Disco Biscuits Camp Bisco sets

I recently purchased the Disco Biscuits sets from Camp BIsco 11 from Itunes. One of the tracks "little betty boop" on the 7/13/12 disc appears to be corrupt. It plays for about 3 minutes and then completley cuts out yet the track is 10 minutes long. Is there a possible fix for this?

Redownload it.
-> http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2519

Similar Messages

  • Download: Album Rocket 3 from The Disco Biscuits

    I would like to purchase the album Rocket 3 from the Disco biscuits, but the albuminfo says there is only one track:
    http://music.ovi.com/nl/nl/pc/Product/The-Disco-Biscuits/Rocket-3/10835063
    I am 100 percent sure that album has more than one track, but I don't want to pay 7,99 euro's if I'm not sure that all tracks from that album are included. I don't understand it. Can anybody help me?

    Have you tried the Check for Purchases (or in iTunes 8 Check for Remaining Downloads) command under the Store menu in iTunes? If not, try that; the remaining tracks may be sitting there to be downloaded.
    If not, try reporting the problem through the form on this web page:
    http://www.apple.com/uk/support/itunes/store/download/
    I've not found the "Problem Report" links to be completely reliable.
    Good luck.

  • Is it possible by using boot camp to set up a high spec mac pro to operate as a pc server for a network of approx 20 pcs

    My company has recently bought a high end mac pro to act as a mac server. However it is no longer need but business does need a new server for a network of about 20 pcs. Is it possible or practical using boot camp to tuen the mac into a fully funtioning pc server?
    jb

    Thanks for the info. I don't have Server 2008 but the Boot Camp documentation says Windows 7 only is supported. Glad you jumped in knowing that Server 2008 is supported.
    In the original poster's post he said he wanted a fully functioning server so I assume he wants Server 2008. If he is misusing the term server and only needs a peer network then he can install Windows 7.

  • Boot camp does not give me the option to make a partition, instead it just gives me the options to download windows support software, install windows 7, etc. I do not want any of these, I want to set aside the space on my hard drive!

    Hello, I wish to install Linux Ubuntu on my macbook pro by using boot camp to set aside space. Whenever I load the Boot Camp Assistant application out of the utilities folder in applications, it only gives me the options to download windows support software and install windows 7. I do not want this, I just want to be able to slide that little bar to set aside the space on my hard drive that i can use for Linux. I tried just downloading the windows support software but my internet is immensely slow and it has been an hour or so since it started and it's not even half way done. When this download is finished will i get the option to partition or will i just be faced with those same options?
    I am on a 13" macbook pro, with apple OS X snow leopard version 10.7.2
    A lot of the data on this macbook was transferred over from my old macbook i had.
    Any ideas on how to fix this problem?
    Thank you for reading.

    Well thank you for your honesty.  Apple requires you have to have a Mac to develop iPhone apps, ergo my foray into OS-Xland. No way around it that one except for running OSX in a VM, which would have probably saved me some quid, true enough.
    BUT for those interested parties: VirtualBox has a startup script in /Library/StartupItems/VirtualBox that will prevent OSX from fully booting on the initial (and required) rEFIt boot cycle. Once I temporarily moved that out of the StartupItems rEFIt went in as expected.
    FYI, the openSUSE desktop running native is a little peppier than OSX native which was a nice surprise.  Now if the Mac just had more open source software we would have a deal. (:

  • What hard drives are compatible with OSX Snow Leopard Boot Camp?

    Recently when the video card in my desktop Mac died, I decided to make some upgrades, one of them being the hard drive. After doing some research, I fixed on the Western Digital 3TB Caviar Green 3.5-Inch and had it installed at the same time as the new video card. I installed OS 10.6.8, opened up Boot Camp Assistant, set the partition sizes: 2.5 TB for my Mac side and 500 GB for the Windows. XP wouldn't install so I ordered Windows 7 and began trying to set up the Windows partition. Each time I tried, I got the same error -- Windows 7 couldn't install on the 500 GB partition since it was formatted GPT which was strange since when I looked at the partition inside of Disk Utility, it said NTFS. While troubleshooting, I came across the following:
    ・Mac users should know that WD's new drives do not support Boot Camp, therefore they cannot be used as a dual-boot hard drive.
    ・The MBR part of the hybrid partition table cannot work with 3TB hard drives. MBR is limited to 2TB.
    ・In a 32-bit MBR world, a disk larger than 2TB is probably invalid, and different OS's and tools react wildly differently when this is forced beyond 2TB.
    I called Western Digital to confirm which of their drives were in fact compatible with Boot Camp and they replied since Boot Camp was a third-party application, they have no information on compatibility. They told me to call Apple to get the information. Before purchasing a new drive and sending back the 3TB WD, I want to be sure I know which specs to look for in a hard drive in deciding whether it is compatible with my machine. Any helpful advice or a point in the right direction would be greatly appreciated.
    Here are the specs for my Mac:
    2006 24" iMac 6,1 2.16 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    OS 10.6.8
    Boot Camp Assistant 3.0.4

    Thanks for responding to my question. I guess I'm not sure I understand your reply though. I had no problem installing OS X on the 3TB WD Caviar Green and WD assured me that if I wanted to install only Windows 7 on it, there would be no compatibility issues. The problem lies with wanting the drive to be dual-bootable I guess via using Boot Camp (I know of no other way to go about it). The tech at OWC (where I bought the drive) said he had never heard of any problems with being able to install both Mac and Windows OS on the drive. In fact, he gave the same reply as yours: most hard drives should be able to work perfectly fine with your Mac. It's just that I can't get XP or Windows 7 (32 bit or 64 bit) to install on the 2nd partition, making the drive I have now not dual-bootable. The tech said 2TB hard drives were different and should solve the problem but when I asked him for any discernible spec I could look for in shopping for a replacement drive, he couldn't give me one, i.e. most drives should be okay. I have paid to have the 3TB installed and will have to pay to get the drive taken out and a replacement put back in -- I want to make sure whatever drive I put in this time allows me to have 2 partitions: one for my Mac OSX system and the other for my Windows enviroment (either XP or Windows 7).
    If there is a work-around not involving Boot Camp, please let me know. I thought the reason for using Boot Camp as opposed to Disk Utility to create the dual-bootable drive was the benefit of using Mac drivers on the Windows side.
    If there is another way, I don't understand why PC world made this blanket statement:
    "Mac users should know that WD's new drives do not support Boot Camp, therefore they cannot be used as a dual-boot hard drive."

  • Boot Camp, Expose, Trackpad & Dock issues after waking from sleep 10.6.1

    Hello,
    Here's my setup:
    13" MBP (Late 2009)
    2.26 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
    500 GB HD (Seagate Momentus Non G-Force version)
    OSX 10.6.1: 367 GB
    Boot Camp MS Windows 7 RTM: 123 GB
    All of this started yesterday. After pressing the power button to boot, the MBP would give me the Mac boot sound, and would not recognize that the "Option" key was depressed. This would cause the system to boot into Windows 7 due to the Boot Camp default setting. After trying to get the system to boot into OSX 5 times, I ended up changing the default boot OS to OSX. The MBP now boots into OSX, but still does not recognize the option key on bootup so it will boot into the Boot Camp default selection only.
    The following Problems are plaguing my MBP after waking up from a sleep state when running OSX 10.6.1:
    The trackpad is performing right clicks no matter how many fingers are used to click the trackpad.
    The dock changes from the Un-Magnified setup to a Magnified setup.
    Expose takes on average 1 to 2 seconds to switch from the tiled view back to a selected application. The animation is slow, and the windows are not properly displayed after selecting an application.
    Except for the Option key not being recognized during boot, these problems go away if I restart, but come right back when the system enters the sleep mode. Help!!!
    Andy

    Please read this whole message before doing anything.
    This procedure is a diagnostic test. It’s unlikely to solve your problem. Don’t be disappointed when you find that nothing has changed after you complete it.
    The purpose of the test is to determine whether your problem is caused by third-party system modifications that load automatically at startup or login. 
    Disconnect all wired peripherals except those needed for the test, and remove all aftermarket expansion cards. Boot in safe mode* and log in to the account with the problem. The instructions provided by Apple are as follows:
    Shut down your computer, wait 30 seconds, and then hold down the shift key while pressing the power button.
    When you see the gray Apple logo, release the shift key.
    If you are prompted to log in, type your password, and then hold down the shift key again as you click  Log in.
    *Note: If FileVault is enabled under OS X 10.7 or later, or if a firmware password is set, or if the boot volume is a software RAID, you can’t boot in safe mode. Safe mode is much slower to boot and run than normal, and some things won’t work at all, including wireless networking on certain Macs.  The next normal boot may also be somewhat slow.
    The login screen appears even if you usually log in automatically. You must know your login password in order to log in. If you’ve forgotten the password, you will need to reset it before you begin. Test while in safe mode. Same problem? After testing, reboot as usual (i.e., not in safe mode) and verify that you still have the problem. Post the results of the test.

  • White Screen of Death at Startup - Boot Camp Based Problem

    I recently received my Intel-based 20" iMac yesterday and this morning I set it up and transfered all of my files from my old Windows XP computer successfully. I then played around with the iLife suite and a few other programs and decided I should probably run Boot Camp and set up Windows for a few Windows-based programs I need and some games that are Windows only.
    I started to look up Boot Camp on the Apple website, then realized iMacs that came with Leapord pre-installed should already have Boot Camp on them. I searched in Spotlight for "Boot camp" and found the "Boot Camp Assistant." I thought that was close enough, so I started the application up.
    First, it told me I needed to partition my hard drive and create a space for Windows. I figured I would have only a few esential programs on it, so I opted for a partion of about 10-12 GB if I remember correctly. The installer then told me to insert my Windows disc and I then put in my Windows XP SP1 installation CD. It read it, shutdown, then booted back up into what I recognized as the Windows setup screen.
    It went through the normal setup steps, until it got to a point where it asked what partition I should install Windows on. There was only one partition listed, so obviously I chose that one, but what was weird was the partition said it was over 100,000 MB, which is not the 10 GB I told it to partition. I got scared when it told me it would have to format the partition since it wasn't suitable for a Windows installation yet. I figured it wouldn't hurt to recheck the amount I partitioned, so I quit out of the Windows installer.
    Next, my Mac restarted and went to the infamous white screen of death.
    I have tried basically every single way to fix this.
    I tried:
    Alt - Option - PR (Reset the PRam) And waited for both 2, 3, 4, and 5 dings
    Alt
    Option
    Shift (Safe Mode)
    Put in the Mac OS X disc and booted up holding:
    D
    C
    None of these worked. Sorry if my key abbreviations are off, by the way, because I'm writing this on a Windows laptop and I haven't gotten the keys down for Macs yet.
    Does anyone have any suggestions? Apple call support is curretly closed, at least in my timezone. I'll probably try calling them tomorrow, but mostly I'm afraid of having to get a whole new harddrive and/or iMac. I haven't backed up my data anywhere yet (this is just my first day with the Mac) so if I lose the data, there goes upwards of a few thousand dollars in music and other data expenses.
    Thanks in advance for ideas, I'll try anything you throw at me now, as long it doesn't void the warranty or involve formatting my hard drive. (Though if you know a way to format my hard drive AND save my data, that would be even better)

    All the data that you transfered to the iMac should still be on the PC which originally contained the content. Transferring to the Mac is in reality only copying.
    A Boot Camp Windows installation requires Windows SP2 only;
    To use Boot Camp, you need:
    1. An Intel-based Macintosh computer with a built-in or USB keyboard and a built-in trackpad or USB mouse.
    2. Mac OS X 10.5 or later
    3. The latest firmware updates available for your Intel-based Mac.
    4. At least 10 GB of free space on your startup disk (single partition).
    5. A full, single-disc version of Windows Vista, Windows XP Home Edition or Professional with Service Pack 2 or later. Boot Camp does not include Windows. You must provide your own properly licensed installation disc.
    

Important: A Windows XP installation disc must include Service Pack 2 (SP2). You cannot install an earlier version of Windows and upgrade to Windows XP, nor install an earlier version of Windows XP and update it to SP2.

    6. Boot Camp Assistant (find it installed in /Applications/Utilities/ on Leopard).
    Just an idea for you. There is an entire Apple Discussion forum dedicated to Boot Camp and Windows.
    Whereas, not everyone here with an Intel iMac has installed, tried to install or has experience with BC & Windows, everyone there has or at least has an interest. You may attract help more quickly there.
    The Forums are at the bottom of the main Apple Discussions page under Windows Compatible Technology. Here is a link;
    Boot Camp: Installation and Storage

  • How do I delete my boot camp partition?

    I want to have as much space as possible on my drive. I have a boot camp partition set up but have decided not to use it. How do I safely delete it?

    Launch the Boot Camp Utility. You'll have the option to remove an existing Boot Camp partition. Delete it and the space will be returned to OS X.

  • Boot Camp: The Disk Cannot Be Partitioned Cause Some Files Can't Be Moved?

    I'm ready to add Vista to my Macbook so opened up boot Camp and set aside GB's for the mac to partition them...it does it for about 10 min then I get this:
    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v370/WhammX/Picture1-2.png
    So I open disc utility but I see it already says its a journaled so don't know what to do to get over this...advice?

    Decemberist wrote:
    mmmm
    I could use some help.
    Then you should probably post your question in the Boot Camp forums, and have a little patience.
    http://discussions.apple.com/category.jspa?categoryID=237

  • Boot Camp Partition shows up Smaller in Windows 7 Setup

    I just installed a new Seagate 1TB hybrid drive (STBD1000400) in my mid-2009 15" MacBook Pro 2.66 GHz Core 2 Duo, 8 GB of RAM, with OS X 10.9.2 and Boot Camp (and all other Software up to date).  Everything went fine with the installation of the new Drive and is showing up as 1TB in the system in OS X.
    When I go to setup my partition in Boot Camp I set it so OSX has 600GB and Boot Camp has 400GB.  After it completes the partition it automatically goes into installing Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium.  But when I go to pick which partition to install it on, the 400GB Boot Camp partition I created only shows up as 372GB, not 400GB.  And I can see my 600GB partition in the list only showing up around 540GB.  After the Windows 7 install it still shows the drive as 372GB.
    After the install and started back up in OS X and I checked the drive and it shows them correctly as 600GB and 400GB.  So restarted back in Windows 7 and it still shows the Boot Camp partition as 372GB instead of 400.  I even went into Disk Management and it doesn't show any unpartitioned drive space available either.
    So I started back up in OS X and deleted the Boot Camp partition and started over trying to go with the 600 and 400GB partitions, but it still shows the 400GB partition as only 372GB again during the Windows 7 setup.
    Anyone know what can be causing Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium to not recognize the full 400GB partition?
    Anyone ever come across a similar problem?
    Thank you in advance for any help or suggestions offered.
    Thank you,
    Nick

    Capacity of the drive or size of the volume.  In windows 7 it says 931.32GB.  Rebooting into Mavericks, DU shows the volume as
    1,000,204,886,016 Bytes
    So....at least one of them must be wrong   I would consider Windows 7 using some 1024 based number and the mac showing raw bytes.  I bet all your space is accounted for.

  • Boot Camp partition won't mount in Disk Utility all of a sudden

    I used to have a Windows 7 Boot Camp partition set-up and working perfectly.
    Turned on my 2009 Mac Mini today and couldn't see it in the Finder. Opened Disk Utility, it was there, but grayed out. Right clicked and selected "Mount BOOTCAMP", got "mount failed"
    Tried verifying and repairing disk, but no joy. So I removed the boot camp partition using Boot Camp Assistant and started again. Went fine, installed Windows 7 fine.
    Booted back into Snow Leopard so I could unpair my bluetooth keyboard (I've found that I can only set-up the bluetooth keyboard in Windows 7 if I unpair it in OSX first). Again, Boot Camp partition doesn't show in the finder, and is grayed out in Disk Utility.
    I googled this problem, and found a few people mentioning that NTFS drivers in OSX (e.g. MacFUSE, paragon etc) can cause issues because they conflict with Snow Leopard's own NTFS driver. I did have MacFUSE installed, so I removed it, but it didn't seem to change anything.
    Any suggestions?

    solution!
    install NTFS-3G (http://macntfs-3g.blogspot.com/)
    open disk utility and mount your greyed out partition (NTFS-3G will mount it)
    unmount it
    open system preferences, go to tuxera NTFS pref, second tab (Volumes)
    make sure your windows 7 partition is selected from drop down menu then click "disable tuxera NTFS"
    at this point i rebooted into windows, then rebooted back into snow leopard. my windows partition was once again mounted and visible in Finder
    hope this works for you guys!
    Message was edited by: colmiak

  • Problems with Boot Camp 2.1 update & Heat Generation with new MBP

    After spending a lot of time debating whether to go with a high-end mac or high end PC, I eventually went with a top spec MBP (17” 2.93 ghz). This was a difficult decision to make, not to mention expensive.
    I figured - the Mac was the winner although lower spec then a similar priced PC it had a major advantage – to run Windows XP (which I use for some creative and recreational purposes).
    I am now very frustrated and angry – the peace of mind, stability and straightforward Mac ideals that I admire have been non existent so far. It has been extremely stressful!
    Problem 1 – when setting up boot camp I wanted to go with the NTFS option, so I partioned 50 gig of space. But after choosing this, the only confirmation option that was displayed was for FAT so I was left wondering if that was correct? (I was very slow and methodically following instructions).
    *Problem 2* – After boot camp was set up, there was not Ethernet driver in the Boot Camp / OS Install Disk so I couldn’t connect to the net. It is just lucky one of my neighbours has an unsecured wireless network that I ‘hopped’ onto, to download the driver.
    *Problem 3* – HEAT!!! when running an old spec video game (Unreal Anthology) the MBP became incredibly HOT. So much so that I had to stop after a few minutes because it was clear that damage was being caused. I have since read on other discussions that this is a problem many other MBP users running boot camp are experiencing.
    *Problem 4* – I downloaded the Boot Camp 2.1 update hoping this would help, but all it did was cut all the sound and disable the keyboard apple keys. I had to uninstall boot camp then reinstall the older version to get the sound back (no ethernet connection again!)
    I am extremely upset – I feel I have been miss sold. I brought the Mac with Apples reassurances (and their sales patter of ‘oh yeah, your windows programs will work better on a mac’) only to find this is NOT THE CASE.
    I hope I have been doing something wrong, because then I can sleep better knowing I have just spent a lot of money on the right tool I need for my job. At the moment I have a nasty feeling of painful regret and stress – everything I hoped to avoided when buying a mac.
    If any apple support people or other users can help I would really appreciate any feedback you may have. Thanks in advance…

    Hi I too just bought a MacBook Pro 2 weeks ago. I settled on a Mac as I had so much problems running Mac OS on my Dell laptop.
    I had OS 10.5 running on my work Dell Latitude D520, it was not a hack but a genuine retail version of Leopard. But I had issues with the keyboard / track pad not working, so I had to use external keyboard / mouse. Not fun on a laptop.
    I’m now running OS 10.5.6 and XP 64 bit on my MacBook Pro. I chose XP 64 bit so I can take advantage of the 64bit CPU and the 4 Gig of RAM in my MacBook Pro.
    It took me 2 days to get all the drivers to work properly well I say all, the bluetooth does not work but I don’t use bluetooth so don’t really care.
    I chose XP 64 bit over Vista 64 bit as Visa is the worst OS Microsoft have come up with to date.
    *If any Apple guys is looking at this please let me know if Apple will ever produce XP 64 drivers, I think I’m not the only one interested in the drivers.*
    Nick9000 with regard to your problems.
    Problem 1
    The Mac will only format FAT32 as it cannot write NTFS only read it. You need to choose NTFS when you are installing from the Windows CD, you can still convert your FAT32 system to NTFS within Windows.
    Problem 2
    I had the same problem but then I was using a non-supported OS.
    Problem 3
    My laptop runs a bit hot at times but to me all laptops run hot maybe more so Mac laptops. You are running the 2.93 GHz so I guess it does run hotter than my 2.66 GHz.

  • Boot Camp from External HDD

    I need to use boot camp so i can learn MSSQL for work, the problem is that I only have about 15G left on my hard drive.
    How do I use boot camp to set it up on the external hard drive, when i start boot camp assistant, it does not give me the option to select the external HDD,
    Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
    Cheers

    How do I use boot camp to set it up on the external hard drive, when i start boot camp assistant, it does not give me the option to select the external HDD
    You basically can't. This is Microsoft's fault, not Apple's.
    Format the external drive as Mac OS Extended (Journaled), move data such as the iTunes or iPhoto libraries to it, launch those applications with the Option key held down, point them there, and then delete them from the hard drive. If there are items in the /Library/Printers/ folder you don't use, those can be deleted, and Monolingual can be run to free up more space.
    (47325)

  • Boot Camp HFS and MacDrive

    I had been using MacDrive to read and write to my HFS HD in Boot Camp. With the new SL drivers, I can only read; it has overwritten the MacDrive functionality, apparently. This is a problem because I was sharing data in my home directory on both computers. Now that Boot Camp reads the permissions correctly, I cannot access my iTunes library on both partitions, for example. Is there a way to uninstall the HFS drivers?

    I found your drivers. I had to disable them myself, they are in:
    \windows\system32\drivers, (XP), they are;
    AppleHFS.sys and AppleMNT.sys
    Remove them and HFS support goes away. You will have to use safe mode
    to remove them and/or Hack the appropriate registry hive using regedt32.
    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/141377
    I don't recommend hacking the registry if you are not familiar with the process.
    If you do, in any case, backup your windows install.
    Another solution is to use an earlier boot camp driver set from Leopard 10.5.x
    http://support.apple.com/downloads/BootCamp_Update_2_1_for_WindowsXP
    Kj ♘
    Message was edited by: KJK555

  • My boot camp partition does not recognize inserted discs

    I am running OSX 10.5.8 and have a Boot Camp partition set up with Windows XP.  The Windows partition works fine, but no longer recognizes when a DVD or CD is inserted.  The disc does not appear in the My Computer folder, even though the drive is spinning.  The eject button does not function to eject the disc, and I have to shut down the Windows partition, boot up in the Mac partition to eject or see the disc contents.
    This prevents me from installing any software on the Windows partition.
    Any suggestions?

    Years ago there were issues with "Gear" software drivers preventing DVD/CD from working.

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