
desi_barney_2
Originally uploaded by PoconoPCDoctor.
Got an old PC running to use my old HP scanner – it does not work with Vista or Snow Leopard…
This was taken in Staten Island – Des was almost 1 year old!

desi_barney_2
Originally uploaded by PoconoPCDoctor.
Got an old PC running to use my old HP scanner – it does not work with Vista or Snow Leopard…
This was taken in Staten Island – Des was almost 1 year old!
So what has President Obama done so far anyway?
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/1/1/820494/-Where-we-were,-and-where-we-are

I had purchased an iPod Touch in late 2007. I was very pleased with it. I started to convert all my CD’s to AAC (the Apple format for music files), added some games. I took it with me on a trip to Iowa where I knocked on doors for a guy with a funny name and big ears.
Then, as luck would have it, it was time to do laundry one day, and yours truly did not quite check all the pockets for items that don’t mix well with soap and water.
Oops.
Not to worry, I further complicated my initial mistake by drying the same pants containing my freshly washed iPod Touch.
Score: Oops two. iPod zero.
Some Google searches basically said to give up the ghost – I had washed and dried the iPod Touch to the iPod afterlife. I still persisted, however. After letting it dry out for about a month, I tried connecting it to iTunes, and voila! The screen came to life! The iPod Touch lives! Long live the iPod!
And look here – iTunes is recommending that I upgrade to the latest version of software – 3.01 – or something like that! I paid for the upgrade, and then……
Oops three. Apparently, some hardware device in the iPod Touch was now defunct (not surprising), and the new software crashed when it did not find the device – at least that was my theory.
Did I give up? NO! I mailed the device to a company that said they might be able to repair the device. Sadly, they could not, and mailed it back to me.
Last chance – I brought it to a Genius Bar – they listened to my tale of washing and drying machines and agreed to give me a ten percent discount towards the purchase of a new iPod Touch. End of the road, right?
WRONG!
As I was home this week, I decided to give it the old college try. After letting the iPod Touch charge overnight, I launched iTunes and immediately got the recovery mode option – would I like to restore the iPod? Yes was my answer, and after a couple of reboots, the iPod Touch was alive. There was one casualty, however. The WiFi feature had died. But it was still functional for music, movies, games, etc. Any online app would not work, although these did not work without connecting to a WiFi network anyway, so not much was lost.
To summarize – adding iPod Touch to laundry – not genius-like. Not giving up? Give me some credit for hanging tough after even the geniuses at Apple advised me to buy another.
Quoted in full —-
Dick Cheney has emerged from his undisclosed lair to issue his expected attack against the President, this one in response to the recent attempted terrorist attack on a U.S. airliner.
As usual, the attack is blatant, hypocritical, and sure to be lapped up by the traditional media for the next 24 hours. In part, he says:
“As I’ve watched the events of the last few days it is clear once again that President Obama is trying to pretend we are not at war. He seems to think if he has a low key response to an attempt to blow up an airliner and kill hundreds of people, we won’t be at war. He seems to think if he gives terrorists the rights of Americans, lets them lawyer up and reads them their Miranda rights, we won’t be at war. He seems to think if we bring the mastermind of 9/11 to New York, give him a lawyer and trial in civilian court, we won’t be at war … But we are at war and when President Obama pretends we aren’t, it makes us less safe.
Of course, after the near identical situation in 2001, when shoe bomber Richard Reid attempted bring down an airliner, the Bush administration waited nearly a week to comment, and then only in passing, and Reid was (presumably after being read his Miranda rights) tried, convicted and sentenced in a civilian court.
I anxiously await the grilling Dick Cheney will get by the media over these pesky little details. And if any intrepid reporter does manage to work up the nerve to question him, maybe they could also ask Dick how that art therapy program kept us safe.
Philco PC from Dave Schultze on Vimeo.

My son’s three year old Mac Mini was acting strange. He had almost run out of hard drive space on the original 80 gigabyte drive, but even after I had connected a backup drive, deleted some junk files, and then ran Time machine, his system was still acting up.
This past Friday, he told me that the Mac Mini was not booting anymore – it just showed the folder with the question mark.
Ooooh boy.
I tried running disk utility – even erased the drive and tried to re-install Snow Leopard – but the installation just hung – it said 30 minutes remaining for two hours. Not a good sign. When I checked the drive again with disk utility, I got errors that seemed to confirm my suspicions that the drive had almost crashed, if it hadn’t already.
What to do?
The system was out of warranty, so I search the Google for Mac Mini repairs, and came across iFixit.com.
I have fixed many PC’s, but not so many Macs. Okay – no Macs.
But after reading the clear (and free!) online manual for replacing the hard drive in a Model A1176 (this means a Mac Mini manufactured in early 2006), I felt confident enough to order a new hard drive – the 500 gigabyte 7200 RPM (speedy!) Seagate. I also ordered the special putty knife, the fine Allen-head screwdriver, and a tool that had an odd name – a Spudger.
Total cost – $160.00. A new Mac Mini – $500.00. Repaired by a shop – $279.00 for only a 160 gigabyte hard drive!
The parts came.
The first thing I did was to print out the manual.
Then, it was on to the Mac Mini Repair!
One thing I like about the inelegant PC is the fairly easy access to open the case. There are usually screws that are easy to remove. The case pops off, and you can replace any part.
The Mac Mini? No screws. The putty knife is needed to wedge open the tight fitting case. This took the longest time, since I was unfamiliar with the Mac Mini, and did not want to rush and possibly break another part inside the case.
Once off, I followed the directions, and soon had swapped the failed hard drive for the much larger and quicker Seagate. The only problem I ran into was disconnecting the Airport connecting wire from the motherboard. I had to first re-connect the wire to the motherboard, then replace the Airport mini circuit board. A few sprays of air to clean the fan and CPU heat sink and motherboard, and it was time to re-assemble the Mac Mini.
The moment of truth had arrived. Will it power up? YES – the happy Mac chimes ring! Will Snow Leopard find the new hard drive? Another YES!
About 40 minutes later, Snow Leopard rebooted, and after connecting the Time Machine backup drive, I was able to start copying the 15 gigs of iTunes files back to the new hard drive. There are more files to copy over, but this will be done over the next few days.
Total time for the repair was about 90 minutes. If I do another, it will take less time, but all in all, I’m happy with iFixit.
I Fixed it!