USB diagnostic tool, part of XCode, that is more detailed  
> and
> technical but less confusing once you get past the details.  IIRC  
> when I
> looked with that it was clear, but it's been a while since I did that
> and I can't recall the specifics.

I believe its called USB Prober.app.

I'm installing it now by running the XcodeTools.mkpg package off my OS  
X Leopard Install DVD.

I've always appreciated the detailed info that is given, in dynamic  
mode ... but the Developer folder is over 1GB, and I didn't have room  
to keep it up before installing my newer SATA drives.


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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Richard Gerome


   I'm just guessing here, but I'm thinking what it is seeing is just whats on 
the mother board and your computer can run 5 built in USB's and a couple are of 
the high speed type, there may be an empty slot for another 2 USB's if you only 
see 2 or yours or you can change it out to a card with 4 USB's for an upgrade 
??? If there is 2 on the keyboard they run though the port where you plug in 
the keyboard, in which case maybe would be piggy backing them to the mother 
board??? Keep in mind this is just a guess on my part, I don't know the 
workings of that computer???  CoolKat



-Original Message-
>From: Jason Brown 
>Sent: Oct 23, 2009 2:35 PM
>To: g3-5-list@googlegroups.com
>Subject: Re: Question about USB ports?
>
>
>
>> Jason, please keep in mind that system profiler only "sees" those USB
>> ports available to it. Thus, if the keyboard is NOT plugged in, you
>> will not see those ports. So, back to the drawing table. Jeff
>>
>
>Ahhh, that is too true. I apologize for misinformation then.
>
>Jason
>
>
>>


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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Bob Whiton

At 9:11 AM -0700 10/23/09, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>Funny thing... I have an early 2005 Powermac G5 with "3 USB ports" on 
>the tower itself. Two on the rear and one on the front. Why does 
>system profiler say that I have 4 "USB Bus" and 1 "USB High-speed 
>Bus"? equalling 5 usb busses all together? and I thought ALL of the 3
>that I do have were "High-Speed" Can someone explain?  Thanks, Jeff
>

There are USB busses that are not associated with external ports.  My 
C2D iMac has three USB ports, but reports five busses - three for the 
external ports, one serving the internal Bluetooth controller and IR 
receiver, and one apparently not in use.  As for the reported speeds, 
that is affected by what is plugged into the port.  The port I have 
my external hub plugged into reports as high-speed, while the other 
two are dragged down to 12 Mb/sec by the keyboard hub and cell modem, 
respectively.

Bob

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Re: File Recovery Query

2009-10-23 Thread Charles Davis


On Oct 23, 2009, at 2:29 PM, Bruce Johnson wrote:

>
>
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 11:12 AM, Charles Davis wrote:
>
>>> Data Rescue from Prosoft Engineering should work for you.
>>>
>>> http://www.prosofteng.com/
>>>
>>
>> Isn't this something that 'Disk Warrior' does also???
>
> No, the only thing that Disk Warrior does is rebuild munged disk
> directories. It does it very well. It does not do any sort of
> 'undelete'; it'll see a freshly formatted drive as having no files on
> it, and faithfully rebuild the empty directory.
>
> --  
> Bruce Johnson
> University of Arizona
> College of Pharmacy
> Information Technology Group
>
> Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs
>
ISTR that there were some 'flags' that could be set, to tell Disk  
Warrior" to look for 'otherwise deleted' information. [This memory is  
a few years old, so I may be remembering from another  'Disk  
Maintenance" routine.
Chuck D.

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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Clark Martin

Jeffrey Engle wrote:
> 
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 9:58 AM, Jason Brown wrote:
> 
>>
>> On Oct 23, 2009, at 11:11 AM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>>
>>> Funny thing... I have an early 2005 Powermac G5 with "3 USB ports" on
>>> the tower itself. Two on the rear and one on the front. Why does
>>> system profiler say that I have 4 "USB Bus" and 1 "USB High-speed
>>> Bus"? equalling 5 usb busses all together? and I thought ALL of the 3
>>> that I do have were "High-Speed" Can someone explain?  Thanks, Jeff

>> Your tower has 3 usb ports. Your keyboard has 2 non powered ports on
>> them. The other part of the question, the USB high speed bus. The best
>> that I can figure is that it is driven by another driver in the system
>> or is a physically different chip. Someone else that is more
>> knowledgeable may be able to answer that part.
>>
>> Jason Brown
>>
> 
> Jason, please keep in mind that system profiler only "sees" those USB  
> ports available to it. Thus, if the keyboard is NOT plugged in, you  
> will not see those ports. So, back to the drawing table. Jeff

The ports on the keyboard are just that, ports, not busses.  They are on 
the same bus as the port the keyboard is plugged into.

The way the system reports busses is strange.  I don't know why it does 
what it does but it does change the reporting of high speed busses 
depending on what you have plugged in.  It seems to overlap the "high 
speed" and low speed busses.  That is it reports 4 low and 1 high but 
that high is really the same as one of the low speed.  I tried to figure 
it out once on my iBook and just found more confusion.

There is a USB diagnostic tool, part of XCode, that is more detailed and 
technical but less confusing once you get past the details.  IIRC when I 
looked with that it was clear, but it's been a while since I did that 
and I can't recall the specifics.

I think in the OP's case there are 4 busses, one for each of the three 
ports and one additional port, either a connector on the motherboard and 
or used by hardware built into the motherboard such as BlueTooth.  Even 
if the machine doesn't have BT there may be some support for it on the MB.

For example, this MacBook Pro.  ASP shows 5 "USB Bus" (lo) and 2 "USB 
High-Speed Bus" (hi).  Now 2 lo and one hi are used internally for BT, 
keyboard / trackpad, IR receiver and iSight.  Leaving 3 lo and 1 hi not 
tasked and two external ports on the MBP.

If I plug in a USB 2.0 card reader it appears on the previously untasked 
hi bus.  If I switch it over to the other port it now appears on the 
same bus as the iSight.  With a mouse plugged in to the first port, it 
shows up on the same lo bus with the BT controller.  That is it is 
plugged into the same connector that the card reader was plugged into 
and appearing on a hi bus.

I guess the one hard piece of data is that the ASP list is screwy.


-- 
Clark Martin
Redwood City, CA, USA
Macintosh / Internet Consulting

"I'm a designated driver on the Information Super Highway"

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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Jason Brown


> Jason, please keep in mind that system profiler only "sees" those USB
> ports available to it. Thus, if the keyboard is NOT plugged in, you
> will not see those ports. So, back to the drawing table. Jeff
>

Ahhh, that is too true. I apologize for misinformation then.

Jason


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Re: File Recovery Query

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 11:12 AM, Charles Davis wrote:

>> Data Rescue from Prosoft Engineering should work for you.
>>
>> http://www.prosofteng.com/
>>
>
> Isn't this something that 'Disk Warrior' does also???

No, the only thing that Disk Warrior does is rebuild munged disk  
directories. It does it very well. It does not do any sort of  
'undelete'; it'll see a freshly formatted drive as having no files on  
it, and faithfully rebuild the empty directory.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: File Recovery Query

2009-10-23 Thread Charles Davis


On Oct 23, 2009, at 2:02 PM, Kyle Hansen wrote:

>
> On 10/23/09 9:43 AM, "aussieshepsrock"   
> Broadcast
> into the ether:
>
>> but
>> can I use a utility program to scan the drive's sectors and
>> reconstitute the data onto another drive?
>
> Data Rescue from Prosoft Engineering should work for you.
>
> http://www.prosofteng.com/
>

Isn't this something that 'Disk Warrior' does also???

Don't have the docs to check myself.

Chuck D.

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Re: File Recovery Query

2009-10-23 Thread Kyle Hansen

On 10/23/09 9:43 AM, "aussieshepsrock"  Broadcast
into the ether:

> but
> can I use a utility program to scan the drive's sectors and
> reconstitute the data onto another drive?

Data Rescue from Prosoft Engineering should work for you.

http://www.prosofteng.com/
---
The first time Microsoft produces something that doesn't suck will be
when they start making vacuum cleaners
---




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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Jeffrey Engle


On Oct 23, 2009, at 9:58 AM, Jason Brown wrote:

>
>
> On Oct 23, 2009, at 11:11 AM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:
>
>>
>> Funny thing... I have an early 2005 Powermac G5 with "3 USB ports" on
>> the tower itself. Two on the rear and one on the front. Why does
>> system profiler say that I have 4 "USB Bus" and 1 "USB High-speed
>> Bus"? equalling 5 usb busses all together? and I thought ALL of the 3
>> that I do have were "High-Speed" Can someone explain?  Thanks, Jeff
>
> Your tower has 3 usb ports. Your keyboard has 2 non powered ports on
> them. The other part of the question, the USB high speed bus. The best
> that I can figure is that it is driven by another driver in the system
> or is a physically different chip. Someone else that is more
> knowledgeable may be able to answer that part.
>
> Jason Brown
>

Jason, please keep in mind that system profiler only "sees" those USB  
ports available to it. Thus, if the keyboard is NOT plugged in, you  
will not see those ports. So, back to the drawing table. Jeff

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Re: Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Jason Brown


On Oct 23, 2009, at 11:11 AM, Jeffrey Engle wrote:

>
> Funny thing... I have an early 2005 Powermac G5 with "3 USB ports" on
> the tower itself. Two on the rear and one on the front. Why does
> system profiler say that I have 4 "USB Bus" and 1 "USB High-speed
> Bus"? equalling 5 usb busses all together? and I thought ALL of the 3
> that I do have were "High-Speed" Can someone explain?  Thanks, Jeff

Your tower has 3 usb ports. Your keyboard has 2 non powered ports on  
them. The other part of the question, the USB high speed bus. The best  
that I can figure is that it is driven by another driver in the system  
or is a physically different chip. Someone else that is more  
knowledgeable may be able to answer that part.

Jason Brown

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File Recovery Query

2009-10-23 Thread aussieshepsrock

Hi Group,
   I have formatted a drive (simple format - no zeroing out) when I
meant to zap a partition. I haven't lost anything of 'importance', but
can I use a utility program to scan the drive's sectors and
reconstitute the data onto another drive? I seem to remember using
Disc Doctor back in the day to do something like this under OS9. I
immediately shut down the computer and pulled the drive, well, after
exercising my 4 letter vocabulary for a moment, so the drive is
untouched except for the 'format' command from disk utility. It would
be much easier to recover the drive than reconstituting from a
plethora of opticals.
Thanks
Richard

10.5.6
2.4ghz solo
500gig
320gig
800gig external
etc etc etc
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Question about USB ports?

2009-10-23 Thread Jeffrey Engle

Funny thing... I have an early 2005 Powermac G5 with "3 USB ports" on  
the tower itself. Two on the rear and one on the front. Why does  
system profiler say that I have 4 "USB Bus" and 1 "USB High-speed  
Bus"? equalling 5 usb busses all together? and I thought ALL of the 3  
that I do have were "High-Speed" Can someone explain?  Thanks, Jeff

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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Bruce Johnson


On Oct 23, 2009, at 7:21 AM, Tray Stephenson wrote:

>
> I plan to replace the 60 GB hard drive in my iBook G4 12" laptop with
> a larger one.  What I have in mind is a 250 GB drive.  My question is
> whether more RPMs makes a lot of difference in overall computer speed
> (5400 RPM vs. 4200 RPM).  I would think that the 5400 RPM drive would
> be faster, but don't really know.
> Thx. for any advice.

Going up in speed makes a useful difference. Going up to 5400 or 7200  
is definitely worth it.

I just replaced a dead 5400 rpm drive in my TiBook  with a new 7200  
rpm one and it's got 'teh snappy'...particularly noticeable when  
starting up or loading programs.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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Re: hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Michael Koch

I replace a 4200 RPM with a 7200 RPM in a 17" G4 Powerbook.
A world of difference like a whole new computer.
Did the same to a 15" MacbookPro with the same results.
On Oct 23, 2009, at 10:21, Tray Stephenson wrote:

> Hi!
>
> I plan to replace the 60 GB hard drive in my iBook G4 12" laptop with
> a larger one.  What I have in mind is a 250 GB drive.  My question is
> whether more RPMs makes a lot of difference in overall computer speed
> (5400 RPM vs. 4200 RPM).  I would think that the 5400 RPM drive would
> be faster, but don't really know.
> Thx. for any advice.
>
> Tray
>
> >
>

have a nice day
Michael Koch
mk...@ncwcom.com




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hard drive speed in an iBook G4 12"

2009-10-23 Thread Tray Stephenson

Hi!

I plan to replace the 60 GB hard drive in my iBook G4 12" laptop with  
a larger one.  What I have in mind is a 250 GB drive.  My question is  
whether more RPMs makes a lot of difference in overall computer speed  
(5400 RPM vs. 4200 RPM).  I would think that the 5400 RPM drive would  
be faster, but don't really know.
Thx. for any advice.

Tray

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Re: IDE/ATA Hard drives

2009-10-23 Thread dc

On Oct 22, 2:14 am, "Michael G.M."  wrote:

> How long do you guys think PPC Mac users with IDE/ATA hard
> drives have as far as being totally obsolete and finding SATA PCI
> cards will
> be nigh impossible.

Jump over the the LEM Swap List quickly, there's a nice SATA PCI card
for only $45!!!
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