23.01.2019
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On 02:56 PM, JF Mezei wrote: The thing is that I am not sure the blue shirted folks at the Genius bar can *really* diagnose a Mac Pro. Not something they fix often. Why should it be harder to diagnose a Mac Pro PSU than a Mini's or iMac's? Microbytes can do it. Well at least on PCs.

Basically the principle is this: 1) Mac Pro's power turns on 2) Power goes from Mac Pro into a Relay switch 3) relay switch turns secondary power supply on 4) power supply runs current to video card 5) I play Borderlands 2 for 3 days straight and my girlfriend leaves me. Usenet readers for mac os x. Congratulations with nice research! I have recently moved and got new job, so I'm a bit out of the hack thing, but hope to soon be back. I can get hold of the PSU boad I have and take some more picture, whatnot could be usefull. Lately when I press the power button on my pro it will make a click sound, there will be a brief surge of power(the room lights always flicker when it starts up), but then I will hear another.

Note: It could be perfectly fine, I have no idea! The advantage to this method is you need NO 12Volt source and NO relay and therefore you can get by with NO soldering. The disadvantage is that the PSU will continue to run when your computer turns off. When turning the PSU off, you can just flip the switch on it.

Final factoid: Some people see these 6 pin connectors coming off PSUs with this tiny 2 pin 'extra' piece to add it up to 8. This is actually completely okay and is usually standard.

To run PowerPC applications on this Mac, it will be necessary to use Mac OS X 10.6 'Snow Leopard'. Also see: Macs are compatible with macOS Mojave (10.14)?

That's why profits are huge. On 12:42 AM, JF Mezei wrote: Sorel Markovsky wrote: Of course, owning an iPhun is an incentive but, with Samsung now offering phones with much better specs at the same price -- hey, here, At the end of the day, user experience is more important than specs. You could have a faster processor and less efficient OS/apps which yield same response time (or even inferior response time) AND reduced battery autonomy. But the specs will show the CPU being faster. I'm sorry, J-F but once again, this is bullshit.

I transplanted all those parts into my very own 1999 Power Mac G4, that I’ve owned and kept since 2009. Got it up and running! It comes with an OWC 1.2 GHz Dual Socket G4 CPU card, a USB 2.0 PCI card, and a Mac flashed AGP 8X ATI Radeon 9800 Pro 128 MB GPU.

It will probably be overnight if they have the part in stock, possibly even same day if you get there early enough. Yeah, you just take a one day walk around the store. On 09:31 PM, Jolly Roger wrote: In article, JF Mezei wrote: My 2009 Mac Pro power supply is failing. It took over an hour of trying after a power failure before it powered the machine on. (it would click, lights in room dim a bit and about 3 secodns later, click 'off'. Have now spent 2 hours on the phone with various apple departments to find a way to order the power supply.